| name | interview-techniques |
| description | Interview technique skill used by the podcast scriptwriter. Provides question design, conversation flow management, and emotional arc design methodologies for drawing out deep conversations in guest interviews. Use this skill's knowledge for 'interview question design,' 'conversation structure,' 'guest questions,' 'dialogue flow,' and similar requests. |
Interview Techniques — Podcast Interview Methodology
Specialist interview design knowledge used by the scriptwriter agent when crafting interview-format episode scripts.
Why This Skill Is Needed
Podcast interviews are different from standard interviews. You must create tension and immersion using only audio, with no visible audience. Good questions yield good answers, and good answers determine listener retention.
Question Design Framework: The DEPTH Model
| Stage | Acronym | Description | Example |
|---|
| Door-opener | Opening | An entry point where the guest can start comfortably | "What first drew you to this field?" |
| Explore | Exploration | Follow-up questions that surface the story beneath the surface | "What was the hardest part about that time?" |
| Provoke | Provocation | Challenge conventional wisdom or invite an opposing view | "Some people argue the opposite — what do you think?" |
| Turn | Transition | Shift naturally to a new topic area | "Hearing that makes me curious about..." |
| Heart | Core | A closing question that distills the episode's key message | "If you could sum up today's conversation in one sentence?" |
DEPTH Application Rules
- D must be the first question — never hit the guest with a tough question before they've relaxed
- E should be repeated at least twice — asking "why?" three times gets you the real story (Toyota's 5 Whys principle)
- P no more than once per segment — excessive provocation turns the interview adversarial
- T should quote a keyword from the previous answer — starting with "You mentioned earlier that..." creates natural continuity
- H goes in the final 5 minutes — anchor the core message at the conclusion
Question Type Pattern Library
1. Story Elicitation Questions
- "If you could go back to that moment, what scene comes to mind?"
- "What was the most unexpected reaction you received?"
- "Right before you made that decision, what was going through your head?"
Why they work: Asking for specific scenes instead of abstract explanations produces sensory detail. Listeners engage with stories more than statistics.
2. Contrast Questions
- "How are you different now compared to when you started?"
- "What's something everyone in the industry agrees on, but you disagree with?"
- "What's the biggest gap between your public image and reality?"
Why they work: Contrast structures create cognitive tension. Listeners perk up and think, "Wait, what's that about?"
3. Specification Questions
- "Can you put a specific number or scale on that?"
- "Can you give me a concrete example?"
- "Could you walk through that process step by step?"
Why they work: Vague answers are deadly in podcasts. Listeners need to be able to paint a picture in their minds.
4. Emotional Access Questions
- "Honestly, how did that make you feel?"
- "What was the first thought that crossed your mind when you heard that news?"
- "Looking back now, what emotions come up?"
Why they work: Information enters through the ears, but emotion reaches the heart. Emotionally charged answers boost retention by 20–40%.
Conversation Flow Design: The Emotional Arc
Emotional Arc Rules
- Opening: Start at medium intensity — too high leaves nowhere to go; too low causes drop-off
- Segment 1 Peak: The first emotional high point — the moment listeners feel "this is good"
- Mid-Valley: Intentional pacing change — sustained tension is exhausting. Use humor or lighter topics to give listeners a break
- Segment 3 Climax: The most intense emotional moment — the peak of insight, surprise, or emotional resonance
- Closing Landing: Bring the emotion down gently while leaving a lingering impression
Segment Transition Techniques
| Technique | Phrase Pattern | Use Case |
|---|
| Bridge Summary | "You just talked about X, and I think that connects to Y..." | Topic expansion |
| Listener Proxy | "I'm sure some listeners are thinking..." | Perspective shift |
| Surprise Card | "Actually, something really surprised me when I was preparing this question" | Energy reignition |
| Callback | "You said something in the first segment about... But now..." | Narrative connection |
Episode Type-Specific Question Structures
Solo Episodes
- Place 2–3 hypothetical listener questions: "A question I get asked a lot is..."
- Deliver personal experiences in story form (Before → Struggle → After)
- Address the listener directly every 5 minutes: "What about you?"
Interview Episodes (1:1)
- Follow the DEPTH model precisely
- Always add 1–2 sentences of reaction after the guest's answer (no dead silence, but no excessive agreement either)
- Keep yes/no questions under 10% of the total
Panel Episodes (3+ participants)
- "What do you think about X, [Panelist A]? [Panelist B], it seems like you might have a different view..."
- Pre-allocate question counts per panelist to balance speaking time
- Encourage direct dialogue between panelists: "Do you agree with [A]'s take?"
Prohibited Patterns
| Prohibited | Reason | Alternative |
|---|
| "Could you introduce yourself?" | The quintessential boring opening | Start with an interesting anecdote about the guest |
| Repeated "yeah, yeah, exactly" | Adds no information for listeners — just noise | "That's interesting because..." |
| 3+ minute host monologue | Defeats the purpose of having a guest | Summarize in under 30 seconds, then ask |
| Reading the script verbatim | Kills spontaneity | Keep only keywords as notes and speak conversationally |
| All questions in order | Feels mechanical | Adapt the sequence based on the answer flow |
Guest Pre-Research Checklist
Must-verify items before writing the script: