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How to Become a Storytelling Genius (Dopamine Ladders)

By Kallaway

Summary

Topics Covered

  • Stimulation Triggers Subconscious Dopamine
  • Curiosity Loops Evolved Brain Hack
  • Anticipation Peaks Dopamine Pre-Answer
  • Affection Demands Personality Over Faceless
  • Revelation Builds Pavlovian Superfans

Full Transcript

If you want to get people truly addicted to watching your content, there's one trick you should be using every single time. It's called the dopamine ladder.

time. It's called the dopamine ladder.

And if you can understand this one framework, you'll become a master of attention overnight. Now, I know this

attention overnight. Now, I know this works because content is all I do all day long. I have a million followers.

day long. I have a million followers.

I've done billions of views. And I've

spent years studying exactly how to use psychology to grow faster on social media and YouTube. So, in this video, I'm going to break down the six levels of the dopamine ladder. how it works,

why it works, and most importantly, the specific tactics for how you can use it to your advantage. All right. Now,

before I explain the dopamine ladder, it's critical to understand the psychology of how attention actually works. Like, what is really going on in

works. Like, what is really going on in a viewer's brain when they watch a video? And this alone will be a huge

video? And this alone will be a huge unlock for you. There are six stages of a viewer's journey when watching content that release increasing amounts of dopamine. And if you can ascend them

dopamine. And if you can ascend them through all six stages, they will have watched your entire video and want to come back to watch more. Now, eventually

if you get them to the end of the dopamine ladder and you do that consistently, you will create a Pavlovian effect. And this really is the

Pavlovian effect. And this really is the ultimate goal if you're making content.

Pavlov is the famous scientist that proved classical conditioning. Every

time he rang this bell, he gave a dog food so that eventually whenever the bell rang, the dog's mouth would water because it represented that sound with getting food. You're really going after

getting food. You're really going after this same thing when it comes to content. Because the ultimate sign of

content. Because the ultimate sign of attention mastery is when you can make dopamine release in the brain of a viewer just by seeing your name or face without actually watching any of your content. And if you can do that, you've

content. And if you can do that, you've basically created a super fan that will watch every single thing you make. This

is when you reach king status in attention land. Now, if you can learn to

attention land. Now, if you can learn to do this on command, you can pretty much build any business as big as you want.

It's that powerful. Okay, so the question is, what are the six levels?

And how do you make your content so that the viewer ascends through the dopamine ladder and you instill the Pavlovian response? And that's what we're going to

response? And that's what we're going to break down right now. All right, the very first rung in the dopamine ladder is the exact same for all visual content. Whether it's short form or long

content. Whether it's short form or long form, it applies the same. And this

first rung is called stimulation. Okay,

the stimulation step is what happens in the very first one to two seconds of the video. Think of stimulation like a

video. Think of stimulation like a visual stun gun that gets someone to stop and lock in on one thing. It's like

a deer in the woods noticing something out of the corner of their eye, and they can't resist the urge but to pick up their head, look, and lock in on that one spot. Now, dopamine from stimulation

one spot. Now, dopamine from stimulation comes from colors, motion, and brightness that is picked up initially from the eye. So, literally, if you show a combination of colors, motion, contrast, and brightness that is

different from what the viewer typically sees, they're going to get a hit of dopamine, and they will pause for a split second. And this is all you need

split second. And this is all you need to earn the space to get them to level two. Now, to prove this is how it works,

two. Now, to prove this is how it works, I'm going to show eight 9x6 images on the screen with colors and motion, but I'm going to blur it out so you don't know exactly what they are. I want you to look at these and tell me exactly

which one your attention goes to first.

