Document Type: Reference
Status: Research
Version: v1.1
Authority: Research Brain
Applies To: Customer interview frameworks, customer-language capture, motivation analysis, and structured insight extraction
Parent: Customer Intelligence Methods
Last Reviewed: 2026-03-15
Purpose
This document stores structured interview frameworks used to extract customer motivations, pain points, and decision drivers.
These frameworks support deeper understanding of:
• customer problems
• decision triggers
• belief barriers
• emotional drivers
• product perception
Insights derived from these interviews may later inform:
• copywriting
• positioning
• product messaging
• offer design
• narrative development
The goal is to capture real customer language rather than internal marketing assumptions.
Customer language extracted from these interviews may later inform:
• advertorial messaging
• landing page structure
• VSL narrative development
• product positioning
Research Brain stores the insight.
Other systems may later reference it.
Scope
This reference applies to:
• customer interview framework design
• structured extraction of customer language
• discovery of emotional and rational decision drivers
• identification of pain points, trust triggers, and objections
• support for downstream positioning and messaging interpretation
This document defines how customer interview intelligence should be gathered and structured.
It does not govern:
• direct copywriting output
• ad creation
• persuasion script generation
• campaign execution
• live funnel implementation
Those remain functions of other systems that may later reference the insights stored here.
Definition / Rules
Interview Structure
The interview follows a structured discovery process designed to uncover both rational and emotional drivers behind purchasing decisions.
The framework moves chronologically through the customer journey.
Stage 1 – Context and Expectations
Establish context and explain the conversation format.
Purpose:
• make the participant comfortable
• clarify there are no right or wrong answers
• encourage open discussion
Example prompts:
• Can you briefly describe how you first heard about this product?
• What initially caught your attention?
Stage 2 – Past State (Before the Product)
Explore the customer’s situation before discovering the product.
This stage surfaces:
• frustrations
• unmet needs
• existing alternatives
• emotional context
Example prompts:
• What problem were you trying to solve?
• What had you already tried before this?
• What frustrated you most about those attempts?
Insights from this stage often reveal pain language that reflects the customer’s internal narrative.
Stage 3 – Discovery and Early Experience
Investigate how the customer encountered the product and their initial reaction.
This stage reveals:
• curiosity triggers
• skepticism points
• emotional reactions
• early expectations
Example prompts:
• What made you interested enough to explore further?
• Did anything about the product seem unusual or surprising?
This stage often reveals the discovery moment, which is a critical narrative element in many marketing stories.
Stage 4 – Decision Drivers and Objections
Examine the factors that influenced the purchase decision.
This stage surfaces:
• trust factors
• hesitation points
• competing options
• credibility signals
Example prompts:
• What nearly stopped you from trying the product?
• What convinced you to proceed?
• Were there any concerns or doubts before buying?
Understanding these factors helps identify the true decision threshold for customers.
Stage 5 – Current Experience
Understand how the customer currently perceives the product.
Focus areas include:
• benefits experienced
• unexpected outcomes
• remaining frustrations
• comparison with previous solutions
Example prompts:
• How does your experience with the product compare to what you expected?
• What has improved most since using it?
Stage 6 – Ideal Future (“Magic Wand” Stage)
Invite the customer to imagine improvements or ideal outcomes.
This stage uncovers:
• latent desires
• unmet needs
• product evolution ideas
• future expectations
Example prompts:
• If you could improve anything about the product, what would it be?
• If a perfect solution existed, what would it look like?
Research Output Categories
Insights extracted from interviews should be categorized into structured research outputs.
Typical insight categories include:
• Emotional drivers
• Hidden frustrations
• Decision triggers
• Belief barriers
• Trust signals
• Product perception
• Identity reinforcement factors
These insight categories help build a deeper understanding of customer behaviour.
Research Principles
Customer interviews must prioritize authentic language capture.
Researchers should:
• avoid leading questions
• encourage storytelling rather than short answers
• record exact phrasing where possible
Direct quotes often provide the most valuable insight.
Structural Role Within MWMS
This framework operates inside Research Brain.
It does not:
• create marketing copy
• produce advertising content
• generate persuasion narratives
It exists to collect and structure customer insight signals.
Other systems may reference these signals when developing messaging frameworks or marketing materials.
Outcome
This framework enables consistent extraction of:
• customer motivations
• emotional drivers
• decision thresholds
• language patterns
These signals improve the reliability of downstream strategic analysis and positioning decisions.
Drift Protection
The system must prevent:
• leading-question interview structures
• summary-only capture without real customer language
• converting interview research directly into copy on this page
• confusing customer quotes with final messaging decisions
• storing assumptions instead of observed customer signals
This page exists to preserve structured customer insight, not to perform persuasion work directly.
Architectural Intent
Research Brain – Customer Interview Intelligence exists to provide a disciplined framework for gathering customer-language evidence and behavioural insight.
It helps MWMS capture real motivations, objections, and emotional patterns in a reusable form so later systems can work from grounded customer reality rather than internal guesswork.
Final Rule
Customer interview intelligence must preserve what customers actually say before anyone decides what it means for messaging.
Reality comes first. Interpretation comes later.
Change Log
Version: v1.1
Date: 2026-03-15
Author: MWMS HeadOffice / Research Brain
Change: Standardised the page fully to the locked cleanup format for this pass. Preserved the original interview framework, six-stage structure, research output categories, research principles, structural role, outcome, drift protection, and architectural intent. Added a dedicated Final Rule section and updated the review date.
Version: v1.0
Date: 2026-03-14
Author: MWMS HeadOffice / Research Brain
Change: Rebuilt page to align with MWMS document standards. Added standardised document header, introduced Purpose / Scope / Definition / Rules structure, normalised section formatting, and preserved the original interview framework, research principles, and structural role.
END – RESEARCH BRAIN – CUSTOMER INTERVIEW INTELLIGENCE v1.1