In its purest form, a clicker is not used with a static release; what LongStick said: you hit anchor, then a slight expansion that triggers the click, which triggers the shot, which would be dynamic, not static. It would work well for a draw check, however, if you set it to click right at the point where you reach your proper anchor. The only problem there is if you do expand after anchor and do it in different amounts from shot to shot, but you said you use a static release so that shouldn't be an issue. I haven't used a clicker, so let me ask something: will it click again if you creep down past the original click point (I know the kind of clicker used on trad bows is not the kind Oly archers use, which would not click again)? If it did that, you would know for sure if you are creeping and it would be an excellent draw check. The whole idea of the clicker, besides training a consistent draw length, is to take your mind off the issue of whether to let it go, so target panic doesn't take over. It clicks, it's gone, not matter what, but it doesn't go until it clicks. In other words, the shot execution takes priority, rather than the ultimate result, which is what really causes target panic: fear of an unwanted result. You either can't let it go because the sight picture won't tell you what you want to see (moreso with sights), or you dump it because you can't stand the tension the fear of missing causes and you say to hell with it the second you see what appears to be the correct sight picture. If you focus on the process, and not the result, you will have taken a big step towards beating target panic.