All right. Now, for most people, these were the two that they noticed and visually focused on. See, your eyes go to the ones that have more motion, color, and brightness. That's just how your subconscious brain works. You can't

override it. And again, to prove it to you in another way, if you were to watch your social media on grayscale or black and white, I guarantee it just wouldn't be as interesting to you. What's really

happening under the hood here in your neurochemistry is that your brain is processing things in two stages. The

first stage is the rapid subconscious processing stage. It's called bottoms up

processing stage. It's called bottoms up processing. And this processing happens

processing. And this processing happens so fast in like 200 milliseconds that your eye and brain are just catching vivid colors in motion. They're not

actually comprehending what they're seeing. But knowing this is how you hack

seeing. But knowing this is how you hack people on the treadmill to pause and pay attention for a split second. So for

you, the tactical tip is that when you're making your own content, you need enough color, motion, and contrast to be able to visually stun them for the first 1 to 2 seconds. But here's the thing. If

everybody copies the exact same motion, color contrast pattern, the viewer will become desensitized because the whole feed will have it and then that will stop working. This is why coming up with

stop working. This is why coming up with your own unique visuals, your unique color palette, the motion, the aesthetic that you want is really critical because it helps you cut through the feed and trigger this subconscious stimulation.

Okay, so that's level one. Now,

stimulation is the weakest and the shortest of the dopamine releases, but it's a very important precursor like we said because if you don't trigger the focus, the rest of the levels don't even matter. All right, level two in the

matter. All right, level two in the dopamine ladder is called captivation.

And this is where the comprehension of what you say and how you say it really starts mattering. The first step was

starts mattering. The first step was literally just visual brain hacking. But

here, this is where the sauce really starts coming in. Now, captivation is the curiosity stage. Massive amounts of dopamine are released in the viewer's brain as soon as they are captivated by an open question that they ask in their

own head. Many people call this a

own head. Many people call this a curiosity loop. Your video must drive an

curiosity loop. Your video must drive an open question that puts the viewer into a loop so that they hunt for the answer.

Now, the reason curiosity loops work so well for triggering dopamine is because the human brain is a problem-solving machine. It evolved to be really good at

machine. It evolved to be really good at thinking critically and taking open complex questions and solving them. The

bigger and more non-obvious the question, the bigger the curiosity, the higher the stakes, and the more dopamine that gets released. The more relevant the question to the viewer, the bigger the curiosity, the higher the stakes, and the more dopamine that gets

released. For example, if you made a

released. For example, if you made a video that got a viewer to ask the question to themselves, hm, I wonder when the aliens are visiting Earth.

Well, this is a pretty huge question.

So, it could be very curiosityinducing.

But if they don't care about aliens, then it's not going to be relevant at all and they're going to churn. They

won't be captivated. So, tactically,

it's important to ask yourself these couple questions as you're structuring the hook to make sure you're setting up the best possible question. First, what

is the most curiosityinducing question that I could ask about this topic to trigger in the viewer's mind? And

second, how well will that question map to something the viewer cares about given the ideal avatar I think I'm attracting? And then you have to figure

attracting? And then you have to figure out what words you say and visuals you show to try to get that question to pop in their head. Now, there's two ways to get a question to implant in a viewer's mind. You could literally ask it like

mind. You could literally ask it like rhetorically the way I just did, or you can imply it with details and try to get them to put it in their own head. Either

way, as quickly as possible in the video, you need the viewer to pop a very interesting question in their mind or they're not going to be captivated. And

if the question doesn't pop or it's just not that interesting, then they're going to bounce and you have no chance. So,

for example, let's say I was scrolling the feed and I saw this really attractive person with this red and orange vivid graphic behind them that was moving. I might be stimulated enough

was moving. I might be stimulated enough from level one to pause for a second and see what they have to say. But then, if that person starts the video saying, "Here's how you do your makeup for the holidays." The questions that are going

holidays." The questions that are going to pop into my mind are the following.

