Lorimor came up with a good list of questions to ask of a "What Gun..." person:
We need to know what, if any, previous experience they have.
How much do they intend to train and practice with the gun?
Do they have the strength to rack the slide? Do they have the strength to pull a DA revo trigger?
What do they think they are most comfortable with, semi or revo, from previous experience, if any?
What is their budget?
What is their intended use for the handgun? SD? Plinkin'? Competition? Carry?
In my article, the ones I posted as my "Top Three" were:
Is this for daily carry, range practice, or home defense?
What experience do you have with guns? With rifles, shotguns, or handguns?
Are you actually going to practice with this?
...which, I note, match several of his, too. Looking at the situation, I tend to think of those "top three" as the starting point of helping someone choose a gun. (And it works for people wanting a second gun, or a third gun...)
I really do think the most important question is: What is the purpose of this gun? (What is it FOR?)
Not only does it tell you what they want it for, but it also tends to tell you a lot about their knowledge base. Example: "So, what are you going to the use the gun for?" "Well, probably concealed carry but I was thinking of trying some NRA Bullseye competitions with it, too."
That tells you quite a bit about their understanding of firearms, CCW, and bullseye competition.
That first question gives you a purpose--which can narrow down a huge set of possibilities to a much narrower set.
To me, the second most important question is "How much experience do you have with firearms, handguns in particular?"
They want a carry pistol, really like the idea of a titanium j-frame in .357Mag (due to
really good marketing), but have no actual previous firearms experience....yeah, that's not going to be a good choice. (And no, I don't think a revolver is a good choice for a first-ever self-defense weapon, for anyone who is serious about self-defense. If the person just wants a self-defense talisman, sure, why not? But otherwise, no.)
If they don't know how to shoot, is getting them the BFG3000 as their first gun a really good idea? Do they even know enough to be safe? Will they be able to make appropriate choices of ammunition and gear? (NO NYLON HOLSTERS! STAHP!)
And third, "Are you going to practice with this gun?"
Granted, most people are going to say "Sure, yeah!" but you can generally get a good idea of the
real answer from the discussion, and that'll help you determine how much effort you should put into attempting to steer them to a actual effective self-defense weapon versus merely a gun that shoots bullets out the muzzle.
If they aren't going to practice, and REALLY want that Judge---sure, why not? It'll be equally as ineffective in their hands as a better self-defense choice would be, and it'll make them happy--and it'll be just as potentially effective as any other gun would be in the hands of someone who doesn't know what they are doing.
Thoughts? Is there a question that is more important that we need to know before these first three?
I like Lormior's budget/hand issue questions. I'm not so sure about the "which do you like better, semi-auto or revolver" question, though,
if talking about a self-defense gun. General range practice, cowboy action shooting, ICORE, sure, but I'm not really sure how much their own preference for semi-auto over revolver matters when talking self-defense weapons IF they are actually going to practice with said gun.
Any other questions we should ask after those top three? (Or instead of those top three?)