skills/viral-content-framework/SKILL.md
Build a framework for creating shareable, high-reach social media content. Use when asked to plan viral content, develop a shareable content strategy, create a hook writing system, or build a repeatable process for content that gets shared. Produces a platform-specific viral content framework with hook formulas, content structures, shareability triggers, and a content testing system.
npx skillsauth add mohitagw15856/pm-claude-skills viral-content-frameworkInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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This skill produces a platform-specific framework for creating content that earns shares, saves, comments, and organic reach beyond your existing following. It covers the psychology of sharing, hook formulas, content structures that consistently perform, platform-specific formats, and a repeatable system for producing high-reach content. Output gives a content creator, social media manager, or marketer a structured process they can apply immediately.
Ask the user for these if not provided:
Platform(s): [List] Niche: [Content topic area] Audience: [Target audience description] Goal: [What high-reach content should achieve] Date: [Date]
Before tactics, understand why people share. Content goes viral when it triggers one or more of these sharing motivations:
| Motivation | What it means | How to trigger it | |---|---|---| | Identity | "Sharing this says something good about me" | Make the audience look smart, informed, or principled by sharing | | Utility | "This is so useful I'd be doing my friends a disservice not to share it" | Teach something actionable that produces an immediate result | | Emotion | "This made me feel something — I want others to feel it too" | Surprise, delight, inspiration, righteous anger, nostalgia | | Tribe | "My people need to see this" | Create content that speaks specifically to a tight community | | Status | "Being first to share this makes me look ahead of the curve" | Break news, contrarian takes, insider information | | Validation | "This is exactly what I've been thinking but couldn't articulate" | Voice what the audience already believes — be their spokesperson |
For [brand/creator], the primary sharing motivation is: [Choose 1–2 that fit the niche and audience]
High-reach content = Strong hook × Valuable substance × Easy shareability
All three must be present. Strong hooks that lead to thin content get clicks but not shares. Brilliant content with a weak hook never gets seen. Content that's hard to share (too long, too branded, too complex) dies at the save stage.
| Element | Strong | Weak | Fix | |---|---|---|---| | Hook (first line / first frame) | Stops scrolling immediately | Generic opening | Use hook formulas in Section 3 | | Substance | Actionable, specific, surprising | Vague, obvious, or filler | Apply content structures in Section 4 | | Shareability | Short enough to screenshot, save, or re-share | Too long, too branded, too complex | Trim to the essential value |
The hook is everything. You have 1–3 seconds on TikTok/Instagram, 1 sentence on LinkedIn/X. Use these proven formulas:
"[Widely believed thing] is wrong / a myth / overrated."
Examples:
- "Posting every day on LinkedIn is killing your reach."
- "Consistency isn't the reason great creators grow. This is."
- "The best social media strategy doesn't start with content."
Why it works: Challenges existing beliefs → triggers curiosity + mild outrage = comments + shares
"I [achieved specific result] in [specific timeframe]. Here's how."
Examples:
- "I went from 0 to 10,000 LinkedIn followers in 6 months. Here's the exact system."
- "Our last post got 2.3M views. These are the 4 decisions that made it happen."
- "I reduced our content production time by 70% using this workflow."
Why it works: Specific numbers are credible. Credibility earns attention. "How" frames create utility.
"Nobody wants to hear this, but [uncomfortable truth about your niche]."
Examples:
- "Nobody wants to hear this, but most social media 'strategies' are just posting without a plan."
- "Your content isn't underperforming because of the algorithm. It's because of the hook."
- "If your product needs a social media strategy to sell, you may have a product problem."
Why it works: "Nobody wants to hear this" primes people to read it. Uncomfortable truths polarise → comments
"[X] things I wish someone had told me about [topic]."
Examples:
- "5 things every social media manager knows that nobody talks about publicly."
- "8 LinkedIn hacks that took me 3 years to discover."
- "The 3 types of hooks that consistently outperform everything else."
Why it works: Implied exclusivity + easy to save and return to
"[Specific moment / scene / event that sets up a tension]."
