One regeneration pass, every client page updated

When a client's positioning shifts, bulk regeneration replaces weeks of manual rewriting with a single action.

One regeneration pass, every client page updated

Regenerate a full client page set in one pass

Describe the client's new positioning, run bulk regeneration, and hand back a fully updated page set before the next check-in call.

Run your first regeneration

The manual rewrite is the wrong unit of work

When a client repositions, the instinct is to open the first page and start editing. That instinct is wrong, not because the editing is hard, but because it scales to zero. Three pages on day one, three more on day two, and by the end of the week you have a patchwork site where the homepage sounds like the new brand and the category pages still pitch the old one. Clients notice. They do not always say something directly, but they start wondering whether you have a process or just a to-do list. The problem is not the writing. It is the unit of work. Rewriting page by page treats a matrix problem as a line item problem, and no amount of late nights fixes that mismatch.

One configuration change propagates everywhere

Landing Creator builds content from a central business description. Every page in the matrix, every service-by-area or offer-by-use-case combination, draws from that shared context. When a client's positioning changes, you update the description once. Then you run bulk page regeneration. Every page picks up the new framing, the new brand voice, the new product angle, simultaneously. No page is left on the old messaging. No page gets a slightly different version of the new story because a different writer touched it on a different day. The entire site moves together, which is the only way a repositioning actually lands.

Context Lock keeps every claim traceable

The risk agencies carry with AI-assisted content is hallucination: a page that invents a feature, misquotes a price tier, or describes a service the client does not offer. That risk compounds when you are onboarding a client you have known for three weeks. Landing Creator's Context Lock ties every generated claim back to the verified business information you provided during setup. Nothing gets added that is not in the brief. This matters most at onboarding, when your knowledge of the client is still shallow and the margin for error is lowest. You can hand the regenerated set to the client for review with confidence that the errors, if any, will be factual gaps to fill, not fabrications to walk back.

Brand voice is learned, not approximated

Regenerating 47 pages in one action only works if the output actually sounds like the client. Landing Creator learns writing style from up to three URLs you provide during onboarding. That means the bulk output does not read like generic SEO copy with the client's name inserted. It reads like content the client's own team might have written, at the register and tone they have already established. For agencies, this closes the gap between "we generated it" and "it is ready to review." The client is not correcting voice on every page. They are checking facts and approving. That is a fundamentally different review conversation, and it is how brand voice replication at scale becomes a repeatable agency deliverable rather than a one-off effort.

What the client sees is a strategic partner

The operational story is about speed. The client story is about confidence. When a client asks on Monday when the site will reflect the new positioning and you can say "review-ready by Wednesday," that answer changes the relationship. It signals that your agency has infrastructure, not just talent. Bulk regeneration is what makes that answer possible without burning your team. The content writer who is already at capacity does not touch this project. The account lead runs the configuration pass, the platform handles the generation, and the deliverable goes to the client on schedule. That is what a strategic partner looks like from the outside, and it is what keeps the engagement long after onboarding ends.

The problem is not the writing. It is the unit of work: rewriting page by page treats a matrix problem as a line item problem, and no amount of late nights fixes that mismatch.

Agency client onboarding is where SEO engagements are won or lost before a single keyword moves. The first deliverable sets the client's expectations for everything that follows, and if that deliverable takes three weeks to produce because the content queue is backed up, the relationship starts in deficit. Bulk page regeneration is built for exactly this moment: compress the production phase, hand over a complete and consistent page set, and start the engagement looking like the strategic partner the client hired.

How it works

  1. Describe the client's business

    Write the business description that will anchor every generated page: what the client offers, who they serve, how they position against alternatives, and any specific claims that must appear or must not appear. This is the brief that Context Lock will enforce across the entire matrix. The more precise you are here, the less the client will need to correct in review.

  2. Set the content matrix

    Define the combinations: services or offers on one axis, target areas or use cases on the other. For an agency onboarding a D2C furniture brand, that might be product categories by room type, or collection names by buyer persona. The platform suggests matrix dimensions based on your business description, so you are not building from a blank spreadsheet. Each cell in the matrix becomes one unique landing page.

  3. Train the brand voice

    Provide up to three URLs from the client's existing site. Landing Creator reads the writing style, sentence rhythm, and register from those pages and applies it to every generated page. This step is what separates output that needs a full rewrite from output that needs a light review. It takes minutes and changes the quality of everything downstream.

