Medium Article Subtitle & Hook Creator
Create subtitles and opening hooks for Medium articles and long-form content.
How to get better results
- 1. Start with a specific niche and audience instead of broad topics.
- 2. Include one clear outcome (clicks, sales, watch time, signups).
- 3. Generate multiple rounds and combine your top-performing ideas.
Who this is for
- Medium writers
- Bloggers
- Long-form content creators
Common mistakes
- Subtitle repeats the title
- Hook is vague or slow
- No clear promise in first line
Best Use Cases
- Essay openings
- How-to articles
- Personal stories
- Opinion pieces
Examples you can copy
Use these as starting points, then generate variations with your exact topic for better performance.
- Subtitle: [One line that expands the title and promises the takeaway]
- Hook: [Question, stat, or bold claim] that pulls the reader into the first paragraph.
Medium Article Subtitle & Hook Creator FAQs
What is a Medium subtitle?
The line under the headline that appears in previews and on the article. It should expand on the title and promise what the reader will learn or feel.
How long should a Medium subtitle be?
Often one sentence, 10β20 words. Make it specific and benefit-led. Itβs the second thing people see after the title.
What makes a strong article hook?
A question, surprising stat, bold claim, or short story that creates curiosity or tension. The reader should want to know what comes next.
Should the hook be in the first sentence or first paragraph?
Ideally the first sentence. If you need one line of setup, keep it short. The hook should appear within the first 1β2 sentences.
Can I use the same formula for different articles?
Yes. Use a consistent structure (e.g., question hook, then subtitle that promises the answer). Vary the topic and angle for each piece.
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