Examples:
- "At 11pm on a Sunday, our post started going viral. By Monday morning it had 500k views. Here's what we did wrong."
- "Six months ago I had 200 followers. I changed one thing. Now I have 40,000."
- "A customer tweeted something about us last week. I nearly deleted it. I didn't. Here's what happened."
Why it works: Stories create forward momentum — people read to find out what happens
"[Question that the audience has never been asked about a familiar topic]."
Examples:
- "What's the real reason some posts go viral on command and others die quietly?"
- "If you had to teach someone to create shareable content in 10 minutes, what would you actually say?"
- "What would happen if you stopped posting for 30 days?"
Why it works: Unusual question about a familiar topic creates a "never thought about that" response
Best for: Education, frameworks, how-to content
Hook: [Formula 1–6 above]
↓
Promise: "Here's what I'm going to share and why it matters to you."
↓
Point 1: [Specific, actionable, with an example]
Point 2: [Specific, actionable, with an example]
Point 3: [Specific, actionable, with an example]
[...up to 7–10 points — stop when you run out of substance, not ideas]
↓
Summary: "The one thing to remember from all of this is: [distill to a single insight]"
↓
CTA: [Follow for more / save this / what would you add?]
Shareability trigger: Utility — save to come back to. Comment-baiting summary.
Best for: Product/service showcases, transformations, case studies
Hook: [The after — start with the impressive result]
↓
Before: "Here's what the situation looked like before: [specific, relatable pain]"
↓
After: "Here's what it looks like now: [specific, impressive outcome with numbers]"
↓
Bridge: "Here's exactly what changed between those two states: [the process / insight / tool]"
↓
CTA: [Try it / learn more / what's your 'before'?]
Shareability trigger: Identity + utility — audience wants to share a transformation they aspire to
Best for: Building authority, thought leadership, engagement
Hook: [Contrarian statement — Formula 1]
↓
Acknowledge the conventional wisdom: "Most people believe [X] because [reason]."
↓
Provide evidence against it: "But here's the data / experience / example that challenges it."
↓
Make the case: "What actually works is [Y], and here's why."
↓
Nuance (important): "To be fair, [X] works when [specific conditions]. But for [audience], [Y] is better."
↓
CTA: "Disagree? Tell me why ↓"
Shareability trigger: Status + validation + tribe (people share things that represent their worldview)
Best for: Video content, personal brand building
Frame 1 (0–3 sec): Hook — [The punchline, result, or conflict stated upfront]
Frame 2 (3–15 sec): Setup — [Who you are + what happened / the situation]
Frame 3 (15–40 sec): Complication — [What went wrong / what the challenge was]
Frame 4 (40–55 sec): Resolution — [What you did / what happened]
Frame 5 (final 5 sec): CTA — [Follow for more / share if this happened to you / comment your take]
Shareability trigger: Emotion — people share stories that resonate with an experience they've had
Best for: How-to content, frameworks, comparisons, statistics
Slide 1 (Cover): [Hook — compelling headline. Must earn the swipe.]
Slide 2: [Context — why this matters. Set up the value.]
Slides 3–7: [One insight per slide. Max 30 words + clear visual/diagram per slide.]
Slide 8 (Summary): [The key takeaway distilled to one sentence.]
Slide 9 (CTA): [Save this / follow / share / link in bio]
Shareability trigger: Save rate. Carousels are the most-saved format on Instagram. Algorithm rewards saves.
What goes viral on LinkedIn:
Format priority: Long-form text posts → carousels → video (in order of average reach)
Algorithm signals that boost reach: Comments > saves > reactions. Ask a question in the CTA.
Posting time: Tuesday–Thursday, 07:30–09:00 or 12:00–13:00 in your audience's timezone
What kills LinkedIn reach: Outbound links in the post body (add links in first comment instead), posting too frequently (3–5x/week max), vanity metrics in the hook
What goes viral on TikTok:
Format priority: Trending sound duets/stitches → original POV → talking-head education
Algorithm signals that boost reach: Watch-through rate (% who watch the full video) is the #1 signal. Replays, shares, and comments follow.
