Brand Voice Style Matching, locked in from day one
Feed Landing Creator three URLs, and every client page you generate sounds like it was written by their best copywriter.

Set the voice once, generate every client page consistently
Match your client's brand voice in a single configuration pass and generate the full page set ready for review.
The patchwork problem agencies keep inheriting
New clients rarely hand you a clean brand. They hand you a website written by three different freelancers, a blog that sounds nothing like the homepage, and a sales deck that uses words the rest of the site never touches. When you start generating SEO pages on top of that, you have a choice: pick a voice and commit, or let the inconsistency compound. Most agencies pick a voice in their heads and hope the writers follow. They don't, not reliably. The result is a page set that a prospect might describe as "scattered" -- not because the strategy was wrong, but because the execution never had a single source of truth for how this brand actually talks. Brand Voice Style Matching is that source of truth.
Three URLs is enough to train the voice
Landing Creator analyzes up to three URLs from your client's existing content -- a homepage, a key service page, a strong blog post -- and extracts the patterns that define how they write: sentence length, vocabulary choices, how formal or conversational the tone sits, how they structure an argument. That analysis becomes the style fingerprint applied to every page the platform generates. You are not writing a style guide. You are not briefing a junior writer. You point at what already works, and the platform learns it. For agencies managing programmatic SEO campaigns across multiple clients, this means each client's page set is stylistically isolated from the others -- no bleed-through, no house style contaminating a client's distinct voice.
Context Lock keeps every claim traceable
Consistent voice is only half the problem. The other half is accuracy. Clients get nervous when AI-generated content invents details -- a service area that's wrong, a claim the business can't support, a product description that doesn't match reality. Context Lock means every factual claim on a generated page is traceable to the verified business information you entered during setup. Nothing is fabricated. When you hand the page set to a client for review, you are handing them copy that sounds like them and says only what's true about them. That combination is what turns a review session from a damage-control exercise into a sign-off.
The full page set, ready before the first client call
The onboarding workflow in Landing Creator compresses what used to be weeks of back-and-forth into a single configuration pass. You describe the client's business, set the content matrix (offers times areas or use cases), and the platform generates the complete page set: original content, schema markup, FAQ sections, internal linking, sitemap, and metadata, all in the client's matched voice. For agencies handling multiple new clients in parallel, this changes the shape of the week. The time that used to go into editing for consistency goes into strategy and client communication instead. If a client's positioning shifts after launch, bulk page regeneration lets you update the full set without starting over.
Publish through the stack you already use
Generated pages go live through WordPress, Next.js, Shopify, or the REST API -- whichever CMS the client already runs. There is no migration, no new platform for the client to learn, and no reason to delay launch while IT figures out an integration. For agencies managing multiple client accounts across different tech stacks, this matters: the same workflow applies regardless of what the client is running. The voice is matched, the content is generated, and it publishes into the existing environment. The client sees their pages, in their CMS, sounding like themselves.
When a potential customer says your new page doesn't sound like the same company, that's not a copywriting problem. It's a consistency problem.
Agency client onboarding is where SEO campaigns are won or lost before a single page goes live. The first deliverable a new client sees sets the tone for the entire relationship, and if the copy feels generic or inconsistent, the trust you spent weeks building in the pitch evaporates fast. Brand Voice Style Matching is built specifically for this moment: the configuration pass where you define what the client sounds like, so everything generated afterward reflects that identity.
How it works
Point at three existing pages
Give Landing Creator up to three URLs from the client's current site -- pages that represent their best writing, or at least the voice they want to project. The platform analyzes sentence structure, tone, vocabulary, and pacing. No style guide required. You are working from what already exists, not from a document no one can agree on.
Describe the business and set the matrix
Enter the client's verified business information: what they offer, where they operate, who they serve. Then define the content matrix -- offers times areas, or offers times use cases. Landing Creator uses this to determine how many pages get generated and what each one needs to cover. This is the configuration pass that replaces weeks of briefing.
Generate the full page set
Every combination in the matrix becomes a unique page, written in the matched brand voice, with original body content, FAQ, schema markup, internal links, and metadata. Context Lock ensures every claim is traceable to the business information you entered -- nothing invented, nothing that will embarrass you in the client review. For large campaigns, see how programmatic SEO campaigns scale this further.
