Hooked Model: Can This Strategy Turn Your Product Into an Irresistible Habit?
Imagine your product becoming a part of your customers' daily routine. Discover how the Hooked Model can make that a reality.
As managers, we all want our products to be more than just useful—we want them to be indispensable.
Whether you’re developing an app, managing a marketing campaign, or creating a service, your goal is to design something that keeps customers coming back.
But how do you turn one-time users into loyal, repeat customers?
The answer lies in the Hooked Model, a powerful framework for building habit-forming products.
Developed by Nir Eyal, the Hooked Model outlines four steps that help businesses create products that become part of customers’ daily lives: Triggers, Actions, Variable Rewards, and Investment.
By understanding and implementing these principles, managers can design products that hook users, increase engagement, and foster long-term customer loyalty.
What Is the Hooked Model?
The Hooked Model is a strategy-driven framework that focuses on forming habits in users by guiding them through a cycle of repeated behaviors.
The key goal for managers is to design products and services that get customers to return without needing constant marketing pushes or reminders. This reduces customer acquisition costs and builds long-term brand loyalty.
The model consists of four key steps—Trigger, Action, Variable Reward, and Investment. Each step strengthens the likelihood that a user will return, forming a habit. Let’s examine each step from a managerial perspective and how it can be applied to enhance product development and marketing strategies.
1. Triggers: Setting the Habit Loop in Motion
External Triggers
Triggers are what prompt the customer to take action. The first type, external triggers, are cues in the environment—like push notifications, emails, or ads—that remind users to engage with your product. From a management perspective, external triggers are essential in driving initial engagement, especially in the early stages of the customer lifecycle.
- Implementation Tip: Create highly targeted external triggers, such as personalized email campaigns or push notifications, to re-engage users. However, overuse can lead to user fatigue, so it’s important to find the right balance.
Internal Triggers
While external triggers are useful for initial engagement, internal triggers are where the real magic happens. Internal triggers come from the customer’s emotions, thoughts, or routines. For instance, users may turn to your product when they feel bored, anxious, or lonely. This makes your product part of their emotional coping mechanism, driving repeated use without external prompts.
- Implementation Tip: Managers should focus on understanding the emotional needs of their users. Use surveys, feedback loops, and customer journey mapping to identify the emotions that drive users to your product. For example, social platforms tap into users’ fear of missing out (FOMO), while fitness apps often address feelings of guilt or motivation.
2. Action: Making It Easy for Users to Engage
The second step is action, the behavior that follows the trigger. For a product to form a habit, the desired action needs to be simple and easy to perform. From a management standpoint, it’s crucial to minimize barriers that might prevent the user from taking that action—whether it’s clicking a button, making a purchase, or engaging with content.
The Fogg Behavior Model in Management
The Fogg Behavior Model offers valuable insights into user actions. It shows that for any action to occur, three factors must converge: motivation, ability, and a trigger.
- Motivation: How badly does the user want to take the action? Are your product’s benefits clear and compelling?
- Ability: How easy is the action to perform? Are there unnecessary steps or complexities that discourage the user from completing the action?
- Trigger: Is there a well-timed external or internal trigger to prompt the action?
- Implementation Tip: Managers should focus on simplifying the user experience. Whether it’s reducing the number of steps in a checkout process or making it easier to sign up for a service, the goal is to lower the effort required to take action. You can also apply A/B testing to find the optimal level of simplicity.
3. Variable Rewards: Keeping Users Engaged with Unpredictability
Once users take the desired action, they must be rewarded. But here’s where a key insight from the Hooked Model comes into play: variable rewards are far more effective than fixed rewards. The unpredictability of the reward keeps users engaged and eager to return, as it taps into their desire for novelty and excitement.
From a management perspective, this is where you can inject creativity into your product or service design. The human brain craves the unknown, and by incorporating variability, you can keep users hooked.