How does she do her makeup? Why is she doing it like that? These are the types of questions that pop into a curious mind regardless of who it is. But for

me, I don't obviously care about the topic of makeup at all. And so that's not relevant to me and I'm churning immediately. Basically, she got me on

immediately. Basically, she got me on the stimulation and bought me into the first kind of question posing period, but then she didn't get me on the captivation. The reality is, if your

captivation. The reality is, if your hooks are not hooking, it means that the question that popped in the viewer's mind is either not relevant to them or just not interesting enough to hold them. So that's level two of the

them. So that's level two of the dopamine ladder. If you want to

dopamine ladder. If you want to captivate the viewer and get them to keep watching, you have to pop a curiosity based loop in their mind from the question. The act of opening that

the question. The act of opening that loop will release dopamine. Now, here's

a few pro tips for triggering a massive amount of curiosity in this process. For

one, you can use contrast, where you compare a known thing to an unknown thing. Or two, you can frame a super

thing. Or two, you can frame a super shocking or weird premise that they've never seen or heard before. Typically,

unknown things pop curiosity better than anything else because curious people want to know what the thing is they've never seen. All right, level three in

never seen. All right, level three in the dopamine ladder is anticipation. So

far, you've stimulated them initially to get them to give you a chance and then you've captivated them by opening a curiosity- based question in their head.

This next step, anticipation, is super powerful and this is really where people get locked in into the video.

Anticipation is what happens when a viewer begins to guess in their head what the answer might be to the question you just posed in level two. This is

essentially a mystery novel playing out in their head in real time as they watch the video. Typically, what happens is as

the video. Typically, what happens is as soon as a question pops in someone's head, they immediately are trying to anticipate what the answer might be.

It's kind of like this subconscious guessing game that goes on. Now, the

more information you give someone that helps them anticipate what the answer might be, the more curious they're going to become right up until the answer is revealed. The highest level of dopamine

revealed. The highest level of dopamine is achieved just before the answer comes. So what you want to do is give

comes. So what you want to do is give them details to get that anticipation close. Ratchet up that curiosity and

close. Ratchet up that curiosity and then just before you deliver the answer, yank it away and head fake them in another direction. Typically adding

another direction. Typically adding misdirection, non-obvious twists, and head fakes is a great way to reset the curiositybased anticipation loop. And

this will make them guess the answer or get distracted, pop a new question, and then restart the process. This is why it's called a curiosity loop. The loop

is them seesawing between question, anticipation, and answer. Or if you don't want to yank away the answer, you could give them the answer and then pop a second question right after that.

Either way, this looping game of new questions and new answers is how you build anticipation. Now, here's a big

build anticipation. Now, here's a big pro tip on anticipation. The viewer is only able to anticipate what the answer might be if they're clear on the facts that you're giving them. If you throw a bunch of rogue details in that don't

really make sense with the question or they can't understand the facts that you're presenting, they're going to get confused and bounce. So tactically for you, as you develop your story, if you want to ratchet up anticipation, you

want to ask yourself this. Based on the question the viewer should have in their head from level two, what should they be anticipating the answer to be? And based

on that answer, what additional facts or context can we give them to get them closer to it? From there, should we give them the answer or is there a way to head fake or tease them away from it to

reset that curiosity loop? This

curiosity anticipation process is kind of like the edging of the storytelling world. Now, if you've ever seen those

world. Now, if you've ever seen those visual hooks where it looks like someone's about to get hit by a car, the car is like slowly approaching. This is

using anticipation to get you to hold on. The reason these work so well is

on. The reason these work so well is because you originally see the person and the car coming and it pops the question, is that person going to get hit by a car? Is that car really going to run them over? And then as the car slowly approaches, you start

anticipating, wait, there's no way. Oh,

wait. I think they might they might be getting hit by the car. Ah, and he comes really close. That anticipation building

really close. That anticipation building is in real time working to drive that curiosity in you. It releases dopamine as you anticipate what might happen.

These are the types of hooks that play on the anticipatory instinct in your brain and they work super well at driving dopamine. All right, the next

driving dopamine. All right, the next level in the dopamine ladder, level four, is called validation. Validation

comes when you do end up giving them the answer to the question that you popped in level two. In other words, level four is you closing the loop. Now, the goal with validation is to make sure you reward or answer with something that was

nonobvious that they wouldn't have expected before. Typically, with

expected before. Typically, with entertainment content, this is the resolution of the story. You don't end it on a cliffhanger. You actually wrap up the loose ends and close the loop nicely. For example, in the case of the

nicely. For example, in the case of the incoming truck hook, usually they don't get hit by the truck and they end up being safe. And that's how you close the

being safe. And that's how you close the loop. Once that loop is closed, you

loop. Once that loop is closed, you realize the story is complete and more dopamine gets released as that's finished. On the education side, the

finished. On the education side, the validation or reward in this case would be you actually sharing the tip or the story or the recommendation that gives them concrete value that they can use to

solve a problem. If the viewer leaves this flow without the loop being closed, they're going to be unsatisfied and they won't release that final dopamine. So,

it's curiosity, question, anticipation, what could the answer be? And then

validation, giving the actual answer.

