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Draft a PR/FAQ in the Amazon style

You're starting a new product and want to force clarity before anyone writes code. This drafts a working-backwards PR/FAQ — press release first, FAQ second — so you know what you're really promising customers before engineering starts.

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

Press Release First: Why Amazon's Working-Backwards Works

Working backwards from a press release forces the team to articulate what they're actually promising customers before a single line of code gets written. The Amazon PR/FAQ method — widely documented across the product community — has been adopted at many product orgs because it catches vague bets early. Paul Graham's writing on doing great work emphasizes the related discipline: if you can't state the result in a single sentence, you haven't decided what you're building.

How the Draft a PR/FAQ in the Amazon style Prompt Works

The prompt produces a 400-word customer-led press release followed by an FAQ with both external and internal questions. The "claim we're least confident we can deliver" output is the pre-launch reality check, and the "decisions still needed" list is what converts the exercise from a marketing draft into a product kickoff artifact.

When to Use It

  • A new product is being scoped and the team lacks customer-facing clarity.
  • A launch is being planned and the core promise is still vague.
  • A cross-functional team needs alignment on what the product actually is.
  • A new PM is kicking off a major initiative.
  • A leadership review needs a working-backwards artifact.

Common Pitfalls

  • Feature-lists in the PR. PRs should lead with outcomes, not feature bullets. Rewrite until every sentence describes customer benefit.
  • Skipping internal questions. External-only FAQ gives you marketing prep, not product clarity.
  • Writing it after engineering starts. The point is to force clarity before building. After the fact, it's just a press release.

Sources

Sources

  1. Y Combinator LibraryY Combinator
  2. How to Do Great WorkPaul Graham
  3. Ten Principles of Product TeamsSilicon Valley Product Group
  4. First Round ReviewFirst Round

Prompt details

Category
Storytelling
Total uses
10
Created
4/17/2026
Last updated
4/17/2026

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