Types of Variable Rewards
There are three main categories of variable rewards that managers can apply:
- Rewards of the Tribe: These are rewards rooted in social interaction. Social media platforms thrive on these by offering likes, comments, and shares that make users feel validated. As a manager, you can build community-driven engagement within your product, such as forums or user-generated content, to tap into these rewards.
- Rewards of the Hunt: These rewards are tied to the search for information or resources. For instance, news apps offer fresh articles, while e-commerce sites use discounts and deals to keep users engaged. By offering ever-changing content or incentives, you can keep customers coming back.
- Rewards of the Self: These rewards focus on personal achievement. Users are driven by the desire to master something or achieve goals, which is why apps like Duolingo and Fitbit are so effective. From a strategic standpoint, implementing progress tracking, badges, or achievements can be a powerful way to increase user investment.
- Implementation Tip: Managers should use data analytics to understand which types of variable rewards resonate best with their target audience. Whether through personalization, surprise rewards, or gamification, keeping users excited about what comes next is key to fostering long-term engagement.
4. Investment: Encouraging Users to Commit
The final step in the Hooked Model is investment. This refers to the time, effort, or resources that users put into a product, which makes them more likely to return. Investments don’t provide immediate rewards but increase the likelihood of future engagement. For managers, this step is about encouraging customers to invest in your product in a way that strengthens their commitment.
Types of Customer Investments
- Data Input: When users create accounts, fill out profiles, or save preferences, they’re investing data into your product. The more personal information they provide, the more personalized and sticky your product becomes.
- Content Creation: Platforms like Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok leverage user-generated content. Users who upload videos or photos are not just consuming the product—they’re contributing to it, making it harder to leave.
- Building Relationships: Social connections, such as followers or friends, create an emotional investment. Once users have built relationships on your platform, they are more likely to stay engaged.
- Implementation Tip: Managers should design features that encourage users to invest in the platform, whether through creating content, customizing their experiences, or building social networks. The more users invest, the more difficult it becomes for them to abandon your product for a competitor.
How the Hooked Model Impacts Business Strategy
For managers and marketers, the Hooked Model isn’t just a tool for product design—it’s a powerful framework that can influence broader business strategies, from customer acquisition to retention. Here’s why this model is essential:
- Cost-Effective User Retention: Acquiring new customers is expensive, but keeping them is far more cost-effective. By designing habit-forming products, businesses can reduce churn and increase customer lifetime value without spending heavily on marketing to bring users back.
- Personalization and Data-Driven Strategies: The Hooked Model encourages managers to focus on personalized user experiences. As customers invest more in your product, you gather valuable data that can be used to tailor content, offers, and interactions to keep them engaged.
- Building Competitive Advantage: Companies that successfully implement the Hooked Model gain a competitive edge. Habit-forming products become harder for competitors to disrupt, as users become emotionally and practically invested in the product.
Examples of the Hooked Model in Action Based on my Observation
LinkedIn leverages both external and internal triggers, such as email notifications and professional networking opportunities. The action—checking updates or connecting with colleagues—is simple, and the variable rewards come in the form of new connections or engagement on posts. Users invest time by building profiles, expanding their network, and posting content, which keeps them coming back.
Netflix
Netflix uses external triggers like recommendations and reminders to re-engage users. The action of clicking “play” is effortless, and the variable rewards are unpredictable—users never know if the next show will be a hit. Netflix also encourages users to invest by building personalized watch lists and recommendations based on viewing history, making it hard to switch to another service.
Author’s Final Thoughts
The Hooked Model provides managers with a clear, actionable framework for designing products that form habits and drive long-term engagement. By understanding and applying the principles of triggers, actions, variable rewards, and investments, managers can create products that not only attract customers but keep them coming back—leading to higher retention, customer loyalty, and business growth.
If you’re a manager looking to make your product more engaging, consider how the Hooked Model can be integrated into your strategy. It’s a long-term investment in customer behavior that pays off with increased engagement and a stronger competitive position.