Deep Researcher
A comprehensive research workflow skill that guides Claude through systematic, multi-layered research on any topic.
When to use this skill
Use this skill when the user:
- •Asks for "deep research" or "comprehensive research" on a topic
- •Needs thorough investigation or due diligence
- •Requests market research or competitive analysis
- •Wants technical deep-dives or architecture reviews
- •Needs literature reviews or trend analysis
- •Asks for detailed reports with multiple perspectives
Research Workflow
Step 1: Define Research Scope and Objectives
Start by clearly establishing research parameters:
- •Identify the main research question - What is the primary question to investigate?
- •Define scope boundaries - What aspects should be included or excluded?
- •Determine depth requirements - How detailed should the research be?
- •Clarify expected deliverables - What format and structure for output?
- •List key areas of focus - What specific subtopics to explore?
Document these parameters before proceeding.
Step 2: Conduct Initial Exploratory Research
Begin with broad reconnaissance to map the landscape:
- •Search for overview information - Find general information, definitions, and context
- •Identify key sources - Look for authoritative sources, recent publications, expert opinions
- •Note initial findings - Create preliminary list of important concepts, terms, themes
- •Discover related topics - Identify adjacent areas that may be relevant
- •Assess information gaps - Note what's available vs. what needs deeper investigation
Create an initial research map with main themes and subtopics.
Step 3: Deep Dive into Key Areas
For each identified key area, conduct detailed investigation:
- •Targeted searches - Use specific queries for each subtopic
- •Multiple perspectives - Seek diverse viewpoints and approaches
- •Technical details - Gather specific data, statistics, methodologies
- •Historical context - Understand evolution and background
- •Current state - Identify latest developments and trends
- •Future outlook - Look for predictions, projections, emerging patterns
Document findings systematically, noting sources and credibility.
Step 4: Cross-Reference and Validate Findings
Ensure accuracy and reliability:
- •Verify key facts - Cross-check important information across multiple sources
- •Identify contradictions - Note where sources disagree and investigate why
- •Assess source credibility - Evaluate authority and reliability
- •Check recency - Ensure information is current and relevant
- •Look for consensus - Identify where experts or multiple sources agree
- •Flag uncertainties - Mark areas where information is unclear or disputed
Step 5: Synthesize and Analyze Information
Transform collected data into insights:
- •Identify patterns - Look for common themes, trends, relationships
- •Draw connections - Link concepts across sources and subtopics
- •Generate insights - Develop original observations based on research
- •Compare and contrast - Analyze similarities and differences
- •Evaluate implications - Consider significance and consequences
- •Address the research question - Directly answer original question with evidence
Step 6: Generate Structured Research Report
Create comprehensive, well-organized final report:
## Report Structure 1. **Executive Summary** - Brief overview of research question - Key findings (3-5 main points) - Main conclusions 2. **Introduction** - Research scope and objectives - Methodology overview - Key areas explored 3. **Main Body** (organized by themes) - Detailed findings for each key area - Supporting evidence and examples - Multiple perspectives where relevant - Data and statistics 4. **Analysis & Synthesis** - Patterns and connections identified - Cross-cutting themes - Insights and interpretations 5. **Conclusions** - Direct answers to research questions - Summary of most significant findings - Limitations of the research 6. **Sources & References** - List of key sources consulted - Credibility notes where relevant
Research Strategies
Information Quality Standards
- •Prefer primary sources - Go to original sources when possible
- •Recent is better - Prioritize current information for fast-moving topics
- •Multiple sources - Don't rely on single source for important facts
- •Expert opinion - Seek recognized authorities in the field
- •Data over anecdotes - Prefer statistical evidence to individual stories
Analysis Techniques
Use these frameworks as appropriate:
- •SWOT analysis - Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats
- •Compare/Contrast - Systematic comparison of approaches
- •Timeline analysis - Historical development and trends
- •Stakeholder analysis - Different perspectives and interests
- •Gap analysis - What's missing or needs further research
Pitfalls to Avoid
- •Confirmation bias - Look for information that challenges assumptions
- •Information overload - Know when enough research has been done
- •Outdated information - Always check dates and currency
- •Single-source dependence - Diversify sources
- •Analysis paralysis - Balance thoroughness with timely completion
- •Losing focus - Stay aligned with original objectives
Progress Tracking
Copy and update this checklist as you work:
Research Progress: - [ ] Step 1: Define scope and objectives - [ ] Step 2: Initial exploratory research - [ ] Step 3: Deep dive into key areas - [ ] Step 4: Cross-reference and validate - [ ] Step 5: Synthesize and analyze - [ ] Step 6: Generate structured report