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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.

Storytelling
0 uses·Published 4/17/2026·Updated 4/17/2026

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

Sources

  1. Intercom BlogIntercom
  2. First Round ReviewFirst Round
  3. Radical CandorKim Scott
  4. Kim ScottKim Malone Scott

Prompt details

Category
Storytelling
Total uses
0
Created
4/17/2026
Last updated
4/17/2026

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