Short videos live or die in the first seconds. The right music makes people stop, feel something, and take action (save, follow, use your sound). Here’s how to make that happen:

What makes a sound “sticky”

  • Strong first beat: Start with a clear pulse in the first 1–2 seconds. Time your first cut or on-screen moment to that beat.
  • Set-up → payoff: Give listeners a quick pattern, then twist it (a drop, a filter sweep, a lyric flip). That tiny surprise is your hook.
  • Repeat on purpose: Short, loop-friendly phrases (2–4 bars) help people recognize the sound and want to hear it again.
  • Earworm traits: Medium-fast tempo, simple melody with one memorable move, and crisp syllables that punch through phone speakers.
  • Match the mood: Upbeat tracks energize reveals and product shots; slower or moodier cues fit storytime and close-ups.

A 30-second build that works

  1. 0–2s: Grab attention – Hit the beat immediately; show a bold visual or lyric line on the first downbeat.
  2. 2–8s: Set the pattern – Let your hook play once; keep captions short and on-beat.
  3. 8–12s: Flip it – Drop the twist (transition, reveal, gag).
  4. 12–30s: Loop & vary – Repeat the hook with tiny changes so it stays fresh and loopable.

Tip: End where you began so the video loops cleanly. Replays = free extra exposure.