How does the voice cloning technology work?
During your 2-week onboarding, we analyze your existing writing—articles,
briefs, emails, speaking transcripts—to train the AI on your specific voice, arguments, word
choices, and perspective. The result is content that sounds like you wrote it on a good day.
Is the content compliant with bar advertising rules?
Yes. Every piece of content goes through our built-in bar compliance and
ethics checking system. We verify against advertising and ethics rules for your jurisdiction
before you ever see it.
What if the content doesn't sound like me?
That's what the "Sounds Like Me" Guarantee is for. We refine until you
literally cannot tell whether you wrote it or the agent did. If we can't get there, you get a
full refund—no questions asked.
How long does setup take?
The voice training period takes approximately 2 weeks. During this time,
we're training your agents on your specific style and customizing the system for your practice
area. After that, your first LinkedIn post can go live immediately.
Why is it a one-time payment instead of monthly?
Unlike human agencies, AI agents don't require salaries, benefits, or
management attention. Once trained on your voice, they operate at marginal cost approaching
zero. We pass this efficiency to you rather than charging ongoing fees.
Can I really only spend 90 seconds per day?
Yes. The agents do the research, write the content, and verify compliance.
You review for 90 seconds, make any small tweaks you want, and click post. That's it.
What practice areas do you support?
We support all major practice areas including Employment Law, Estate
Planning, Cybersecurity & Privacy, IP & Patent, Personal Injury, Corporate M&A, Real Estate,
Tax, Healthcare, and Financial Services. The system customizes to your specific specialty.
How do you verify citations and sources?
The Intelligence Agent cross-references Westlaw and LexisNexis databases for
citation verification. Case names are checked for current status. Statutes are verified for
amendments. You'll never post a reference to a case that was overturned.