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

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.
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.