Skills Artificial Intelligence Generate Deep Research Prompt Brief

Generate Deep Research Prompt Brief

v20260707
research-prompt
This skill converts ambiguous or general research needs into a single, highly precise, self-contained prompt. It guides the user to define the project context, the core question, and specific sub-questions, ensuring the resulting prompt is rigorous enough for deep, multi-source AI research, minimizing ambiguity and guesswork.
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Overview

Research Prompt

When to Use

  • Use when the user wants a deep-research brief or researcher prompt.
  • Use when a vague research question needs to become one precise self-contained paragraph.

Goal: turn a vague research need into ONE self-contained paragraph that a researcher with zero prior knowledge of the project can act on with zero back-and-forth.

Rules

  • One paragraph. No headers, no bullet list in the deliverable.
  • Prompt the job, not the topic. Give search handles (timeframe, ranking, source type, decision logic) — not just a subject.
  • Assume zero prior knowledge. Write for a researcher who has never heard of the project. Open by explaining, in plain English, what the project/product is, why it exists, and the current situation — so they understand what's going on, what we need, and why we need it.
  • Lead with the goal + decision. Right after that explainer, state the single question the research must answer and the decision/use it informs.
  • Embed all context. Names, dates, product, prior known facts, constraints. The researcher must not need to ask anything or guess.
  • Number the sub-questions inline (1, 2, 3…) so coverage is explicit. Keep to 3–6. One mission per prompt — don't cram unrelated questions.
  • State constraints. What to include, what to avoid (e.g. "only non-Chinese competitors", "no marketing fluff").
  • Source hierarchy. Prefer primary sources (official docs, GitHub, papers, filings, changelogs); forums/X/Reddit are weak signal only, never factual proof.
  • Contradiction handling. If sources conflict, separate confirmed facts / inference / unresolved uncertainty — don't force fake consensus. Flag low-confidence claims for verification.
  • Completion bar (define "done"). Don't stop at the first plausible answer. Corroborate each key claim with multiple independent primary sources where they exist; where sources are scarce, say so explicitly instead of padding. Keep going until every numbered sub-question is covered to this bar.
  • Gap round before finishing. Require a final self-critique pass: list gaps, contradictions, and any single-source claims, then run another round of searches to close them — repeat until clean.
  • Constrain output hard, method loosely. Be strict on the deliverable; leave the search path flexible so the researcher can explore.
  • Demand a fixed output per finding: source link + specific claim + one-line "why it matters / why a viewer should care".
  • Verifiable, citable facts only. No opinions.
  • Last sentence: instruct them to output everything into a single detailed markdown file.

Process

  1. Pull context from the relevant project files / conversation (dates, names, known facts, audience, end use), and write a 1–2 sentence plain-English explainer of what the project is and why it exists for a reader who knows nothing.
  2. Identify the ONE question the research answers.
  3. Draft 3–6 numbered sub-questions that fully cover it.
  4. Add include/avoid constraints + the per-finding output format.
  5. Compress to one clean paragraph. Cut filler.

Template

[For a reader with zero prior knowledge: in 1–2 plain-English sentences, what the project/product is, why it exists, and the current situation.] Research [TOPIC + key identifying facts] to answer one question: [THE QUESTION] — for [DECISION / END USE]. Find: (1) …; (2) …; (3) …; (4) …. [Constraints: include X, avoid Y.] Prefer primary sources; treat forums/social as weak signal only; if sources conflict, separate fact from inference and flag what needs verification. Don't stop at the first plausible answer: corroborate each key claim with multiple independent primary sources where they exist (and say so explicitly where they don't), continuing until every numbered question is covered to that bar. Before finishing, do a self-critique pass — list gaps, contradictions, and any single-source claims, then run another round of searches to close them, repeating until clean. For each point, give the source link, the specific claim, and a one-line "why it matters". No marketing fluff — verifiable, citable facts only. Output everything into a single detailed markdown file.

Executing the prompt

To run the finished prompt with an AI researcher, execute it via DeepAPI POST /v1/research/deep — follow the deep-research skill.

Limitations

  • Adapted from davidondrej/skills; verify local paths, tools, credentials, and agent features before acting.
  • For commands, remote access, scheduling, browser automation, or file-changing workflows, get explicit user approval and confirm the target environment first.
Info
Name research-prompt
Version v20260707
Size 5KB
Updated At 2026-07-08
Language