Research & insight

🧠 Exploratory vs. Structured: Getting the Question Right

By
Ben Levett
 min read
 min watch
🧠 Exploratory vs. Structured: Getting the Question Right

Research & insight

🧠 Exploratory vs. Structured: Getting the Question Right

By
Ben Levett
 min read
 min watch

When using AI-powered tools like Responsible Capital to extract ESG or financial insight, the way you frame your question fundamentally shapes the kind of answer you receive. Thinking through the objective of the analysis, the function the output will serve, and the details of the questions can make a huge difference.

There are arguably two core ‘prompting’ modes to consider:

1️⃣ Exploratory prompting

This allows for underspecification — where some ambiguity is intentional. It’s useful when you're surfacing unknowns or patterns: early indicators of reputational risk, shifts in tone, or diluted commitments say.

Open-ended prompts encourage the model to make associative links and uncover weak signals. This is discovery, not measurement.

2️⃣ Structured prompting

This requires precision — clear rules, defined outputs, and repeatability.


If you’re scoring disclosures, tracking policy-specific measures, or benchmarking performance, your questions must specify both the criteria and output format.

With that clarity comes a tradeoff: the risk of overly literal or mechanical responses.
Prompt overfitting, or prompt brittleness, can lead to box-ticking answers that reflect the structure of your prompt rather than deeper reasoning.

Still, it’s often a necessary compromise when consistency and comparability are the goal — and Responsible Capital is designed to handle that structured complexity under the hood, applying its ESG-aware taxonomy, expert-tuned prompts, and 1M+ disclosure dataset to deliver meaningful, reliable results.

The balancing act reflects a larger truth:


🔍 Precision reduces perception — the more tightly you define a task, the less room the model has to infer, connect, or interpret. So, before you ask, ask yourself:


👉 Am I looking to explore, or to define. Evidence gather or structure?

🛠️ 10 Quick Question Design Tips for Better Results

Whether you're using exploratory or structured prompts in Responsible Capital, these guidelines can help refine your inputs:

1️⃣ Start with your goal
What exact insight or output do you want? Briefly explain it up top to anchor the task.

2️⃣ Define the answer type
Do you need a yes/no, number, text, or multiple choice? For text answers, specify the structure or format you want.

3️⃣ Break the question down
If it’s complex, sequence it into clear steps or sub-questions.

4️⃣ Set boundaries
Want actions or targets—not policies or commitments? Spell it out clearly.

5️⃣ Include all rules
Add criteria, thresholds, or framework requirements upfront if they're part of your assessment logic.

6️⃣ Avoid hidden assumptions
Unstated conditions often lead to inconsistency. Make implicit expectations explicit.

7️⃣ Be concise but complete
Short, clear prompts perform best. Avoid rambling, but don’t omit key details.

8️⃣ Use examples
Examples help illustrate structure, context and relevance

9️⃣ Design each question to stand alone
Avoid referencing earlier questions — unless using Disclosure Assistant mode, which retains thread context.

🔟 Iterate if needed
Unexpected answers? Refine your question by identifying missing elements before scaling.

Need more pointers to setting up and creating great Assessments? Check out the full guide here

Data
Data Analysis
ESG
Ben Levett
Ben Levett
Lead ESG Researcher
Neural Alpha

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