Advice often fails because it is delivered before the problem is understood. Without context, advice becomes generic, misapplied, or even insulting—especially when it overlooks constraints, history, or goals. Asking questions first is not a delay tactic; it is a relevance strategy. It prevents wasted effort and signals respect. The most useful guidance is tailored, and tailoring requires information.
Good questions clarify three things: desired outcomes (what “better” looks like), current reality (what is happening and why), and constraints (what cannot change). They also surface what has already been tried. Many problems persist not because people haven’t thought of solutions, but because a previous attempt failed under certain conditions. Questions uncover those conditions. They also reduce defensiveness because they turn the conversation into exploration rather than judgment.
Asking before advising improves accuracy and builds trust. It transforms advice from a performance into a service. It also increases buy-in: people are more likely to use guidance that fits their situation and reflects their stated goals. The point is not to interrogate; it’s to orient. Once the problem is understood, advice becomes specific, actionable, and more likely to help.
Try it!
- Ask about goals first: “What outcome matters most here?”
- Ask about attempts and constraints: “What’s been tried? What’s fixed?”
- Offer advice as options tied to goals, not as declarations.