In more detail
The word is a blend of "list" and "article." Listicles work because the format is easy to scan, the headline sets a clear expectation (you know exactly how many points are coming), and each item stands on its own. That makes them simple to skim on a phone and easy to share. On social media, listicles show up as carousel slides, X or LinkedIn threads, caption breakdowns, and short video lists, where each item maps to one slide or one beat. The risk is thin content: a list with 10 shallow items is weaker than 5 with real substance behind each one.
Example
A skincare brand posts an Instagram carousel titled "6 ingredients that calm redness." Slide 1 is the cover with the title, and slides 2 through 7 each cover one ingredient with a short why. The number in the headline tells people what they are getting, and the one-idea-per-slide structure keeps them swiping.
FAQ