A founder writes his own landing page copy using AI. He gives it the product description, the main benefits, and asks for a persuasive headline and three feature sections. What comes back sounds like every SaaS landing page he has ever seen: “Powerful [category] for [audience type]. Save time. Do more.” The features are presented as features, not as outcomes. The headline could appear on a competitor’s site with one word changed. He edits it. What he ends up doing, without realizing it, is translating the generic output back into the language his customers actually use, the voice his brand has in other channels, and the specific claims about his product that are actually true and differentiated. By the time he’s done, he has written the copy himself. AI produced the scaffold he had to dismantle.
Why AI Copywriting Defaults to Category Language
Generic copy is not a failure of creativity. It is the predictable output of a brief that described a product category instead of a specific product for a specific customer. AI calibrates to the patterns of the category — what landing pages in this space look like, what claims companies in this space make, what language is common. The output is statistically representative of the category. That is exactly what makes it invisible to the customer who has already seen the category. The copy that converts is the copy that sounds like it was written for a specific person who has a specific problem — and that makes a specific, credible claim about why this product solves that problem in a way others don’t. That copy cannot be produced without knowing the specific person, the specific problem, and the specific differentiating claim. None of those are available to AI without a brief.
What a Copy Brief Must Contain
A copy brief that produces usable output has to contain four things that most product descriptions leave out. The customer’s specific problem, in the customer’s own language — not the product team’s characterization of the problem but the language the customer uses when they describe it to themselves. This matters because copy that mirrors the customer’s internal language creates immediate recognition. Copy that uses the product team’s language for the customer’s problem creates distance. The specific thing that changes for the customer when they use the product — not the features, but the before-and-after in the customer’s experience. “You can now do X” is a feature. “You stop doing Y, which was eating three hours of your week” is an outcome. Copy built on outcomes converts. The brand voice with specific constraints — what the brand sounds like, and equally specifically, what it never sounds like. One company’s “confident and direct” is another company’s “arrogant.” The negative constraints are what define the voice. And the one differentiating claim that is both true and impossible for a direct competitor to make without being dishonest. That claim is the copy’s center of gravity.
What a Properly Briefed Copywriting Request Looks Like
Role: You are a direct-response copywriter working on a landing page for
[product], a [category] for [specific audience].
Customer's problem in their language: "[Quote or close paraphrase of how
customers describe their problem — this is from customer interviews, not
internal product language]"
What changes for them: Before: [specific situation they're in now, including
the cost — time, money, frustration]. After: [specific outcome — not a feature,
a change in their experience or results].
Brand voice: [Specific — tone, sentence length tendency, what the brand
would never say]. Examples of on-brand language: [two or three examples].
Examples of off-brand language: [two or three things the brand never does].
The differentiating claim: [The one thing that is true of this product that
a direct competitor cannot honestly say].
Output needed: One headline (under 12 words), one subheadline (under 25 words),
and three feature-to-outcome statements (feature in parentheses, outcome as the
copy). No generic benefit language — every claim should be specific enough that
a customer could tell whether it applies to them.
The copy produced from this brief is built on what the customer actually experiences, in the language the brand actually uses, around the claim that actually differentiates. It may not be final — copy always gets refined — but it has the right foundation. It is not generic category language that has to be dismantled and rebuilt.
The Customer Insight Is the Brief
Great copy has always been built on customer insight — on knowing what the customer thinks, says, and feels about the problem the product solves. This insight comes from customer interviews, reviews, sales call recordings, support tickets. It is the raw material of copy that converts. AI cannot access that insight without the brief. Every copywriter who has done the customer research has the material to write a brief that produces useful output. The brief is the transfer mechanism — the way the customer insight that was gathered through research enters the copy before the first draft is written. For founders and brand teams writing copy for products they know deeply, Briefing Fox structures the brief to surface the customer insight and differentiating claims before any writing begins.
Before Your Next Copy Project
Before asking AI to write any copy, write down three things: one sentence in the customer’s own language that describes their problem, the specific change in their experience when the product works, and the one claim about your product a competitor cannot honestly make. Brief AI with those before describing features. The copy that converts is built on the customer, not the product. The brief is where the customer enters. Try Briefing Fox free at www.briefingfox.com.