Review and hand over with confidence
Send the page set to the client for review. Because the voice is consistent and the facts are accurate, the review session is typically about positioning and priorities, not line-by-line copy fixes. Clients who recognize their own voice in the output move faster through approval.
Publish into the client's existing CMS
Deploy via the WordPress plugin, Next.js package, Shopify app, or REST API -- whichever stack the client already uses. No migration, no new tools for the client to adopt. Pages go live in the existing environment, and the sitemap and internal linking structure are already built in.
Voice consistency across every page
Every page in the generated set is analyzed against the same style fingerprint, extracted from the client's own best content. When a client reads the output, they recognize how they talk. Consistent brand voice across all generated pages is the default, not something you have to edit toward.
Zero fabricated claims
Context Lock traces every factual claim back to the verified business information entered at setup. Nothing is invented. Client review sessions focus on strategy, not on catching AI errors.
Full page set from one configuration pass
Schema markup, FAQ, internal linking, metadata, and original body content are all generated together. The entire deliverable is ready for review without assembling it from separate tools or writers.
Isolated voice per client account
Each client's style fingerprint is independent. Managing multiple client accounts means no shared house style bleeds across accounts. Each client's pages sound like that client, not like your agency.
Publishes into the client's existing stack
WordPress, Next.js, Shopify, or REST API -- no migration required. Pages go live in the CMS the client already uses, with no new tools for them to adopt or approve.
Use cases
Agency onboarding a multi-location service client
A digital agency picks up a new client running HVAC services across twelve cities. The client's existing website has a solid homepage and two strong service pages, but no consistent voice across the rest of the site. The account manager feeds those three URLs into Landing Creator, sets the matrix (services times cities), and generates 72 unique pages in a single configuration pass. Every page sounds like the client's homepage, not like a template. The client's first review comment is that it finally feels like one company. See how offer times city combination pages work for this type of matrix.
SEO specialist managing three new clients simultaneously
An in-house SEO specialist at an agency is covering three new client onboardings while the copywriting team is understaffed. Previously, each onboarding required separate briefs, separate writer assignments, and multiple rounds of edits to get the voice consistent. With Brand Voice Style Matching, the specialist configures each client's voice from their existing URLs, generates the page sets independently, and sends three separate review-ready deliverables in the same week. Each client's pages are stylistically isolated from the others -- no house style contamination, no bleed-through between accounts.
Agency repositioning a client's service offering mid-campaign
Six months into a campaign, a B2B software client rebrands and shifts their messaging from "affordable" to "enterprise-grade." The agency needs to update the full page set without rebuilding from scratch. Because the voice fingerprint and business description live in Landing Creator, the account manager updates the positioning, re-runs generation, and uses bulk page regeneration to push the updated pages live. The entire page set reflects the new positioning without a single brief written or junior writer briefed.
How many URLs does Brand Voice Style Matching need to work?
Landing Creator analyzes up to three URLs from the client's existing content. You do not need a comprehensive style guide or a full content audit -- three representative pages (a homepage, a service page, a blog post) are enough to extract the tone, vocabulary, and sentence structure patterns the platform applies to all generated pages.
What if the client's existing content has inconsistent voice across those URLs?
Pick the three pages that best represent the voice the client wants to project, not necessarily the most recent ones. The platform learns from what you point it at, so choosing pages that reflect the target voice gives you the most useful fingerprint. If the client's site is genuinely inconsistent, this is also a good moment to align on which register they want to commit to going forward.
Can I manage multiple clients with different voices in the same account?
Yes. Each client's style fingerprint and business context are configured independently, so each account's generated pages are stylistically isolated from the others. There is no shared house style that bleeds across client accounts. See how multi-business management handles this at scale.
What does Context Lock actually prevent?
Context Lock ensures that every factual claim in a generated page is traceable to the verified business information you entered during setup. The platform will not invent service areas, product features, or claims the business cannot support. This is what makes the output reviewable by a client without a line-by-line fact-check.
What CMS platforms does Landing Creator publish to?
Pages can be published via the WordPress plugin, Next.js package, Shopify app, or REST API. No migration is required -- the pages go live in whatever CMS the client already uses.
Turn your next client onboarding into a single configuration pass
If you are onboarding a new SEO client this week, the configuration pass takes less time than writing a brief. Point Landing Creator at three of their best pages, set the matrix, and see what the full page set looks like before you have written a single word yourself.