Open focused hook packs for fitness, finance, productivity, dating, education, and utility apps with category claim reminders.
Showing 60 of 60
Fitness pack · 1
The repeatable starting point
Example: When I do not know what to train, I open MoveNote and start with the routine I already saved. Category reminder: Show a planning choice, not a promise that the workout is medically appropriate or effective.
When I do not know what to train, I open [app] and start with [visible choice].
FitnessFill-in structure
Fitness pack · 2
The workout record
Example: This is how I remember which weight and variation I logged last time. Category reminder: Describe recorded data only; do not imply progress, strength, or health improvement.
This is how I remember [specific workout detail] from my last session.
FitnessFill-in structure
Fitness pack · 3
The routine adjustment
Example: My plan changed today, so I moved the long session and kept the short mobility block. Category reminder: Do not frame an app adjustment as medical or professional exercise advice.
My plan changed today, so I changed [one routine detail] here.
FitnessFill-in structure
Fitness pack · 4
The no-perfect-streak restart
Example: I missed a week. Here is where I choose today's routine without hiding the gap. Category reminder: Avoid habit, motivation, or health guarantees; show the real restart flow.
I missed [time period]. Here is where I restart without pretending the streak never broke.
FitnessFill-in structure
Fitness pack · 5
The exercise note
Example: I save my coach's setup cue here so I can read it before the next set. Category reminder: Do not create safety instructions or present a personal note as expert guidance.
I save [form cue or preference] here so I can read it before the next set.
FitnessFill-in structure
Fitness pack · 6
The plan overview
Example: One screen shows how I arranged two gym days and one at-home routine this week. Category reminder: The view can show a plan; it cannot guarantee completion or results.
One screen shows how I arranged [days, routines, or sessions] this week.
FitnessFill-in structure
Fitness pack · 7
The equipment filter
Example: I only have resistance bands today, so I filter the saved routines before choosing. Category reminder: Do not imply a filter verifies suitability, safety, or equivalent training outcomes.
I only have [equipment], so I filter the options before choosing.
FitnessFill-in structure
Fitness pack · 8
The personal comparison
Example: Here is the duration I logged for Tuesday's walk, and what I logged today. Category reminder: Keep it to accurate personal records and avoid transformation or performance promises.
Here is what I logged for [activity] then, and what I logged today.
FitnessFill-in structure
Fitness pack · 9
The coach handoff
Example: Before I talk with my trainer, I bring the routine notes and completed-set history. Category reminder: Do not imply records replace professional evaluation or medical history.
Before I talk with [coach or trainer], I bring this record of [specific information].
FitnessFill-in structure
Fitness pack · 10
The honest app boundary
Example: MoveNote does not choose what is safe for me. It helps me organize the routines I already use. Category reminder: Keep the boundary explicit and never imply diagnosis, treatment, or guaranteed body changes.
[App] does not choose what is safe for me. It helps me [supported planning or tracking job].
FitnessFill-in structure
Finance pack · 1
The transaction context
Example: I add the client and project here so I remember what this software charge supported. Category reminder: Describe organization only; do not imply bookkeeping accuracy, tax treatment, or financial advice.
I add [note or label] here so I remember what this transaction was for.
FinanceFill-in structure
Finance pack · 2
The upcoming view
Example: This is where I look before annual software renewals come up. Category reminder: A reminder view does not guarantee payment, sufficient funds, or avoidance of fees.
This is where I look before [bill, renewal, or planned purchase] comes up.
FinanceFill-in structure
Finance pack · 3
The category check
Example: I thought I spent mostly on ads, so I checked the actual campaign and production entries. Category reminder: Present the user's own records without drawing investment, tax, or credit conclusions.
I thought I spent mostly on [category], so I checked the actual entries.
FinanceFill-in structure
Finance pack · 4
The assumption toggle
Example: I changed the monthly subscription assumption to see how the runway scenario moved. Category reminder: Label scenarios clearly and do not present them as forecasts or guaranteed outcomes.
I changed [one assumption] to see how this planning scenario moved.
FinanceFill-in structure
Finance pack · 5
The shared money question
Example: Before we discuss the campaign budget, I put media and creative costs in one view. Category reminder: Do not imply shared visibility resolves disputes or establishes legal responsibility.
Before we discuss [shared expense], I put the same numbers in one view.
