The 24-year-old has taken to wearing headphones that pipe through the raucous sounds of a match day crowd while practising his shots at goal during training.
He says the work he has done since Christmas has already been reflected in his return of nine goals, two behinds (9.2) in the first three rounds, which is tracking much better than his 2010 total of 38.40.
"It's a bit left-field, practicing with headphones with a bit of crowd noise, just getting the hang of what it's like being out there in front of 50,000 or 60,000 people and getting used to the abuse and the noise that comes along with the game of football," he told afl.com.au ahead of the Magpies' round four clash with Richmond at the MCG.
"It's showing progress at the moment. The ones I've kicked from set shots have been nice kicks so far with pretty good connection.
"There's been a couple of wayward ones in there as well, which haven't escaped my mind so I go back to the drawing board with them and look through them and cut them down into minute areas."
Cloke blasts snippets of crowd noise, repeated over and over, into his ears as he lines up in front of goal in an attempt to learn how to block out the booming noise the Pies play in front of almost every week.
It is a technique that has been used by NFL teams wanting to teach their players how to focus without becoming distracted.
He has also been working closely with former Magpie Anthony Rocca and the club's development coaches over the past few months to try and overcome his previously poor conversion rate.
"[Rocca] spoke very elaborately on all the different circumstances but it was just about going back to the basics of what you learn when you're a young kid; keeping your head over it, moving through the ball, keeping your momentum," he said.
"Over the past two, two and a half years I've been working it but it's taken a turn for the better, which is nice.
"I think if you look overall, a lot of them have been on the run than set shots, which is a bit different for me than normal.
"Hopefully my accuracy can stay up around that 75 per cent range, which would be nice, and in 10 weeks time when I look at it again, it's still up there."
Cloke's sudden onset of accuracy has spread throughout the team with the Pies kicking more goals than behinds in all three games this year, whereas in 2010, they managed that feat 13 times out of 26 games with an additional one where they kicked an even amount.
He said it had been a team focus area across the summer after the Pies attracted criticism for the shortcoming last season.
"We were tossed up in the air late in the year with people saying our accuracy could cost us a grand final," he said.
"We've spent numerous hours on it as a group over the past few years and it's really starting to show now.
"Dayne Beams and myself are probably the two culprits that have pretty bad accuracy ratings but that's turned around the other way at the moment."