| name | s4h-communication-objection-mapping |
| description | Maps likely objections before delivering a proposal — objections that are anticipated feel addressed; objections that land as surprises derail. Triggers: 'anticipate objections', 'what will they push back on', 'steelman the opposition', 'prepare for resistance', 'objection mapping'. |
Communication Objection Mapping
Anticipated objections feel handled. Unanticipated objections derail. The difference is
not the content of the objection — it is whether the receiver senses that the sender
has thought it through. A proposal that addresses likely objections before they are
raised signals rigor and respect. One that doesn't signals that the sender only thought
from their own perspective.
Your Process
Step 1: State the Proposal
Write the proposal clearly — what is being asked, what it proposes to do, and what it
asks of the audience (approval, resources, behaviour change, belief change).
Framing check: Confirm the message, the audience, and the goal before continuing. State what you've identified — the actual proposal being analyzed, who it is directed at, and what it is asking them to do — in one sentence, then use AskUserQuestion:
- Question: "I'm reading this as: [your one-sentence framing of the proposal, its audience, and the outcome being sought]. Is that right?"
- Header: "Framing"
- Options:
- Yes — proceed — framing is correct
- Adjust — one element is off; user will correct it before you continue
- Reframe — different situation than read; incorporate the correction before proceeding
Step 2: List Audience Segments
Who will receive this? Different roles and individuals will have different objections.
A finance stakeholder's objection to a proposal is structurally different from an
engineering lead's, even if both say "this is risky."
Step 3: Generate Objections per Segment
For each segment: given what they care about and what they fear, what is their most
likely objection? Be specific — "they might push back on cost" is too vague. "They will
argue the ROI model assumes usage patterns that contradict last quarter's data" is useful.
Step 4: Classify Each Objection
- Legitimate: the objection raises a real concern the proposal should genuinely engage
with. Dismissing it will damage credibility.
- Unfounded: the objection reflects a misunderstanding, missing information, or
an assumption the proposal already addresses. Requires clarification, not capitulation.
Step 5: Respond to Legitimate Objections
For each legitimate objection: what is the honest, direct response? Acknowledge the
concern genuinely. Address it specifically. Do not pretend it doesn't exist or soften
it into irrelevance — that will be noticed.
Step 6: Pre-emptive Move
For each significant objection: is there something in the message itself that could reduce
the objection's force without capitulating to it? Pre-empting an objection by raising it
yourself is more credible than responding to it when challenged.
Human Check-in
Before proceeding, use the AskUserQuestion tool. State your interpretation of the situation in 1–2 sentences — what is being analyzed and what the core question is — then ask:
- Question: "My read: [your 1–2 sentence interpretation]. How do you want to proceed?"
- Header: "Scope"
- Options:
- Full analysis — Complete all steps, reasoning shown throughout
- Key findings only — Bottom-line output, skip step-by-step detail
- Top 3 objections only — Most likely showstoppers, skip the full map
- Reframe — The read is off; correct it and the analysis will follow the corrected framing
Proceed based on their selection. If the user reframes, incorporate the correction before running any analysis.
Output Format
Proposal: [Summary — what is being asked and what is being proposed]
Objection map:
| Audience segment | Likely objection | Legitimate / Unfounded | Response | Pre-emptive move |
|---|
| | | | |
| | | | |
Objections to address in the message itself:
[Which objections should be pre-empted in the proposal, not left for Q&A — and why]
Objections to prepare for but not address upfront:
[Which are better handled in dialogue than in the message]
Notes
The classification in Step 4 requires honesty. The temptation is to classify all
objections as unfounded — that they reflect misunderstanding rather than legitimate
concern. If an objection is legitimate and you dismiss it, you lose credibility on
everything else.
What's Next
After delivering this output, use AskUserQuestion to offer the next move:
- Question: "Objections mapped. What's next?"
- Header: "Next"
- Options:
/s4h-writing-argument — Build arguments that directly address each mapped objection
/s4h-communication-clarity-audit — Check that responses to objections are clear
/s4h-logic-argument-validation — Validate the arguments you'll use to address key objections
- Done — Wrap up and synthesise what we have so far