A recurring problem across client accounts is that institutional knowledge about client business models, terminology preferences, and content rules lives in people's heads rather than in a shared, queryable system. When this knowledge isn't captured, content errors slip through — wrong business model descriptions, forbidden phrases, or factual misrepresentations — that erode client trust and create rework.
This initiative proposes building a structured Client Brain knowledge base for every account, using AI to actively govern content against client-specific rules before it goes out the door.
The concept surfaced during a pre-call prep session for the [1] account, where a social post incorrectly described reverse ATMs as leased (they are owned by Bluepoint; business owners benefit from foot traffic, not revenue). Neither the account manager nor the strategist knew the correct model. A similar pattern exists with [2], where terms like "peel oil," "crushing," and "chocolate" (vs. "chocolate flavored") have caused repeated friction.
Client-specific knowledge accumulates informally over the course of an engagement but is rarely written down in a structured way:
Without a system to capture and enforce these rules, the same mistakes recur. Content writers, designers, and strategists onboarding to an account have no single source of truth.
"We're building institutional knowledge about these clients, but we're not doing a particularly good job of writing it down anywhere."
— Mark Hope
Add a dedicated Institutional Knowledge section to each client's existing Client Brain workspace. This section would contain:
Feed the knowledge base into an AI content-checking workflow. Before any content (blog post, social copy, ad creative, web page) is sent to the client, it is run against the client's rules:
This replaces the current manual checklist approach (which exists for Bluepoint but is not systematized across accounts) with an AI-assisted pass that scales across all clients.
Example prompt pattern:
"Review this content against the following client rules: [rules]. Flag any violations or potential issues."
To seed the knowledge base, schedule a focused 30-minute discovery call with each client using a standard question set:
These calls are framed as a quality initiative, not a remediation exercise. The output feeds directly into the Client Brain knowledge base.
Suggested question areas:
| Category | Example Questions |
|---|---|
| Business model | Who owns the product/equipment? Who pays whom? |
| Terminology | Any words or phrases we should avoid? Preferred alternatives? |
| Audience | What do leads care about most? What objections come up? |
| Competitors | Who should we not mention or compare against? |
| Past misses | What content have we produced that wasn't right? |
| Client | Known Rule / Learning |
|---|---|
| [3] | Reverse ATMs are owned by Bluepoint, not leased. Business owners benefit from foot traffic only, not revenue share. |
| [4] | Do not mention "peel oil." Use "squeezing," not "crushing." Flavoring must be described as "chocolate flavored," not "chocolate." |