working draft — gets better as I learn

Answer the
scary questions.

The FAQ is the most-read, least-considered section on most business sites. People open it while they’re DECIDING — and most businesses greet them with softballs. Mine say things like “we don’t do weddings” and “nobody staffs the booth, on purpose.” Those answers close more deals than the capability list ever has. Here’s how to write yours.

Companion to Guide No. 3: the checklist earns attention; the honest FAQ converts it.

The section people
actually read.

It’s a trust engine, not a filler section

Nobody reads an FAQ casually — they read it while deciding whether to trust you with money. That makes it the highest-leverage copy on the site, and most businesses spend it answering questions nobody asked. Treat every slot like it costs something, because it does.

Answer what they’re afraid to ask

Price (even when the honest answer is “it depends — here’s exactly what it depends on”). What happens when something goes wrong. What you’re not good at. The question behind the question is always “can I trust you?” — and only uncomfortable answers prove it.

The honest exclusion is your best salesman

“We don’t do weddings.” “Nobody staffs it — by design.” “We’re not a backdrop warehouse.” Saying what you DON’T do disqualifies the wrong customers before they cost you both, and makes every remaining claim believable. Bonus: the exclusion routes a referral to a peer who does do it — the bench gets fed.

Every answer routes somewhere

An answer that just ends is a dead end in your highest-intent real estate. Every answer should finish with a door: a tool, a booking link, a checklist, a cross-referral. Rule of thumb — if the reader finishes an answer with nothing to click, you owed them one more sentence.

Write from the inbox, not the imagination

The real FAQ already exists — it’s in your email, your DMs, your phone calls. If you’ve typed the same answer twice, it’s an FAQ entry. If a new question starts repeating, the page updates that week. An FAQ written from imagined questions reads like it; one mined from real ones reads like you’ve been listening.

Let the robots read it too

Structure the page so search engines can lift your questions straight into results (native accordions plus FAQ markup — your web person will know, or ask me). The honest answers then do their work before anyone even reaches your site. Just keep the markup and the page saying the same thing.

Build the FAQ
they came for.

if you’ve answered it twice by email, it’s an FAQ entry

Mine

The questions already exist — collect them.

  • Pull the last 20 inquiry emails/calls and list every question actually asked
  • Write down the three questions you dread answering — those go in first
  • Ask your last five customers what they almost didn’t ask about
  • Note the question behind each question (usually: can I trust you, what will this cost me)

Answer

Honestly — including the disqualifiers.

  • Answer price honestly, even if the honest answer is what it depends on
  • Write your exclusions: what you don’t do, who you’re not for — plainly
  • Add the “when something goes wrong” answer: your actual make-it-right process
  • Read each answer aloud — cut anything you wouldn’t say to a customer’s face

Route

No dead ends in high-intent real estate.

  • End every answer with a door: tool, link, checklist, or referral
  • Point each exclusion at someone who DOES do it — feed the bench
  • Check the whole page answers “what should I do next?” at least three ways
  • Put the ask-us-directly line at the bottom for everything you didn’t cover

Maintain

A living document, not a launch task.

  • Set the rule: answered twice by email = added to the page that week
  • Review quarterly: retire questions nobody asks anymore
  • Keep the search markup in sync whenever an answer changes
  • Track which answers convert (or just ask customers what they read)

Or skip the
expensive drafts.

Every box above is doable solo — I’m not gatekeeping, the whole guide is free on purpose. But solo means you pay full tuition on each lesson: the wrong first hire, the package priced from fear, the move made a year too late. Fail-fast keeps the tuition survivable; it never makes it free.

A mentor doesn’t do the work for you. They’ve already eaten those mistakes, so you get to skip the drafts that only teach you what not to do. The guide hands you the map; someone who’s done it hands you their reps.

That’s the oldest shortcut there is — ask someone who’s been down the road before. Me, or anyone in your corner who has. (No one on your bench yet? Guide No. 6 is about building it.)

the checklist is free. the reps behind it weren’t.

Ask someone who’s done it

Scared of
an answer?

The question you’re avoiding on your FAQ is usually the one your business needs to answer internally first. That’s a genuinely useful conversation — bring it.