All three phases release dopamine at each time. are the first four levels we

each time. are the first four levels we just went through of the dopamine ladder. These are kind of like the base

ladder. These are kind of like the base levels that you can pull with any script and visual storytelling. And again,

those were stimulation, captivation, anticipation, and then ultimately validation. But the last two levels of

validation. But the last two levels of the dopamine ladder is really where you start building cult fandom. This is

where you ascend beyond the individual story and into the storyteller. The

first four have to do with the video itself. We'll call that the message. The

itself. We'll call that the message. The

last two are more with the messenger.

Level five is called affection. Now,

affection is the stage where the viewer starts taking a liking to the creator or personality that was delivering the story. And this is why it's kind of hard

story. And this is why it's kind of hard for Faceless content to fully ascend to that Pavlovian peak. It's easy for Faceless to get those first four levels, but it's hard when there's nothing to

like, when there's no personality to attribute that taste, trust, and like to. And this is what happens in the

to. And this is what happens in the brain. As the viewer begins to realize

brain. As the viewer begins to realize they like and trust the person that's delivering the message, more dopamine is released. And think about it, if you

released. And think about it, if you already like someone, you're going to give them a lot longer leash when you watch their content. For a stranger, you might churn right away. But if it's someone you like and you already know, there's dopamine that's being released

there that buys a lot more time of your attention. Now, as long as that viewer

attention. Now, as long as that viewer recognizes it's you, that likability will carry over from video to video. So,

of course, the million-dollar question that everyone asks is, "How do I improve my likability so that I can speed up that process to get through level five?"

And here's four ways to improve your liability. The first one, attractiveness

liability. The first one, attractiveness is a massive factor. Now, I hate to say it as someone who has a face for radio and a voice for vaudeville silent films, but the reality is when you're attractive, people just like you more.

It's subconscious and it's how humans behave. So, if you're good-looking, lean

behave. So, if you're good-looking, lean into it, show yourself more, and I guarantee the liability will go up. The

second thing that improves likability is your overall vibe. the way you look, the way you dress, the way you sit, your posture, the way you carry yourself. All

of that signals silently to someone and it goes into them deciding if they like you more or not. The third thing, smiling is great for subconscious likability. Joy is an emotion that

likability. Joy is an emotion that transfers through the camera lens. So if

you look like you're happy or passionate, people will feel that warmth themselves when they watch you. And then

fourth, and this is the easiest one, if you're making education content, if you actually solve a problem for them, max trust and likability will be transferred. The easiest way to get

transferred. The easiest way to get somebody to like you and trust you is to actually help them with something they're struggling with. Agnostic of how attractive you are, how smiley you are, etc. Number four is the strongest one.

So, likability is one of those things that you want to try to improve over time. But the reality is you don't want

time. But the reality is you don't want to force it. Just be yourself. Be

authentically passionate in what you're doing and then try to live that out. The

more value you can deliver and the more valuable you can be, the more likable and trustworthy you will seem to the viewer. All right, we've approached

viewer. All right, we've approached level six, and this is really where the Pavlovian response really starts kicking in. But before we go into that, let's

in. But before we go into that, let's just recap where we were. The first

level was stimulation. This was

subconscious. It's motion, colors, brightness. All you have to do is get

brightness. All you have to do is get somebody to focus, a little bit of dopamine released, but that's what locks them in, right? So, that's the precursor. Then, we talked about the

precursor. Then, we talked about the three levels that really have to do with the specific video and the storytelling in it. And that was captivation with

in it. And that was captivation with initial curiosity, anticipation, getting them to guess what's going to happen and maybe leading them through a head fake or zigzag on that curiosity. And then

ultimately validation, giving them the answer and closing the loop so that they get that dopamine release on the full cycle. Those were 2, three, and four.

cycle. Those were 2, three, and four.

