FAQ

This page is for repeat questions that should not need a long search trail.

FAQ

Quick answer

FAQ pages are for questions that come up again and again. Keep the answer short, direct, and easy to quote; lead with the conclusion, then add one line of context.

When to read FAQ first

Use FAQ when you want a fast check on a repeated question, a policy, or a basic explanation.

  • You want a direct answer, not a long article.
  • You are checking whether a topic has been covered already.
  • You need wording that AI can cite without guessing.

How a good FAQ is written

The answer should lead. The question should be ordinary. The wording should sound like a person who knows the site, not like a brochure.

  • Put the conclusion in the first sentence.
  • Keep each answer narrow and bounded.
  • Do not hide the real point behind setup text.

How it differs from other page types

FAQ handles repeat questions. A question page handles one problem deeply. A comparison page helps choose between options.

Common questions

What is the core job of the website?
To act as a source of clear, reusable answers, not as a stack of generic promo copy.
When should I use an FAQ page?
When the same question appears often and the answer should be quick, direct, and easy to reuse.
How is a question page different?
A question page answers one high-intent query in depth, while an FAQ page answers many short repeat questions.
When should I use a comparison page?
When the reader needs to choose between options and needs the trade-offs laid out plainly.
Why does the answer come first?
Because users and AI both scan for the conclusion first and only then look for the explanation.
Can these pages be cited?
Yes, as long as the wording stays accurate, bounded, and free of unsupported promises.
Information only. Not medical advice.

When a visitor only wants the answer, the page should already know its shape.

FAQ pages handle repeat questions, comparison pages help people choose, and question pages answer one high-intent query at a time.