Write a feature rejection response
You're saying no to a feature request from a major customer or a senior stakeholder. The default email sounds dismissive. This writes a rejection that acknowledges the need, explains the decision, offers alternatives, and preserves the relationship.
Rejections That Preserve the Relationship
Feature rejections that come across as dismissive cost future signal — the customer stops sending you the next idea. Intercom's customer communication writing and First Round Review on product communication both argue for explicit revisit triggers: the customer needs a signal that their request is heard and conditional, not permanently declined.
How the Write a feature rejection response Prompt Works
The prompt structures the rejection into six sections with tone rules (no over-apology, no blame-priority, no vague future). The "one sentence most likely to feel dismissive" output is the empathy check — most dismissive rejections have one identifiable sentence doing the damage.
When to Use It
- A major customer has asked for something outside scope.
- A senior stakeholder pushed a feature and you need to push back respectfully.
- A CS team needs a rejection template for common asks.
- A new PM is learning to say no well.
- A roadmap communication session requires explicit non-commitments.
Common Pitfalls
- Blame priority. "It's not a priority" sounds like "you are not a priority." Be specific about strategy fit.
- No revisit trigger. Without a trigger, the customer sees permanent decline. Offer conditional reconsideration.
- Over-apologizing. Excessive apology undermines confidence. Be direct and kind.
Sources
- Intercom Blog — Intercom
- First Round Review — First Round
- Radical Candor — Kim Scott
- Kim Scott — Kim Malone Scott
Sources
- Intercom Blog — Intercom
- First Round Review — First Round
- Radical Candor — Kim Scott
- Kim Scott — Kim Malone Scott
Prompt details
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Open the live prompt detail page for the full workflow.