The Golden Circle
For understanding how great leaders and orgs inspire action by starting with a clear sense of purpose.
The Relationship Map
A simple way to evaluate your relationships.
Research Funnel Model
Understand users with clarity, even when resources are tight.
StoryBrand Framework
Focuses on the seven elements necessary for helping your customer.
The Hook Model
A four-step process that encourages user engagement and promotes habit formation.
Self-Us-Now Framework
Help individuals and groups connect personal stories to collective action.
The AIDMA Model
Classic framework in marketing, helping business understand and influence each stage of the customer journey.
AISAS Model
Adapts traditional marketing concept to the digital landscape.
AARRR Model
Amodel redefines digital marketing by focusing on measurable growth and customer retention.
AIPL Model
Optimize each stage of the customer journey, from brand awareness to loyalty.
Pixar Storytelling Formula
Turn complex ideas into clear cause-and-effect stories people remember.
5A Marketing Model
focusing on how brands can guide prospects from awareness to advocacy.
Hero's Journey Storytelling Framework
A storytelling framework that makes your message relatable, memorable, and impactful in any context.
The Innovation Story Framework
Narrate how an idea was born, built, and scaled to demonstrate its real-world impact.
4P Marketing Mix
A classic framework that provides a clear, structured approach to marketing.
ICARE Model
Build a service culture that turns everyday interactions into lasting customer loyalty.
4C Marketing Model
For building customer-focused marketing strategies.
TAM-SAM-SOM Analysis
Enhance your market segmentation and marketing strategy
9 Key Forces of Mobile Technology Reshape Customer Behavior
Understand how context, location, and environment shape mobile customer decisions.
Marketing Funnel 5 Stages To Boost Email Marketing
Align your marketing email with the proven customer journey strategy.
Product GTM Canvas
Brings clarity, reduces risk, and gives your product the best chance of success.
FABE Model
Highlight product value, connect with customer needs, and build long-term trust
SPIN Model
Uncover real customer pain through thoughtful, guided questioning.
6 Essential Marketing Campaigns Every Brand Needs
Better fomulate your brand’s marketing strategy.
Straight Line System
Gives sales people a clear roadmap to follow.
4P Model in Content Marketing
Build a clear system to improve content, ensuring long-term marketing impact.
ChatGPT5 P.R.O.M.P.T. Framework For Business Planning
Help you stay focused, filter noise, and improve output, which is deeply aligned with your intent.
POEMS Framework
Gives teams a clear way to observe, classify, and interpret user behavior.
5E Experience Model
Map user journeys from first attraction to lasting memory by structuring experiences across five critical stages.
CARE Framework
Design consistent customer service experiences through connection, support, resolution, and continuous improvement.
Freytag’s Pyramid
Helps communicators control emotional rhythm and attention over time.
Philip Kotler's 5 Product Levels
Analyze where your product creates value and identify the layers where real differentiation happens.
The Hook Model: Engineering Habit-Forming Products
A four-step process that encourages user engagement and promotes habit formation.
The Hook Model
Why This Matters
In a crowded digital world, many products struggle to hold user attention. Users often try something once and move on. A strong engagement loop is essential for user retention and long-term success.
The Hook Model helps designers and product teams identify how to build habit-forming products that bring people back again and again. By combining this model with system thinking, you can see not just features but the whole system of triggers, rewards, and investments that sustain habits.
The Hook Model is a psychological framework developed by Nir Eyal.
It is designed to explain how companies can create habit-forming products that capture and sustain users' attention.
Outlined in his book "Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products," the model consists of a four-phase cycle that fosters user engagement and promotes habit formation.
The Four Phases of the Hook Model
Trigger
Triggers are cues that prompt users to take action, and initiate the behavior.
Triggers can be external (like notifications, emails, or advertisements) or internal (like emotions, routines, or thoughts).
Over time, external triggers aim to create internal triggers, making the behavior more automatic.
Internal triggers are particularly powerful because they create a habitual response.
Example: A push notification from a social media app might remind a user to check for updates, while boredom can become an internal trigger to open the app without prompting.
Action
This phase involves the behavior the user performs in anticipation of a reward.
The action must be simple and easy to complete.
For this to happen, the user needs both motivation and the ability to perform the action with minimal friction.
Example: Scrolling through a social media feed or clicking on a video link are actions designed to be frictionless.
Variable Reward
After the action, the user receives a reward.
Rewards must be varied to maintain user interest.
The key is that the reward must be variable, not predictable, because the "Predictable Rewards" quickly become mundane, but "Variable Rewards" keep users engaged by offering an element of surprise or novelty.
This variability creates a sense of anticipation and excitement, similar to gambling, which keeps users engaged and coming back for more.
"Gamification" can be introduced to delight your users.
Examples include social validation (likes, comments), content (new videos, articles), or personal achievement (leveling up in a game).
Investment
In this final step, users are asked to invest something of value into the product (time, data, effort, money, etc.).
This investment increases the likelihood of future engagement because it creates a sense of commitment and ownership.
The more users invest, the more they value the product, leading to a deeper habit formation.
Examples:
More and more friends were connected in Fackbook, and the interaction with others became more and more frequent.
In computer games, the level, equipment and skills of your character continue to increase.
Creating playlists, or contributing content to a community