You tried an AI content tool. You typed in 'write an Instagram post for my restaurant' and got something that could have been written for any restaurant on the planet. So you concluded AI doesn't work for local businesses and went back to writing captions yourself at 11pm on a Wednesday. That conclusion is completely understandable - and completely wrong. The tool didn't fail you. You just handed it a blank canvas and expected a portrait. AI content is only as local, specific, and human as the context you feed it. Give it nothing about your business, and it gives you nothing in return. Give it the right inputs - once, in about ten minutes - and it starts producing content that actually sounds like you.
Why Generic Output Is a Context Problem, Not a Technology Problem
Think about what a skilled marketing hire would do on their first day. They wouldn't sit down and start writing posts. They'd spend hours asking questions: What kind of customers do you love serving? What do regulars always say about you? What's the one thing you do that the place three doors down doesn't? They'd eat at your restaurant, browse your rails, sit in your salon chair. They'd absorb your voice before producing a single word in it. AI tools skip that entirely - unless you build that onboarding yourself. The output you've been getting isn't a flaw in the technology. It's the predictable result of asking a capable tool to work without the one thing it actually needs: specific, grounded knowledge of your business.
Generic content doesn't just fail to attract customers - it actively signals that your business is interchangeable with everyone else. And for a local business, interchangeable is the most dangerous thing you can be.
The 10-Minute Brand Brief: Answer These Once, Use Them Forever
What follows is a practical brand input template. Complete it once - honestly, specifically, without overthinking - and paste it as context into any AI tool before you write a single prompt. If you're using a platform like Rulrr, the AI Content Studio is built around this principle: it asks for exactly this kind of business context upfront so every piece of output it generates is grounded in who you actually are, not a generic version of your category.
- Business name and one-line description - not your official tagline, but how you'd explain it to a neighbour in 20 seconds. ('We're a neighbourhood barbershop that's been on this street for 12 years - known for straight razor shaves and never keeping a regular waiting.')
- Your customer in one sentence - not a demographic, a person. ('Our regulars are mostly women in their 30s and 40s who work nearby, come in on lunch breaks, and always ask for Maria.')
- The three things you're genuinely known for - not aspirationally, actually. What do people say when they leave a review or recommend you to a friend?
- One thing you never do - your deliberate lines. ('We don't do cheap promotions, we don't rush appointments, we never use synthetic ingredients.') This shapes tone as much as what you do.
- Your actual voice in three adjectives - and one word that is NOT your voice. ('Warm, direct, a little irreverent. Never corporate.')
- One local reference that only your customers would recognise - a street, an event, a shared experience that signals you're genuinely from here. ('The chaos after the Saturday market' or 'the regulars who come in after school drop-off on Elm Road.')
- Your current business priority in plain language - filling a slow Tuesday, pushing a new treatment, getting more bookings for a specific service. This focuses every piece of content on something that actually moves the needle.
How to Actually Use This in Practice
Once you have these seven answers written down - even roughly - you have a brand brief. Every time you use an AI content tool, open with: 'Here is context about my business. Use this to inform everything you write for me.' Then paste the brief. You'll notice the difference immediately. The posts will name the right kind of customer. The offers will reflect your actual priorities. The tone will stop sounding like a press release from a chain you've never heard of. The brief doesn't need to be long or polished. Rough, honest, and specific beats perfectly written and vague every single time.
A Real Example: Before and After
Without a brand brief, a prompt like 'write a post about our new spring menu' produces: 'Spring is here! Come and enjoy our delicious new seasonal menu, featuring fresh ingredients and exciting flavours. Book your table today!' With a brief that says you're a chef-led bistro in Edinburgh's Leith neighbourhood, known for locally sourced Scottish produce, that gets a little cheeky on social, and that your regulars are food-curious professionals who hate tourist-trap menus - the same prompt produces something that sounds like an actual person wrote it for an actual place. Specific wins. Always.
Built Into the Tool, Not Bolted On After
The reason most AI content tools produce generic output isn't that their underlying technology is weak. It's that they're designed to accept a prompt and return a result - with no mechanism for capturing the business context that makes that result meaningful. Rulrr's AI Content Studio approaches this differently. Brand voice, business context, local specifics, and current priorities are part of the system by design, not an afterthought. The output it generates for a Leith bistro looks nothing like what it produces for a Miami fast-casual spot - because the inputs aren't the same. That's not magic. It's the right architecture.
The One Habit That Separates Local Businesses That Win at Content
It's not posting frequency. It's not budget. It's not even the quality of the images. The single clearest separator between local businesses that produce content that actually builds loyalty - versus content that's just noise - is specificity. Specificity about who they serve. Specificity about what they stand for. Specificity about the tiny, real, local details that make a business recognisable rather than replaceable. AI makes the execution faster. But the specificity has to come from you. Write your brand brief this week. It takes ten minutes. Paste it into every content tool you use from this point forward. That one habit will do more for the quality of your marketing output than any prompt trick, posting schedule, or content calendar you'll ever find.