FinanceFill-in structure
Finance pack · 6
The manual check
Example: Before I trust the monthly total, I open the charges and refunds behind it. Category reminder: Do not claim accuracy, bank-grade security, or completeness unless independently supported.
Before I trust [summary number], I open the entries behind it.
FinanceFill-in structure
Finance pack · 7
The personal threshold
Example: I set my own monthly contractor threshold here, then review what crosses it. Category reminder: Make clear the threshold is user-chosen, not financial guidance.
I set my own [budget or alert threshold] here, then review what crosses it.
FinanceFill-in structure
Finance pack · 8
The export question
Example: Before using a finance app, I check how to export the transaction list as a CSV. Category reminder: Show the actual export and disclose format, plan, retention, and completeness limits.
Before using a finance app, I check how to export [my records].
FinanceFill-in structure
Finance pack · 9
The contribution view
Example: This view separates subscription revenue from media and creative costs using my entries. Category reminder: Do not call arithmetic a forecast, profit guarantee, or investment recommendation.
This view separates [money in] from [costs] using the assumptions I entered.
FinanceFill-in structure
Finance pack · 10
The honest finance boundary
Example: LedgerLite helps me organize recurring costs; it does not decide what I should invest or deduct. Category reminder: Never imply guaranteed returns, credit changes, tax outcomes, or professional advice.
[App] helps me organize [financial information]; it does not decide [high-stakes action].
FinanceFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 1
The next visible action
Example: I turn 'launch prep' into 'record the billing-screen demo' before I close the app. Category reminder: A clearer task does not guarantee completion, focus, or productivity gains.
I turn '[vague project]' into this one next action before I close the app.
ProductivityFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 2
The daily shortlist
Example: Instead of staring at the whole backlog, I open the three items marked for today. Category reminder: Do not imply the app knows the correct priority unless the rule is explicit.
Instead of staring at the whole list, I open [small view] for today.
ProductivityFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 3
The restart note
Example: Before I stop editing, I leave one line naming the next clip to review. Category reminder: Frame it as a personal method, not a guaranteed focus or memory improvement.
Before I stop [task], I leave one line for where to restart.
ProductivityFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 4
The recurring setup
Example: I reuse this launch checklist whenever a new app version needs creative. Category reminder: Do not imply templates remove review or make every project identical.
I reuse this [template or checklist] whenever [recurring project] comes back.
ProductivityFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 5
The meeting outcome
Example: A creative review is not done for me until the next test and its owner are recorded here. Category reminder: Describe your process, not a universal management rule or guaranteed follow-through.
A meeting is not done for me until [decision or owner] is recorded here.
ProductivityFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 6
The interruption capture
Example: When a new hook idea interrupts me, I put it in the inbox instead of opening the editor. Category reminder: Do not claim the technique treats attention conditions or improves focus for everyone.
When [new request] interrupts me, I put it here instead of switching tasks immediately.
ProductivityFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 7
The owner filter
Example: I filter by review owner before asking which ads are waiting on feedback. Category reminder: Do not imply an assignment guarantees responsibility, timing, or completion.
I filter by [owner or status] before asking who is waiting on what.
ProductivityFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 8
The done definition
Example: This field tells our team what 'ready to edit' means for a raw UGC take. Category reminder: A definition can clarify expectations but cannot guarantee quality or agreement.
This field tells our team what 'ready' means for [work item].
ProductivityFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 9
The low-capacity plan
Example: On a busy week, I reduce the content plan to one demo and two opening takes. Category reminder: Avoid promising reduced stress, better health, or increased output.
On a busy week, I reduce the plan to [small realistic commitment].
ProductivityFill-in structure
Productivity pack · 10
The honest productivity boundary
Example: FocusBoard shows me the next approved task; it cannot make me concentrate or finish it. Category reminder: Never promise hours saved, mental-health effects, or guaranteed productivity.
[App] shows me [work information]; it cannot make me [human outcome].
ProductivityFill-in structure
Dating pack · 1
The profile detail check
Example: Before I publish my profile, I reread the prompt answers for specific details someone can respond to. Category reminder: Do not promise matches, attention, compatibility, or relationship outcomes.
Before I publish my profile, I reread [specific section] for what it actually says about me.
DatingFill-in structure
Dating pack · 2
The preference control
Example: This is where I set my distance preference instead of assuming every suggestion is nearby. Category reminder: Show real controls without implying filters guarantee compatibility or safety.
This is where I set [real preference] instead of hoping the app guesses.