  4. Run bulk generation

    Trigger generation across the full matrix. Every page is produced with original content, schema markup, FAQ, internal linking, and metadata, all in the client's brand voice, all traceable to the verified business description. For a client mid-reposition, this is also where you update the business description first and then regenerate: every existing page picks up the new context in the same pass. No page is left on outdated messaging.

  5. Hand over for client review

    The full page set goes to the client as a structured review deliverable. Because voice is already calibrated and claims are grounded in the brief, the client is reviewing for factual accuracy and strategic fit, not correcting tone on every page. Publish via WordPress plugin, Next.js package, Shopify app, or REST API when approved. No migration, no rebuild.

  • Full matrix updated in one action

    Change the business description or brand voice, run regeneration, and every page in the matrix reflects the update. No page is left on outdated messaging because there is no page-by-page queue to manage.

  • Zero hallucination across the page set

    Context Lock ties every generated claim to the verified brief you built at onboarding. When you hand the set to the client for review, you are not hunting for invented facts, you are confirming the brief was complete.

  • Voice calibration from existing URLs

    Landing Creator learns the client's writing style from up to three URLs. The bulk output reads like the client's own team wrote it, which means the review conversation is about strategy, not copy corrections.

  • No extra headcount for scale

    A repositioning that previously meant hiring temp writers or delaying delivery runs through one configuration pass. The account lead handles it, and the content writer who is already at capacity stays on their current projects.

  • Publish to any stack without migration

    WordPress plugin, Next.js package, Shopify app, or REST API. The client's existing CMS stays in place and the regenerated pages go live without a rebuild.

Use cases

D2C pivot with 47 outdated landing pages

A furniture brand moves from B2B wholesale to direct-to-consumer and every existing landing page still pitches trade accounts and volume pricing. The agency account lead updates the business description to reflect the new D2C positioning, trains the voice on three pages from the client's new brand guidelines microsite, and runs bulk page regeneration. All 47 pages are regenerated simultaneously, each picking up the new messaging, the new audience framing, and the correct schema markup. The client receives a review-ready set two days after the brief is finalized, not two weeks.

New SEO client with no existing content infrastructure

An agency onboards a regional home services company that has a five-page brochure site and wants to rank across twelve service categories in eight cities. Building that matrix manually would mean 96 pages of original content, each needing metadata, FAQ, and internal links. The agency describes the business, sets the matrix, and generates the full page set in one configuration pass. The client goes from a five-page site to a 96-page SEO-ready content structure without the agency staffing up or the client waiting months. For agencies managing multiple business accounts, this workflow repeats cleanly for every new client.

Mid-campaign brand voice correction

Three months into an engagement, a SaaS client tightens their brand voice after a rebrand: shorter sentences, no passive voice, a sharper ICP focus. The agency updates the voice training URLs to reflect the new style guide and reruns bulk regeneration across the existing page set. Every page is updated to the new register without a writer touching a single file manually. The client notices the consistency in their next review call and attributes it to the agency's attention to detail, which is accurate, just not in the way they imagine.

What happens to pages that were already approved when I run a bulk regeneration?

Bulk regeneration updates every page in the matrix using the current business description and voice settings. If you have approved pages you want to preserve, the right moment to regenerate is before final client sign-off, or you can treat the regenerated set as a new draft round. The regeneration does not auto-publish, so nothing goes live without a deliberate publish action on your end.

How does the platform learn a new client's brand voice during onboarding?

You provide up to three URLs from the client's existing site. Landing Creator reads the writing style, sentence structure, and register from those pages and applies that learned voice to every page it generates. This voice training runs at the start of onboarding and can be updated at any point, triggering a fresh regeneration pass if the style changes mid-engagement.

Can I manage multiple clients from one account?

Yes. The multi-business management workflow is built for agencies running several client accounts. Each client has its own business description, matrix, and voice settings, so a regeneration for one client does not affect another. Each account is fully isolated, which matters when clients are in the same industry and you cannot risk cross-contamination.

What does the client review process look like after bulk generation?

The generated page set is structured and reviewable before anything is published. Because Context Lock grounds every claim in the verified brief and voice training calibrates the tone, clients typically spend review time on strategic fit and factual gaps, not on correcting the writing style or chasing down invented claims. The review round is shorter than it would be with manually written content.

Stop letting a repositioning stall your entire engagement

If you have a client mid-reposition and a page set that no longer reflects the brand, the configuration pass takes one session. The regeneration runs while you move on to the next account. Hand the client a review-ready set and stop being the bottleneck.

Regenerate your client's pages