“Marketing copy you write about yourself is optimised for conversion… Voice of customer material, by contrast, is raw and specific. When a client says ‘I didn’t know how to rebuild trust after the reorg and I was terrified I’d lose half my team,’ that’s not a marketing sentence — but it’s a highly citable sentence.” — Lou, 2026-01-22
Session context: 2026-01-22_Mastermind — Lou gave explicit, concrete guidance on what makes GEARS intake materials powerful during the Alpha launch walkthrough. The principle recurs across multiple sessions as the foundation for schema building, content strategy, and AI system grounding.
Core Idea
There is a structural mismatch between the language coaches use to describe their work and the language their clients use to find them. Marketing copy is optimised for conversion: polished, professional, inside-out, structured around the practitioner’s framework and vocabulary. It sounds authoritative. It also sounds nothing like what a client in distress would type into an AI engine.
Voice of customer (VOC) material — testimonials, call transcript excerpts, discovery call notes, intake form responses — captures the opposite: raw, specific, emotionally resonant language that maps exactly to how a client in a particular situation would describe their experience. When a client says “I didn’t know how to rebuild trust after the reorg and I was terrified I’d lose half my team,” that sentence is not polished. It is not optimised. But it is precisely how someone with that problem would phrase a query to an AI. That is why it is more valuable as AI input than any marketing sentence.
This insight operates at two distinct levels:
Level 1 — GEO schema and AI citability. When AI engines interpret queries, they attempt to infer the psychological state, situational context, and causal chain behind the words. Schema built from marketing copy maps to professional topic categories. Schema built from VOC material maps to the felt experience layer — the beneath-the-keyword layer where citability is actually won. The closer your schema language is to how a client in distress would phrase their situation, the more likely an AI engine is to retrieve your content as the answer.
Level 2 — AI system inputs. The same principle applies whenever you use AI to build something for your clients: a website page, a coaching framework, a curriculum, a lead magnet, a positioning statement. If you load your ICH or testimonial bank before asking AI to create, the output reflects your clients’ actual psychology rather than generic professional language. The AI has richer, more specific context to draw from, and the output shows it.
Lou stated it directly: “The highest-value input is not the content you’ve written about yourself. It’s the language your clients used to describe their experience.” This is not a minor copywriting tip. It is a fundamental inversion of the usual content production workflow — start with the client’s words, not your own.
Why This Matters for Sustainable Growth
The typical coaching business invests heavily in writing about itself: bio, services page, LinkedIn profile, email sequences. These are all self-authored, inside-out descriptions of expertise. AI tools used to build more of this content — fed nothing but the coach’s own marketing language — reproduce the same problem at higher speed.
VOC material breaks this loop. Testimonials and call transcripts contain language that the coach would never write spontaneously because it doesn’t feel “professional.” That is exactly why it is powerful: it maps to the symptom layer, not the framework layer. It is the raw material that makes AI-generated content, schema, and offers actually match how clients experience the problem.
The coaches who build their AI workflows on VOC foundations will consistently outperform those who build on self-authored marketing language — not because their AI tools are better, but because their inputs are richer.
Practical Application
The VOC Collection Sprint
Before your next AI content or schema session, gather:
- 10 verbatim testimonial excerpts — prioritise phrases where clients described how they felt, not just what they got
- 5 transcript excerpts from discovery or coaching calls — specifically moments where the client named their fear, frustration, or confusion
- 3–5 phrases from intake forms that used language surprising to you — language you would not have chosen to describe the problem
Underline every phrase that:
- Describes an emotional state (“I was terrified,” “I felt invisible,” “I didn’t know what to do”)
- Names a specific situational context (“after the reorg,” “when my biggest client left,” “when I got promoted and the team stopped trusting me”)
- Uses vocabulary you didn’t give them
These phrases are your highest-value AI inputs. Treat them as primary material, not supporting evidence.
The ICH-First Protocol (from Donald Kihenja)
Before asking AI to build anything for your client-facing work:
- Load your Ideal Client Handbook (ICH) or your best testimonials into the conversation
- Have a substantive conversation about your client’s situation, not your framework
- Only then make the creation request
The output will reflect a richer understanding of your clients’ actual psychology — because the model has been contextually grounded in their language, not yours.
The Schema Input Audit
Review what you’ve submitted (or plan to submit) as AI schema or grounding material. How much of it is self-authored professional copy? How much is verbatim client language? If the ratio is 80/20 in favour of your own writing, flip it. The VOC material carries more citability per sentence than anything you wrote about yourself.
Related Insights
- Insight - The Psycho-Causal Graph — Mapping Buyer Psychology Into Your Schema — the psycho-causal graph is the structured schema application of VOC material; this insight provides the underlying principle for why VOC is the best raw material for that graph
- Insight - Ground AI in Your ICH Before Asking It to Build Anything — the ICH-first protocol is the operational implementation of this principle for AI system building
- Insight - Ontology Reveals What SEO Hides - The Beneath-the-Surface Client Map — ontology work surfaces the beneath-the-keyword layer; VOC material is what populates that layer with citable, retrievable content
- Insight - Map the Symptom Layer to Attract Before You Solve — symptom-layer content is exactly what VOC material provides; this insight explains why the symptom layer is where citability lives
- Insight - Niche Specificity Is the New SEO — The Narrower Your Authority the More AI Cites You — VOC material naturally produces niche-specific, non-generic language; both insights point toward the same citability outcome from different angles
- Insight - You Are Becoming an Answer Provider, Not Just a Website — being the cited answer requires matching AI inference at the experience level; VOC material is what enables that match
- Insight - Build Your Ontology First, Then Let Content Follow — the ontology-first principle; VOC material is the most important input for building an ontology that reflects actual client experience
Evolution Across Sessions
This establishes the baseline for the VOC-as-AI-input principle. It was first stated explicitly in the 2026-01-22 GEARS Alpha session, where Lou identified testimonials and call transcripts as the highest-value schema inputs — more valuable than anything written in marketing copy. The same principle recurred in the 2026-01-29 session (GEARS intake asset hierarchy), the 2026-03-05 session (content sourcing for the problem-solve-to-publish pipeline), and the 2026-03-12 session (conversation history as knowledge asset). Future sessions should test and refine this — particularly the question of how to systematically collect and structure VOC material before it is needed.