--- name: discovery-interview-guide description: "Create a structured user discovery interview guide with screener questions, a discussion guide, and a synthesis framework. Use when planning user interviews, customer discovery sessions, Jobs-to-be-Done research, or problem validation. Produces a complete guide covering warm-up, problem exploration, and a per-session synthesis template." --- # Discovery Interview Guide Skill Design interviews that surface genuine insight — not validation of what you already believe. Every guide follows a story-based, past-behaviour-focused structure. ## Core Principles 1. **Never ask about the future.** "Would you use X?" tells you nothing. "Tell me about the last time you did X" tells you everything. 2. **Interview for behaviour, not opinion.** Opinions are cheap. Behaviour is evidence. 3. **The 5 Whys.** Every surface answer is a door. Keep opening doors. 4. **Confirm the problem before exploring the solution.** Never show a prototype until you've confirmed the pain exists unprompted. ## Interview Structure (60 minutes standard) ### 1. Warm-Up (5 min) Build rapport. Get them talking. Don't discuss the topic yet. - "Tell me a bit about your role and what a typical week looks like for you." - "What tools do you rely on most day-to-day?" ### 2. Context Setting (10 min) Understand their world before diving into the problem space. - "Walk me through how you currently [handle the domain area]." - "What does that process look like from start to finish?" - "Who else is involved when you do this?" ### 3. Problem Exploration (25 min) — THE CORE Surface pain without leading. - "Tell me about the last time you had to [relevant task]. What happened?" - "What was the hardest part of that?" - "How did you handle it?" - "What did you try before settling on that approach?" - "What does it cost you when this goes wrong?" (time, money, stress, reputation) - "If you could wave a magic wand and change one thing about this process, what would it be?" ⚠️ **Do not mention your product or feature during this phase.** ### 4. Current Solutions (10 min) Understand the competitive landscape from their perspective. - "What tools or workarounds do you use today for this?" - "What do you like about [current solution]? What frustrates you?" - "Have you tried other approaches? What happened?" ### 5. Wrap-Up (10 min) - "Is there anything about this topic we haven't covered that you think I should know?" - "Is there anyone else you'd recommend I speak to?" - "Would you be open to a follow-up if I have more questions?" --- ## Output Format ### Discovery Interview Guide — [Topic] — [Date] **Research Goal:** [One sentence: what decision will this research inform?] **Target Participant Profile:** [Role, company size, behaviour qualifier] **Screener Questions** (for recruiting): 1. [Question] → Must answer: [Y/N or specific] 2. [Question] → Must answer: [Y/N or specific] 3. [Disqualifier question] → Disqualify if: [answer] **Interview Guide:** [Full structured guide using the format above, customised to the specific research topic] **Synthesis Template** (fill after each interview): - Key quote: "[verbatim]" - Core pain: [1 sentence] - Current workaround: [what they're doing today] - Intensity (1–5): [how painful is this?] - Surprise/unexpected finding: [anything that challenged your assumptions] **Pattern Detection** (after 5+ interviews): - Pain mentioned by [X/N] participants: [theme] - Workaround used by [X/N] participants: [theme] - Most emotionally charged moment in interviews: [observation] --- ## Required Inputs Ask the user for these if not provided: - **Research topic or question** (what decision will this inform?) - **Target participant profile** (role, behaviour, company type) - **Session length** (30 / 45 / 60 / 90 minutes) - **Number of interviews planned** - **Known hypotheses to test or avoid confirming prematurely** (optional) ## Quality Checks - [ ] No future-tense questions ("would you...") — only past-behaviour questions - [ ] Product or solution not mentioned until after pain is confirmed - [ ] Questions open-ended (cannot be answered yes/no) - [ ] Synthesis template included for per-session notes - [ ] Screener questions identify and disqualify wrong participants ## Guidelines - Recommend 5–8 interviews to reach thematic saturation for most discovery questions - Always record with permission — transcripts beat notes - If user is new to interviewing: remind them to stay silent after asking a question (aim for 80/20 participant-to-interviewer talking ratio) - Never synthesise during the interview — do it after, when you can look across sessions - Flag confirmation bias: if user writes questions that lead toward a predetermined answer, rewrite them as open-ended alternatives ## Anti-Patterns - [ ] Do not use future-tense questions ("Would you use this?") — hypothetical responses do not predict real behaviour and produce false confidence in an idea - [ ] Do not mention your product or solution before problem exploration is complete — doing so anchors the participant's responses and invalidates the discovery - [ ] Do not synthesise across fewer than 5 interviews — themes from 2–3 interviews reflect anecdote, not pattern; wait for saturation - [ ] Do not write screener questions that are too easy to pass — if participants can guess the "right" answer, you will recruit the wrong people - [ ] Do not treat participant opinions as evidence of future behaviour — what people say they will do consistently diverges from what they actually do