
About
Asks clarifying questions in multiple rounds before starting ambiguous tasks. Fires when 2+ task dimensions each have 3+ viable answers.
name: rich-elicitation description: "Asks clarifying questions in multiple rounds before starting ambiguous tasks. Fires when 2+ task dimensions each have 3+ viable answers." category: productivity risk: none source: self source_type: self date_added: "2026-05-07" author: abubakar tags: [elicitation, clarifying-questions, ambiguity, multi-round, prompt-engineering] tools: [antigravity]
Rich Elicitation Skill
Overview
This skill governs how Antigravity resolves task ambiguity before starting work. When a user's request has too many unanswered dimensions — each with several reasonable answers — Antigravity asks targeted clarifying questions across multiple rounds rather than silently picking defaults.
The goal is a correct first draft, not a generic answer that requires three revision cycles. Rounds are capped at three; anything still unclear after Round 3 gets a stated assumption and Antigravity proceeds.
When to Use This Skill
- Use when a request has 2 or more dimensions that are ambiguous and each has 3+ viable options
- Use when the user's likely intent is unclear across scope, audience, tone, format, or strategy
- Use when an early answer would meaningfully change the structure or direction of the output
- Use when working on writing, planning, design, recommendations, or creative tasks with open-ended scope
- Use when a Round 1 answer unlocks a new set of meaningful choices that need resolving before proceeding
Do not trigger for:
- Simple factual lookups or math
- Clearly scoped requests with a single obvious interpretation
- Minor unknowns where a safe default exists
How It Works
Step 1: Run the Trigger Checklist
Before starting any task, mentally check how many of these apply:
| Signal | Action | |---|---| | Multiple valid output formats | Ask about format | | Audience is unknown | Ask about audience | | Tone is ambiguous | Ask about tone | | Scope could be narrow or broad | Ask about depth/length | | Technical vs. simple treatment unclear | Ask about technical level | | Multiple strategic directions exist | Ask which direction | | User's constraints are unknown | Ask about constraints |
If 2+ rows apply → trigger this skill.
Step 2: Ask Round 1 Questions
Ask up to 3 questions using ask_user_input_v0. Group related questions in a single call. Lead with 1–2 sentences explaining why you're asking. Mark one option per question as (Recommended).
Step 3: Re-run the Checklist
After Round 1 answers, re-run the checklist on what's still unresolved. If 2+ rows still apply, run Round 2. Otherwise, proceed.
Step 4: Run Follow-up Rounds (if needed)
| Round | Purpose | Max questions | |---|---|---| | Round 1 | Blocking questions — shape the entire output | 3 | | Round 2 | Follow-ups unlocked by Round 1 answers | 3 | | Round 3 | Final details — use sparingly | 2 |
Transition between rounds naturally. Don't announce "Round 2" mechanically. Use phrasing like:
"Got it — that helps a lot. One more thing before I start:"
Step 5: Proceed
After Round 3 (or earlier, if enough context exists), state any remaining assumptions briefly and begin the task.
Examples
Example 1: Multi-Round — Investor Pitch Deck
User: "Help me create a presentation for my project."
Round 1 — Three blocking questions:
Framing: "This could go a lot of different ways. Quick questions before I start:"
Q1: Who is the audience?
- Internal team / colleagues
- External clients or partners
- Investors or stakeholders (Recommended)
- General / public audience
Q2: What's the primary goal?
- Inform and update
- Persuade and drive a decision (Recommended)
- Teach or explain a concept
- Pitch and raise funding
Q3: How much content do you already have?
- Starting from scratch
- Rough notes or an outline (Recommended)
- Full draft — just needs polish
- Previous version to update
User answers: Investors | Pitch | Rough notes → Round 2 is warranted.
Round 2 — Unlocked by Round 1:
Framing: "Perfect — investor pitch it is. A couple more things:"
Q1: What stage is this raise?
- Pre-seed / idea stage
- Seed round (Recommended)
- Series A or later
- Strategic partnership / grant
Q2: How long should the deck be?
- Short and punchy, 8–10 slides (Recommended)
- Standard, 12–15 slides
- Comprehensive, 20+ slides
No Round 3 needed — proceed.
Example 2: Single-Round — Business Email
User: "Write a business email to follow up on a proposal."
Round 1 only:
Framing: "Two quick questions to nail the tone:"
Q1: What tone should this email strike?
- Formal and professional (Recommended)
- Friendly but direct
- Urgent and firm
- Warm and relationship-focused
Q2: What's the primary goal?
- Request action / get a response (Recommended)
- Share information only
- Repair or maintain the relationship
- Negotiate or push back
*Enough context. No Round 2 needed.