
The Role of Investment in Habit-Forming Products
Investment is the fourth phase of the Hook Model, focusing on how a user’s contributions (time, data, effort, money, social capital) increase the value and stickiness of a product, making it more like...
17 Elo 20259min

Designing and Matching the Right Variable Rewards
Selecting and integrating the correct type of variable reward, tailored to your product’s use-case and user psychology, is essential for forming meaningful, lasting habits—misaligned or weak rewards w...
16 Elo 202511min

Finite vs Infinite Variability in Products
The distinction between finite and infinite variability shapes how long a product remains engaging—finite variability products grow stale, while infinite variability keeps users returning.
16 Elo 20258min

Autonomy and Ethical Use of Variable Rewards
Maintaining a sense of autonomy is crucial—users must feel that they freely choose to engage, as coercive or overbearing variable rewards can provoke resistance and diminish long-term engagement.
16 Elo 20259min

Three Types of Variable Rewards: Tribe, Hunt, and Self
Habit-forming products use three main categories of variable reward—rewards of the tribe (social), hunt (material/informational), and self (intrinsic mastery)—to engage and retain users.
15 Elo 202511min

Vitamins vs. Painkillers: The Habit Shift
A framework distinguishing between 'vitamin' (nice-to-have) and 'painkiller' (must-have) products, and how habit formation can turn vitamins into painkillers.
15 Elo 202511min

The Power of Variable Reward
Variable reward is the third phase in the Hook Model, describing how products use unpredictable, enticing outcomes to reinforce user engagement and habit formation.
6 Elo 20258min





