DatingFill-in structure
Dating pack · 3
The conversation reminder
Example: I save the book recommendation here so I remember what we already talked about. Category reminder: Avoid surveillance-like framing and never expose another person's private information.
I save [non-sensitive detail] here so I remember what we already talked about.
DatingFill-in structure
Dating pack · 4
The opening prompt
Example: Instead of sending 'hey,' I ask about the trail in their weekend photo. Category reminder: Do not promise replies or encourage manipulative, harassing, or copied messages.
Instead of sending '[generic opener],' I start from this detail in their profile.
DatingFill-in structure
Dating pack · 5
The safety setting
Example: Before meeting anyone, I check how to share the plan and report a concern. Category reminder: Do not imply interface controls guarantee personal safety; point to official guidance.
Before meeting anyone, I check where [safety or privacy control] lives.
DatingFill-in structure
Dating pack · 6
The boundary update
Example: I changed the relationship-intent field when what I was looking for changed. Category reminder: Do not shame preferences or imply settings control other people's behavior.
I changed [preference or boundary] here when my situation changed.
DatingFill-in structure
Dating pack · 7
The honest profile
Example: This prompt helped me replace 'I love travel' with the train trip I keep talking about. Category reminder: Do not invent experiences or suggest authenticity guarantees better matches.
This prompt helped me replace [vague answer] with one true example.
DatingFill-in structure
Dating pack · 8
The pause control
Example: This is how I pause profile visibility without deleting my notes and settings. Category reminder: Confirm what is actually paused, retained, or visible; avoid privacy guarantees.
This is how I pause [visibility or notifications] when I want a break.
DatingFill-in structure
Dating pack · 9
The expectation check
Example: Before I use a compatibility label, I remember it cannot tell me how a real conversation will feel. Category reminder: Do not present scores, badges, or matching logic as proof of compatibility.
Before I use [feature], I check what it does not tell me about a person.
DatingFill-in structure
Dating pack · 10
The honest dating boundary
Example: MeetNote can help me remember conversation details; it cannot promise a reply or relationship. Category reminder: Never guarantee matches, dates, replies, attraction, compatibility, or safety.
[App] can help with [supported connection job]; it cannot promise [human outcome].
DatingFill-in structure
Education pack · 1
The lesson starting point
Example: When I open fractions, this is the first visual example I work through. Category reminder: Do not promise mastery, grades, test results, or suitability for every learner.
When I open [topic], this is the first example I work through.
EducationFill-in structure
Education pack · 2
The mistake explanation
Example: Instead of hiding the wrong answer, StudyStep shows which part of the equation changed. Category reminder: Do not claim explanations are always correct or replace qualified instruction.
Instead of hiding the wrong answer, [app] shows me [specific explanation].
EducationFill-in structure
Education pack · 3
The saved question
Example: I save this grammar question for tutoring instead of guessing past it. Category reminder: Avoid presenting the app as a substitute for professional educational support.
I save this question for [teacher, tutor, or study session] instead of guessing past it.
EducationFill-in structure
Education pack · 4
The review selection
Example: I choose what to review from the missed-question list, not just my favorite chapter. Category reminder: Do not imply review selection guarantees retention, mastery, or scores.
I choose what to review from [visible record], not from what feels familiar.
EducationFill-in structure
Education pack · 5
The short practice block
Example: I use this five-question vocabulary set while waiting for the bus. Category reminder: Only state a duration the activity truly fits; avoid learning-speed promises.
I use this [small activity] when I have [realistic amount of time].
EducationFill-in structure
Education pack · 6
The progress record
Example: This shows which lessons I completed, not whether I can use every concept alone. Category reminder: Keep activity, completion, proficiency, and achievement clearly separated.
This shows what I completed in [topic], not what I have mastered.
EducationFill-in structure
Education pack · 7
The parent or teacher view
Example: This is the assignment status a teacher can see, and these are the private study notes. Category reminder: Verify permissions and protect child/student data; do not make compliance claims casually.
This is the information [parent or teacher] can see, and this is what stays private.
EducationFill-in structure
Education pack · 8
The learning preference
Example: I switch from the definition to the diagram when I need another way to look at the process. Category reminder: Describe available formats, not a diagnosis or guaranteed match to a learning style.
I switch from [format] to [format] when I need another way to look at the idea.
