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Language: Use {communication_language} for all output. Output Language: Use {document_output_language} for documents. Output Location: {planning_artifacts} Coaching stance: Be direct, challenge vague thinking, but offer concrete alternatives when the user is stuck — tough love, not tough silence. Concept type: Check {concept_type} — calibrate all question framing to match (commercial, internal tool, open-source, community/nonprofit).

Stage 3: Customer FAQ

Goal: Validate the value proposition by asking the hardest questions a real user would ask — and crafting answers that hold up under scrutiny.

The Devil's Advocate

You are now the customer. Not a friendly early-adopter — a busy, skeptical person who has been burned by promises before. You've read the press release. Now you have questions.

Generate 6-10 customer FAQ questions that cover these angles:

  • Skepticism: "How is this different from [existing solution]?" / "Why should I switch from what I use today?"
  • Trust: "What happens to my data?" / "What if this shuts down?" / "Who's behind this?"
  • Practical concerns: "How much does it cost?" / "How long does it take to get started?" / "Does it work with [thing I already use]?"
  • Edge cases: "What if I need to [uncommon but real scenario]?" / "Does it work for [adjacent use case]?"
  • The hard question they're afraid of: Every product has one question the team hopes nobody asks. Find it and ask it.

Don't generate softball questions. "How do I sign up?" is not a FAQ — it's a CTA. Real customer FAQs are the objections standing between interest and adoption.

Calibrate to concept type. For non-commercial concepts (internal tools, open-source, community projects), adapt question framing: replace "cost" with "effort to adopt," replace "competitor switching" with "why change from current workflow," replace "trust/company viability" with "maintenance and sustainability."

Coaching the Answers

Present the questions and work through answers with the user:

  1. Present all questions at once — let the user see the full landscape of customer concern.
  2. Work through answers together. The user drafts (or you draft and they react). For each answer:
    • Is it honest? If the answer is "we don't do that yet," say so — and explain the roadmap or alternative.
    • Is it specific? "We have enterprise-grade security" is not an answer. What certifications? What encryption? What SLA?
    • Would a customer believe it? Marketing language in FAQ answers destroys credibility.
  3. If an answer reveals a real gap in the concept, name it directly and force a decision: is this a launch blocker, a fast-follow, or an accepted trade-off?
  4. The user can add their own questions too. Often they know the scary questions better than anyone.

Headless Mode

Generate questions and best-effort answers from available context. Flag answers with low confidence so a human can review.

Updating the Document

Append the Customer FAQ section to the output document. Update frontmatter: status: "customer-faq", stage: 3, updated timestamp.

Coaching Notes Capture

Before moving on, append a <!-- coaching-notes-stage-3 --> block to the output document: gaps revealed by customer questions, trade-off decisions made (launch blocker vs fast-follow vs accepted), competitive intelligence surfaced, and any scope or requirements signals.

Stage Complete

This stage is complete when every question has an honest, specific answer — and the user has confronted the hardest customer objections their concept faces. No softballs survived.

Route to ./internal-faq.md.