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Copy in the Client's Voice

How generated site copy is written to sound like the client, drawn from their own intake inputs, with hard limits that keep it honest and on brand.

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Generated copy usually reads like generic AI: interchangeable, over-polished, and clearly not written by the business owner. Seedly Sites writes generated site copy in the client's own voice, drawn from what the client provides in their intake questionnaire, and holds it to hard limits so it stays honest.


Where the Voice Comes From#

At intake, the client contributes the raw material for their voice:

  • A few sentences they would actually say to a customer. This is the strongest signal - the platform matches the register, warmth, and rhythm of the client's own words rather than a template default.
  • Two tone dials - plainspoken or polished, warm or all-business - to steer copy that has no strong signal either way.
  • Preferred and banned phrases - words the client wants worked in, and words they never want to see.

Optionally, the platform also reads the tone of the writing already on the client's own website and the tone of their Google reviews, purely to understand how they and their customers talk.


Style, Never Facts#

There is a firm line between borrowing a client's tone and putting words in their mouth:

  • Harvested writing informs tone only. Nothing scraped from the client's site or their reviews ever becomes a stated fact or a quoted phrase in the generated copy.
  • Only the client's own typed words can become a signature phrase. A phrase the copy leans on has to come from what the client actually wrote, not from a review or a competitor's site.
  • A customer's review is the customer's voice. Reviews help the platform read the room; they are never rewritten into the client's copy as the client's own words.

The facts a page is allowed to claim come only from the proof points the client supplied, which is what the honesty gates enforce.


Voice That Fits Each Page#

The same brand voice reads differently across a site, and the copy reflects that: the home page leads with the client's boldest register, an FAQ reads like the owner answering the phone, and a contact or careers page stays warm and direct. The client's overall warm-or-all-business setting is respected throughout.


Kept Honest and On Brand#

Voice is paired with hard limits so sounding like the client never means overclaiming:

  • Banned phrases are enforced. Anything on the client's avoid list is blocked from the copy, and the copy is never even prompted toward a phrase the client asked you to avoid.
  • Invented claims abort the build. Copy cannot ship a statistic, rating, or superlative the client did not actually provide. See Honesty Gates.
  • Generic phrasing is flagged. Stock AI phrases are surfaced for review so a slip toward blandness does not go out unnoticed.

The Client Sees It First#

Before the site is built, the client can review a short "Does this sound like you?" summary - their register and warmth read back to them, with a couple of their own sentences quoted. It is a quick gut check that the voice landed, caught before any pages are composed rather than after they are live.


Summary#

Source of voiceThe client's own intake words and tone dials
Harvested writingTone only, never facts or quoted phrases
Per-page fitBolder on home, owner-on-the-phone on FAQ, warm on contact
GuardrailsBanned phrases blocked, invented claims abort the build
Client checkA "Does this sound like you?" review before the build

Frequently asked questions

Where does the "voice" come from?
From the client's own words - a few sentences they gave at intake about how they talk, plus a couple of tone dials (plainspoken or polished, warm or all-business). Optionally, the platform also reads the tone of the writing already on their own site and in their Google reviews.
Can a competitor's writing or a customer review end up as the client's copy?
No. Harvested writing only ever informs tone. It never becomes a quoted phrase or a stated fact, and only the client's own typed words can become a signature phrase in the copy.
What if the copy still sounds generic?
A client reviews a "Does this sound like you?" summary before the site is built, and you review the finished draft in the builder. Generic, AI-sounding stock phrasing is also flagged automatically for you to catch.
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