Hook principle: Start mid-sentence. Start in the action. Never open with "Hey guys, today I'm going to..."
What goes viral on Instagram:
Format priority: Reels → carousels → static images (in order of current algorithm weighting)
Algorithm signals that boost reach: Saves > shares > comments > likes. Design for saves.
Caption strategy: Hook in the first line (shows before "more" truncation). Value in the body. CTA at the end.
What goes viral on X:
Format priority: Short opinion takes → threads → quote tweets with commentary
Algorithm signals that boost reach: Replies > retweets > likes. Controversy (civil) drives replies.
Thread principle: First tweet must work as a standalone — many people won't click "see more"
What goes viral — Shorts:
What goes viral — Long-form:
Virality is repeatable if you treat content creation as an experiment.
Produce 5–10 pieces per content type. Use a consistent structure with one variable changed per batch (hook type, format, topic angle).
| Platform | 48-hour signal to watch | What it tells you | |---|---|---| | LinkedIn | Comments + saves in first 2 hours | Relevance to professional audience | | TikTok | Watch-through rate in first 24 hours | Hook and content quality | | Instagram | Saves rate per impression | "Worth returning to" value | | X/Twitter | Replies in first 4 hours | Resonance with the community |
After 30 days, review your top 5 performing posts and answer:
Your "content code" = the combination of these variables that consistently outperforms. Double down.
| Phase | Action | |---|---| | Week 1–4 | Test 2–3 hook formulas + 2–3 content structures. Post consistently. | | Month 2 | Identify top-performing patterns. Create 2x more of those. | | Month 3+ | 70% proven formats / 30% new experiments. Never stop testing the 30%. |
Apply the hook formulas and content structures from above to these topic angles:
| # | Content angle | Hook formula | Structure | Format | |---|---|---|---|---| | 1 | [Common mistake in your niche] | Contrarian statement | Thread | LinkedIn / X | | 2 | [Counterintuitive insight you learned] | Uncomfortable truth | Thread | LinkedIn | | 3 | [A result you achieved + the process] | Specific number/result | Before→After→Bridge | All | | 4 | [A framework you use regularly] | Listicle tease | Carousel | Instagram / LinkedIn | | 5 | [An industry trend + your take] | Contrarian deep dive | Thread | LinkedIn / X | | 6 | [A story of failure + lesson] | Story hook | Story arc | TikTok / Reels | | 7 | [A tool/resource your audience would save] | Utility listicle | Carousel / list | Instagram / LinkedIn | | 8 | [A "what I wish I knew" post] | Listicle tease | Thread | LinkedIn | | 9 | [A behind-the-scenes process] | Pattern interrupt question | Video | TikTok / Reels | | 10 | [A reaction to industry news] | Contrarian statement | Thread | X / LinkedIn |
[Generate 20 more ideas specific to the brand's niche here, using the same table format]
development
Generate article or newsletter thumbnail candidates using the Gemini API from inside Claude Code. Claude reads article copy, proposes composition concepts, writes image generation prompts incorporating brand specs, calls Gemini to generate the images, evaluates the results via computer vision, and returns ranked candidates with rationale. Use when asked to create thumbnails, generate cover images, or produce visual candidates for an article or newsletter.
testing
Flips Claude's default from "find reasons you're right" to "find reasons you're wrong." A genuine thinking partner, not a mirror with grammar. Use before high-stakes decisions, plans, assumptions, or pitches you haven't stress-tested.
development
Scrapes a Substack Notes page and exports engagement data (likes, comments, restacks) to a formatted .xlsx file with conditional formatting and summary stats.
testing
Audit an existing social media presence across all active platforms. Use when asked to review social media performance, analyse a brand's social presence, benchmark against competitors, or identify what's working and what isn't. Produces a scored audit with platform-by-platform analysis, content performance review, competitive benchmarking, and a prioritised action plan.