Why AI-generated marketing sounds the same regardless of who prompts it
AI language models generate content from statistical patterns across a vast training dataset. When a professional services firm asks one of these models to write a LinkedIn post or a thought leadership article, the model draws on everything it has seen about how professional services firms write about themselves. The challenge every firm faces is how to make AI marketing that sounds like your business.
Often the result is the average. A competent, professional-sounding average that could belong to any firm in the category.
This is not a limitation of the tool. It is a direct consequence of how the tool works. Give the model a generic input, “write a LinkedIn post about our accounting firm”, and it will produce generic output. The model does not know your methodology for restructuring a family business before a transaction. It does not know the question you always ask in the first client meeting that nobody else is asking. It does not know that your best clients come to you thinking they have a tax problem and leave having solved a governance problem they had not named yet.
Without that specific intelligence in the brief, AI produces the average. And the average of professional services marketing in Australia is undifferentiated, unmemorable, and very easy to scroll past.
The voice architecture problem: what most firms skip before they start writing
Most professional services firms approach AI marketing the same way: they subscribe to a tool, they write a prompt, they edit the output, they publish. The tool gets faster. The output stays generic.
The step that is being skipped is voice architecture, the structured articulation of how a firm thinks, what it believes, how it explains what it does differently, and what language it uses when it is at its most specific and most useful.
Voice architecture is not a tone of voice document. It is a strategic layer that captures the things that make a firm genuinely different: the methodology that its principals have developed over years of client work, the specific language that surfaces in its best client conversations, the perspective on its market that no one else holds in quite the same way, and the earned point of view that its people could defend in a room of their peers.
This is what a generic AI prompt cannot access. And this is what AI marketing that sounds like your business depends on.
What thought leadership actually means — and why it is the answer
The term thought leadership has been diluted to the point of near-uselessness. Most professional services marketing labelled as thought leadership is not: it is competent summary of industry trends, technically accurate and commercially inert.
Genuine thought leadership is content that expresses a specific, earned point of view on a question the firm knows better than most, informed by real experience, real methodology, and direct expertise. It takes a position. It draws on something the author has actually learned, often the hard way. It produces in the reader a response of genuine recognition: “I have not seen anyone say this quite this way before.”
This is the content that builds authority. It is also the content that AI platforms cite.
When Perplexity or ChatGPT is building a response to a professional buyer’s question, it draws on sources that added something to its understanding, that were specific, authoritative, and citable. Content that simply restates the industry consensus contributes nothing to an AI’s synthesis. Content that expresses a distinct point of view, backed by named expertise, is the content AI platforms learn to cite.
AI marketing that sounds like your business is not just about brand consistency. It is the foundation for AI search visibility.
How to diagnose generic content in your own marketing: a five-question test
Apply these five questions to the last five pieces of content your firm published. For each one, answer honestly.
- One: Could a competitor publish this piece without changing more than the firm’s name? If the answer is yes, the content is not expressing the firm’s distinctive perspective, it is describing the category.
- Two: Does the content explain what the firm does without explaining why it does it differently? Most professional services marketing answers “what” and skips “why ours specifically.” That gap is where generic lives.
- Three: Is the language in the content the same language the firm’s principals use in their best client conversations? Or is it cleaner, more formal, more like marketing copy? The closer the content is to how the firm actually talks when it is at its most specific and useful, the more distinctive it will be.
- Four: Does the content express a position the firm could defend if challenged by a peer in its sector? Generic content makes no claims that could be disputed. Thought leadership makes claims that reflect genuine conviction.
- Five: Would a prospective client reading this content feel understood, or would they feel informed? Understanding creates connection. Information creates distance. AI marketing that sounds like your business produces the first response, not the second.
If three or more of these questions reveal a gap, the issue is not the tool. The issue is that the strategic layer, the voice architecture, is missing from the brief before the tool is used.
The Leadership Content Suite: how Infokus Marketing structures voice before content
Infokus Marketing’s Leadership Content Suite is a done-for-you thought leadership content programme developed specifically for professional services firms across Victoria and Australia. Tanya Duncan has built this approach over twenty years of content strategy work with professional services founders, the programme reflects what it actually takes to produce content that sounds like a specific firm and builds its authority in the market.
The process starts before any content is written. At onboarding, the firm’s voice, positioning, methodology, and expertise architecture are structured into a detailed brief, the strategic layer that makes AI marketing that sounds like your business possible. This is not a generic voice guide. It is a specific, firm-level intelligence system that captures the things that make the firm different in terms specific enough to guide content generation.
Every piece of content produced through the Leadership Content Suite starts from this foundation. The result is content that reads as though the firm’s best thinker wrote it on a very clear day.
From there, each month’s content is built around the questions the firm’s prospective clients are actually asking, the authority positions worth building, and the market conversations worth leading. Three articles, social posts across LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram, and an optional editorial email, all grounded in the firm’s voice architecture and guided by Infokus Marketing’s editorial strategy.
Why AI platforms cite thought leadership — and ignore generic content
There is a direct commercial connection between content quality and AI citation presence that most professional services firms have not yet drawn.
AI platforms do not cite content that restates the consensus. They cite content that adds to it, that is specific, authoritative, and structurally clear enough to be extracted and used in a synthesised response. Generic content is effectively invisible to AI, not because it ranks poorly, but because it contributes nothing the AI does not already know.
AI marketing that sounds like your business, specific, distinctive, expressed from genuine expertise, is the kind of content AI platforms learn to cite. A professional services firm that produces this kind of content consistently, over time, builds an AI citation presence that compounds. A firm that produces generic content consistently produces nothing the AI platforms can use.
This is the connection between the Leadership Content Suite and the Advertise to AI programme. The content is the foundation. The citation is the result.
Your Content Should Sound Like You — Not Like the Industry Average
If the five-question test revealed a gap, the content architecture is the place to start.
The Leadership Content Suite begins with a voice and positioning session that builds the foundation, then produces content from it, month after month, so the body of work builds rather than treads water.
Book a Discovery Call to talk through what this would look like for your firm.