Then level five is likability. Right? So

you've got the answer from the video, but now we've ascended beyond the message into the messenger and we're going to likability. If the viewer likes you, they'll give you more leash.

They'll have dopamine release every time they see you because they'll remember that they like you and that'll be helpful. Level six, the final level, the

helpful. Level six, the final level, the final frontier, is called revelation.

And this is really where the viewer begins to realize that you're going to be a continued source of value for them over time. Now, typically both

over time. Now, typically both entertainment and education content can ascend from level 1 to 5. But it's much easier for educational content to ascend from five to level six, revelation.

Entertainment content can only get to level six if the viewer decides that that creator is going to be a consistent source of maximum entertainment for them. Meaning, every piece of content

them. Meaning, every piece of content they see is going to for sure be above their line when it comes to entertainment. And this is just a really

entertainment. And this is just a really hard bar to achieve. Maybe Mr. Beast has this level of Pavlovian response.

Anytime someone sees his face, they know it's going to be entertaining. But if

you're an entertainment creator and you're not Mr. Beast, you're competing with Netflix, the NFL, Kaisat, Mr. Beast. It's just hard to beat the best

Beast. It's just hard to beat the best maximum bar in the entertainment category. But on the education side, if

category. But on the education side, if you solve specific problems for people that they have in their life, they will tie you with a consistent source of value for solving in that area. And when

they have this revelation that you're going to consistently help them, it releases max dopamine whenever they see you because you've trained that you equal value. That is the Pavlovian

equal value. That is the Pavlovian response. As a corlary, imagine dating

response. As a corlary, imagine dating someone and then realizing that over time after spending a lot of time with them, you always feel good and you always feel love. That means in the future whenever you hear their name, you're going to get a huge hit of

dopamine because you're going to think positively and feel those feelings again. It's the same way here with

again. It's the same way here with content. Now, the way to achieve this

content. Now, the way to achieve this level six revelation, especially with education content, is to deliver non-obvious differentiated value over and over and over. If they are deeply struggling with a problem that you talk

about, it might only take a couple of pieces of content for them to ascend from level one to six and then build that Pavlovian response. If they're not really struggling with your topic area that much and it's more of a nice to have, it might take a lot more pieces of

content for you to build that Pavlovian bond. But either way, when you can hit

bond. But either way, when you can hit this level six state, you have won the attention game because it means if they hear your name, see your face, or see your name, even without watching the content, they're going to get the

dopamine hit that leads them to watch it. All right. All right. Now, super

it. All right. All right. Now, super

quick before we end this video, I just want to show you one live example of an actual short form video and break down as I narrate through the dopamine ladder and the different levels as we ascend through them. And I'm just going to do

through them. And I'm just going to do short form video because it'll be easier to watch. And because I always do

to watch. And because I always do education examples, I'm going to do an entertainment example on this one. All

right. So, this example is from a creator named Citizen. If you don't know him, he's kind of like a musician that uses these viral stitch clips to market his music. So, we're going to pull the

his music. So, we're going to pull the video up on the side. We're going to watch it and then pause it a lot as I narrate through the different pieces.

Okay, so the first step in the dopamine ladder, as we know, is stimulation. And

this happens fast. Right away, there's a slight zoom in. You see two people hugging. You kind of see this like

hugging. You kind of see this like perspective from a car of a car. It's

something you don't normally see on the feed. That alone is all that's needed to

feed. That alone is all that's needed to give me a slight hit of dopamine and narrow my focus on the video. Next, we

go to level two, which is captivation or curiosity.

Now, as I'm watching this unfold through the first like 2, three, 4 seconds, the questions that are popping in my head is this. First, who are these people? Why

this. First, who are these people? Why

are they hugging? Do I care? This almost

made me churn cuz I was like, why do I care about this?