EducationFill-in structure
Education pack · 9
The source check
Example: Before I use the history summary, I open the cited passage behind it. Category reminder: Do not imply a citation guarantees accuracy; encourage appropriate verification.
Before I use [answer or summary], I open the source or explanation behind it.
EducationFill-in structure
Education pack · 10
The honest education boundary
Example: WordPath helps me practice vocabulary; it cannot promise a test score or fluency. Category reminder: Never guarantee grades, admissions, credentials, mastery, or developmental outcomes.
[App] helps me practice [specific skill]; it cannot promise [grade, mastery, or credential].
EducationFill-in structure
Utility pack · 1
The one-job shortcut
Example: When I need to rename a batch of screenshots, I open FileTidy and choose the date rule. Category reminder: Show the complete job and do not claim support for every file, device, or condition.
When I need to [specific utility job], I open [app] and tap here.
UtilityFill-in structure
Utility pack · 2
The compatibility check
Example: Before I rely on the export, I check whether it supports the CSV format my client needs. Category reminder: Do not imply universal compatibility; name tested formats and current limits.
Before I rely on [feature], I check whether it supports [real format or device].
UtilityFill-in structure
Utility pack · 3
The batch preview
Example: I preview the new filenames before I apply them to forty image files. Category reminder: A preview cannot guarantee there will be no data loss or unexpected result.
I preview these changes before I apply them to [files or items].
UtilityFill-in structure
Utility pack · 4
The undo path
Example: Before I archive a project folder, I check how long restoration stays available. Category reminder: Show real recovery limits and never promise recoverability you cannot guarantee.
Before I use [batch action], I check how to undo or restore it.
UtilityFill-in structure
Utility pack · 5
The local-versus-uploaded check
Example: The preview stays in my browser; the shared link uploads the selected file. Category reminder: Base privacy statements on documented behavior and avoid absolute security claims.
This is what stays on my device, and this is what [app] sends elsewhere.
UtilityFill-in structure
Utility pack · 6
The settings reset
Example: I changed too many export options, so I reset them to the app defaults. Category reminder: Do not imply resetting settings restores deleted data or previous content.
I changed too many options, so I use this to return to [known state].
UtilityFill-in structure
Utility pack · 7
The before-you-run checklist
Example: Before I compress a video, I check its dimensions, duration, and target upload limit. Category reminder: A checklist cannot guarantee output quality, compatibility, or platform acceptance.
Before I run [utility action], I check these [number] details.
UtilityFill-in structure
Utility pack · 8
The output inspection
Example: I do not stop at 'exported.' I open the file and check that the captions are readable. Category reminder: Do not imply a single check proves the entire output is correct or safe.
I do not stop at 'complete.' I open the output and check [specific property].
UtilityFill-in structure
Utility pack · 9
The plan-limit check
Example: Bulk rename works on the desktop plan, so I check that before preparing the files. Category reminder: Keep plan, platform, and availability details current; do not hide paid requirements.
This feature works on [plan or condition], so I check that before starting.
UtilityFill-in structure
Utility pack · 10
The honest utility boundary
Example: CompressCheck estimates file size; it cannot guarantee a platform will accept the upload. Category reminder: Never guarantee compatibility, security, recovery, acceptance, or lossless results.
[App] helps with [supported technical job]; it cannot guarantee [broader technical outcome].
UtilityFill-in structure
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How to use it
Start with category context, then make the line yours.
Open the pack closest to your app, then choose a structure that matches what the demo can show. The brackets make the missing details obvious before you record anything.
Read the category reminder on every card. It is not legal advice, but it helps you notice promises that need evidence, softer wording, or a different angle.
The packs are intentionally finite and do not connect to ClipStitchr's larger Hook library. Use ClipStitchr's paid workflow when you are ready to organize source footage and produce the ads.
Questions
What to know before you use it.
Are these hooks personalized for my app?
No. Each pack is a fixed set of fill-in structures for a common app category. Replace the brackets with details your product and footage can honestly support.
Why does each pack include claim reminders?
Different categories carry different risks. A finance app should not imply guaranteed returns, for example, and a fitness app should not promise a medical result.
Can I use a structure from another category?
Yes, when the underlying idea fits. Keep the claim reminder from your own category and make sure the opening still leads naturally into footage of your app.
Ready to make the ads?
Keep planning free. Use ClipStitchr when it is time to produce.
ClipStitchr is paid software for organizing reusable footage and turning it into finished short-form ads.