How to ask better anonymous questions
Most low-quality anonymous inboxes fail for one reason: the prompt is vague. When people read a broad prompt like "send me anything" they default to short jokes or low-effort replies. Better prompts create better data.
This guide gives you a repeatable framework for writing prompts that pull useful, specific feedback from your audience.
Principle 1: Ask one question at a time
Multi-part prompts force people to choose what to answer and usually reduce depth. Use one clear question for each sharing cycle.
- Weak: "What do you think about my content, style, and personality?"
- Strong: "What is one thing in my videos that feels repetitive?"
- Strong: "What topic should I explain better next week?"
Principle 2: Narrow the context
People answer better when they know the category. Add context words such as "content", "communication", "presentation", or "workflow".
- Weak: "How can I improve?"
- Strong: "How can I improve my explanation clarity in short videos?"
- Strong: "What part of my onboarding email is confusing?"
Principle 3: Ask for observable examples
Feedback without examples is hard to act on. Ask for one concrete moment, phrase, or behavior.
- "What exact sentence did I use that sounded unclear?"
- "Which post this week felt strongest, and why?"
- "Where did I lose your attention in my story?"
Prompt formats that work
Use these templates directly:
- "What is one thing I should stop doing in [context]?"
- "What is one thing I should continue because it helps?"
- "What question do you wish I would answer publicly?"
- "What part of my message felt confusing this week?"
- "What would make this easier to understand in 30 seconds?"
Posting cadence for better quality
Quantity is not the goal. Publish your inbox link with one focused prompt two to three times per week, then review responses in one batch.
- Monday: improvement prompt.
- Wednesday: clarity prompt.
- Friday: next-step prompt.
What to avoid
- Do not ask ten questions in one post.
- Do not post without boundaries such as "constructive feedback only".
- Do not react publicly to every message in real time.
- Do not optimize for volume if quality is dropping.
Quick implementation checklist
- Write one prompt focused on one topic.
- Add a boundary sentence before sharing your link.
- Collect responses for at least 24 hours.
- Tag each response: actionable, unclear, or noise.
- Choose one improvement to execute this week.