Then I look down and I read that little text across. It says, "Bro, what did I

text across. It says, "Bro, what did I just witness?" And that pops the

just witness?" And that pops the question in my head, "What are we about to see?" Now I'm curious again.

to see?" Now I'm curious again.

Then as the girl walks away and gets in the car, I notice the shoelace stuck in the door and I notice him noticing it.

And that pops the question, "Oh no, is he aware? Is she going to drive away?

he aware? Is she going to drive away?

What's going to happen?" Right? Three or

four rapid questions in succession. So

at this point, my curiosity is pretty high. I've got all these open questions

high. I've got all these open questions and I'm really curious to see what's going to happen. Next level three is anticipation.

So, because I see the main character and he sees that he's stuck, I'm anticipating, is he going to get out or is he going to get dragged by the car?

I'm trying to figure out what's going to happen. That's me anticipating the

happen. That's me anticipating the solution.

Now, as the car starts pulling away, I can see he's going down. So, I'm trying to anticipate what's going to happen. Is

he going to be dragged? Are they

actually going to film this? Right? I'm

still really curious. Now, level four is validation where I find out the answer.

let me off.

>> And in this case, he falls backwards like I would have expected, but then it hard cut match cuts away to him getting dragged singing a song. The audio comes in and he starts singing. That's not

what I was expecting. So, I get the validation of closing the loop that he's okay, but also this shocking headfake moment where the answer is not what I expected. And because now I know he's

expected. And because now I know he's not hurt, I get that dopamine release of that initial anticipatory loop closing.

But also, I'm kind of interested in why is he doing this? Does this music video strategy work, etc.? All right, level five now is affection. Now, here,

assuming this is the first video you've seen of this guy, you probably haven't seen enough to determine if you like or trust him or not. And with entertainment content, as I mentioned, it's a lot harder to determine affection and revelation than it would be with

education content. But I will admit, I

education content. But I will admit, I found this pretty funny and shocking, and I kind of give a hat tip to him. So,

if I saw another video from him, I'd probably watch it because I wanted to see what crazy stunt is he going to come up with next. Now, level six, the last one, is Revelation. And it would have taken me probably several other videos, but eventually I would have realized

this guy is like a viral marketer meets music, which is kind of an interesting category. And if I like marketing or

category. And if I like marketing or music or his music, I might realize every time I see one of his videos, I get entertained in this unique way and also get to see his song. So I may associate this like entertainment value

drip with him. Now, in this case, I'm not going to have the full Pavlovian effect because this is an entertainment use case, but you can imagine how this ladder would work for educational content, and if he was giving me a tip

that I could use in my life, I might have that Pavlovian effect much faster.

So, this is a great example of how the dopamine ladder works in content. And

when Citizen made this video, he specifically engineered those pieces to trigger you through those loops so that you kept watching. And I promise you, if you take any piece of educational content that has worked on you and you

analyze it in this way, going through these levels in the dopamine ladder, it'll all be there clearly why you liked it and why you kept watching. All you

have to do is figure out how to reverse engineer that when you make your content and you'll be good to go. All right,

guys. That is all I've got for this video. As a recap, we covered the full

video. As a recap, we covered the full dopamine ladder, all six levels that you need to get the maximum dopamine released in the viewer's brain and get them to keep watching for longer. This

will make them addicted to your content if you can do it consistently. Your

goal, as I just mentioned, is to use these levels, this framework, as a checkpoint, as a checklist that you can ascend the viewer through. Are you

driving the right curiosity? Are you

driving the right dopamine releases?

This is a great framework for that. As

always, guys, I'm trying my absolute best to cover the non-obvious stuff that gives you an edge when you're trying to grow on social media and YouTube. And

one last thing, if you're an entrepreneur or a business owner, I built a completely free community called Wavy World that has 65 other trainings just like this one. So if you want to learn the advanced mode of YouTube and

social media, it's in there for free.

Also, there's 37,000 other people in there that are all teamed up, partnered up, giving each other feedback. So if

you want a peer group that's in the content trenches as a business owner, they're in there as well. I've got a free invite link for you below in the description. All right, we will see you

description. All right, we will see you guys on the next video. Peace.

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