Interview-Style Doc Building
The user's preferred mode for creating durable strategic docs. AI does NOT propose content — AI asks one question, the user answers, AI patches the file, AI asks the next question. The file IS the conversation's output, updated incrementally.
When to Use
- Building a new SSOT file (life priorities, life vision, principles, frameworks, ranked lists).
- Filling out a structured doc the user explicitly wants to author themselves.
- Quarterly/annual reviews where the user's words go into the file.
NOT for: day planning (use day-plan), task triage (organize-tasks), or anything where AI proposes content first.
The Loop
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Create the file with a skeleton (header, sections, "to be filled in" placeholders). Single
write_file for the new file. After this, NEVER overwrite — only patch.
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Ask ONE question. Concise. Specific. Single-faceted. Open-ended where possible.
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Wait for the answer. Don't ask the next question yet.
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Patch the file with the user's answer in the correct section.
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Re-ask — next question, or follow-up if the answer was incomplete.
- Repeat until the file is complete.
Hard Rules
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One question at a time. Never dump multiple questions in a single message. The user has flagged this.
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Patch, don't overwrite. After the initial skeleton, use
patch for every update. Never write_file to an existing doc.
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Update the file BEFORE asking the next question. Order: receive answer → patch file → ask next question. Not the reverse.
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Lists from the user are UNORDERED SETS. When the user lists items in response to "which X should we cover?" or "what are the Ys?", that is a SET, not a ranking. Never infer rank, priority, or sequence from the order they typed them. If you need ordering, ask explicitly: "Which of these is #1?"
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Ask dynamics, not names. When the user references a person, don't ask "who is X?" — ask about the role/dynamic.
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No snark, no attitude, no filler. Concise questions, concise acknowledgments.
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No speculative additions. Don't invent sections, edge cases, or "anything else?" prompts unless the user asks.
Question Design
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Domain-discovery, not confirmation. "What wins against everything else?" — not "Is Business #1?"
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Surface new reality. Each question should pull out info AI doesn't already have.
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Engine-move framing where applicable. "What's the thing that, if true, makes the rest obvious?"
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Concrete over abstract. "What's #2 — the domain that wins against everything except #1?" beats "Tell me about your second priority."
File Patching Pattern
After each answer:
- Read the relevant section (if not already in context).
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patch with old_string = placeholder or previous entry, new_string = updated content with the user's words preserved.
- Confirm the diff. Move on.
For ranked lists, append one rank at a time:
1. **Business** — Q2 #1 goal: ...
2. **Health** — get below 81.0 kg, sleep 9h/day, ...
Each rank gets patched in as the user confirms it.
Common Pitfalls
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Assuming order from a set. The user lists "A, B, C, D" → AI writes "1. A, 2. B, 3. C, 4. D" → the user flags it. ALWAYS confirm rank explicitly.
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Asking too many questions at once. Even bundling 2 violates the rule.
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Overwriting the file instead of patching specific sections — destroys prior content.
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Adding AI-generated content to fill out sections. Sections stay empty until the user provides the content.
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Skipping the file update between Q&A pairs — the doc falls out of sync.
Pairing with Other Skills
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day-plan — different pattern (task triage), not interview-style.
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organize-tasks — Todoist-specific.
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memory-management — separate from this; persona/preferences go to memory.
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.