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DOCKED · ANALYSIS COMPLETE
instagram·SCAN COMPLETE
@thesistershoppers
20 videos analyzed · 18 patterns surfaced
Median views
118.2K
Top outlier
6.1M
51.4× baseline
Hook score (avg)
Top pattern
Content
18 insights
PATTERN #01 · HOOK
95%
Open with slam/impact pattern interrupts in the first 0.5 seconds using high-contrast visuals that stop scroll behavior, not flat-lay product reveals.
DO THIS: Film product being slammed, dropped, or dramatically revealed on counter in first cut. Use high-contrast colors and 0.5-1s duration maximum for opening shot.
hook
PATTERN #02 · SCRIPT
93%
Lead with identity-trigger hook words that name specific pain points, not generic product categories or sale events.
DO THIS: Write opening line that directly names viewer's frustration or identity trait in first 3 seconds. Use format: 'The [problem area] hack I wish I knew' or 'Because [personality trait] is NOT in my vocabulary.'
script
PATTERN #03 · EDITING
91%
Sync cuts to physical product sounds and emotional payoff moments at 0.8-1.2s intervals, not just rapid cutting for speed.
DO THIS: Cut exactly when product makes satisfying sound (slam, click, spin, clack). Time cuts to 0.8-1.2s intervals but only cut on audio peak or visual satisfaction moment.
editing
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20 videos analyzed
Click a tile for per-video scores and what AI noticed

About this Instagram analysis of @thesistershoppers

This is a complete pattern breakdown of thesistershoppers's Instagram content, built by analyzing 20 of @thesistershoppers's most recent videos end-to-end with vision-language models, transcript analysis, and per-second hook scoring. Every video was scored for hook strength, pacing rhythm, retention curve, on-screen text density, and emotional beat structure, then compared against the creator's own baseline so the patterns surfaced are statistically significant for this account specifically — not genericInstagram advice.

The result is a replication playbook: what thesistershoppers does in their viral hits that they don't do in their flops. Hook openers, cut cadence, narrative structure, CTA placement, music BPM, caption tone — all extracted automatically and ranked by how much they correlate with the outlier-high video group.

If you're researching how @thesistershoppers grew on Instagram, what makes their videos go viral, or how to apply their playbook to your own niche, the patterns above are the answer. 18 replication patterns are tagged with confidence scores so you know which ones are load-bearing and which are tendency-level.

Key patterns from this analysis

Open with slam/impact pattern interrupts in the first 0.5 seconds using high-contrast visuals that stop scroll behavior, not flat-lay product reveals.
Film product being slammed, dropped, or dramatically revealed on counter in first cut. Use high-contrast colors and 0.5-1s duration maximum for opening shot.
Lead with identity-trigger hook words that name specific pain points, not generic product categories or sale events.
Write opening line that directly names viewer's frustration or identity trait in first 3 seconds. Use format: 'The [problem area] hack I wish I knew' or 'Because [personality trait] is NOT in my vocabulary.'
Sync cuts to physical product sounds and emotional payoff moments at 0.8-1.2s intervals, not just rapid cutting for speed.
Cut exactly when product makes satisfying sound (slam, click, spin, clack). Time cuts to 0.8-1.2s intervals but only cut on audio peak or visual satisfaction moment.
Target universal pain points that create 'sending to friend who [specific problem]' sharing behavior, not lifestyle aspirations.
Choose products that solve everyday frustrations everyone recognizes (laundry disasters, warm drinks, cluttered spaces) rather than aesthetic upgrades or smart home luxuries.
Combine ASMR sensory triggers with emotional relief hooks simultaneously, not ASMR alone for aesthetic retention.
Record prominent product sounds (spinning, clicking, pouring) while voicing specific emotional frustration it solves. Layer satisfying audio over problem-statement hook.
Don't use longer explanatory text overlays or generic sale-event framing that lacks emotional specificity.
Limit text overlays to 3-5 words maximum that create curiosity gaps or identity triggers. Avoid 'AMAZON Big Spring Sale' or feature-list text.
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