Generate stronger opening lines from a real topic, audience, promise, and proof instead of recycling the same hook list for every post.
Better hooks usually create urgency or curiosity without becoming vague.
Name the topic or desired outcome quickly.
Make the line feel specific to a real reader.
Use proof when the claim is bold.
Write the body to pay off the promise immediately.
Switch between curiosity, contrarian, story, data, question, and how-to styles.
Tell the tool what the post is about, who it is for, and what promise it needs to make.
Copy the hook that fits the post, then build the rest of the content under it.
Small adjustments here usually improve output quality and publishing speed.
Hooks get stronger when the promise is concrete and the audience is narrow.
Use data or story hooks when you already have proof to support the claim.
Question hooks work best when the answer matters immediately to the reader.
Do not overpromise in the opening line if the post cannot support it.
Campane connects ideation, formatting, publishing, and analytics so the work you started here turns into a repeatable workflow instead of another disconnected tab.