| name | youtube-title-creator |
| description | Generate high-CTR YouTube titles and thumbnail concepts using 119 proven frameworks ranked by performance score. Use when creating YouTube titles, optimizing video titles for CTR, generating thumbnail text, A/B testing title variations, or pairing titles with complementary thumbnails. Covers framework fitting method, universalization strategy, complementarity principle, and psychological trigger analysis. |
YouTube Title & Thumbnail Creator
Generate titles that achieve 6%+ CTR using the framework fitting method: extract your concept, match to 119 proven formulas ranked by performance, generate variations, select best.
Key Principles
Framework Fitting Method
Extract content concept → Review ALL applicable frameworks → Test fit → Generate volume → Select best.
Critical Rule: Avoid First-Match Bias. The best framework might not be the obvious one. Test 5-10 before selecting.
The Complementarity Principle
Title + thumbnail work TOGETHER, not repeat each other.
- Bad: Title "Five Productivity Myths" + Thumbnail "Five Productivity Myths"
- Good: Title "Five Productivity Myths" + Thumbnail "You're doing it wrong"
Universalization Strategy
"Every word after your sexy hook is a filter to lessen the audience."
- Bad: "Five Productivity Myths Every Entrepreneur Believes" (filters to entrepreneurs)
- Good: "Five Productivity Myths" (anyone interested in productivity)
Narrow only when targeting a specific audience is the strategic goal.
10 Psychological Principles That Drive Clicks
- Curiosity - Open loops ("What happens to...?")
- Desire - What viewers want (success, money, health, status)
- Negativity - Warnings and fears grab faster than benefits
- Controversy - Counterintuitive claims, polarizing takes
- Authority - Names, titles, credentials ("Expert reveals...")
- Specificity - Numbers, timeframes ("5 habits," "in 3 seconds")
- Lists - Numbered frameworks feel scannable
- Constraint - "The ONE choice," "This ONE trick"
- Contrast - Juxtaposing opposites ("Not X, but Y")
- Speed/Ease - Quick results, easy methods
Titles using 2-3 principles outperform single-principle titles.
Workflow
Phase 1: Extract Content Elements
Summarize in 1-2 sentences, then identify:
- Problem - What pain/struggle exists?
- Goal - What result does viewer want?
- Benefit - What will life look like after?
- Concept - What idea/principle applies?
- Example/Data - What story/stat illustrates?
- Process - What steps lead to result?
Phase 2: Framework Matching
Browse the 119 frameworks in references/creator-hooks-frameworks.md.
Top performers (Score 8000+):
- #1: "I tested X vs Y" (26,000)
- #2: "Getting ADDICTED to X is Easy, Actually" (17,518)
- #3: "How to X Without Y" (11,492)
- #4: "NEVER Say This in..." (9,783)
- #5: "What Happens to X That Never Y?" (9,461)
- #6: "The REALITY of X in [year]" (8,465)
Dial to 11: Keep making the title more extreme until absurd, then pull back one notch.
Generate 10+ variations across different frameworks.
Phase 3: Select & Pair with Thumbnails
Quality tests:
- McDonald's Test: "Someone at McDonald's understands instantly"
- Would this make ME stop scrolling?
- Can my grandmother understand it?
- Hints at payoff without giving it away?
Thumbnail strategies:
- A: Title asks, Thumbnail hints
- B: Title promises, Thumbnail adds urgency
- C: Title states problem, Thumbnail shows emotion
- D: Title broad, Thumbnail specific
Output Format
Produce 5 titles with 3 thumbnail options each:
## TITLE 1: "[Title]"
Framework: #X - [Name]
Principles: [Which of the 10 it uses]
Thumbnail A: [Visual] + [Text]
Thumbnail B: [Visual] + [Text]
Thumbnail C: [Visual] + [Text]
References