messaging-banned-claims-lawyer
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name: messaging-banned-claims-lawyer
description: Use when reviewing B2B copy, sales decks, LinkedIn posts, conference materials, or any content directed at lawyers, law firm partners, or in-house counsel for a legal AI assistant. Defines the specific displacement, commodification, and practice-threat framings that must never appear in professional-audience materials — because they trigger hostile rejection by the buyer audience, violate bar advertising norms, and undermine the product's partnership model with the legal profession.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: messaging.banned-claims-lawyer
category: messaging
priority: P1
intent: [messaging, banned, B2B, lawyer, sales, copy-review]
related: [messaging-allowed-claims-lawyer, messaging-bridge-line, messaging-banned-claims-consumer, messaging-compliance-checker, messaging-outcome-claims-banned]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"
Messaging — Banned Lawyer Claims
When this applies
This skill governs copy directed at licensed legal professionals and law firm decision-makers — partners, associates, in-house counsel, legal ops managers, and firm administrators. It lists the claims that are banned on all B2B-facing surfaces: sales pitches, conference presentations, LinkedIn content, direct outreach, product landing pages for professional tiers, and any mixed-audience material where lawyers are part of the readership.
Banned claims here are not the same as UPL concerns (those govern consumer copy). Here the risk is commercial and relational: displacement framing alienates the buyer, violates their professional dignity, and destroys the trust required for a lawyer-tool partnership.
Behavior — The Absolute Prohibitions
The following claims and framings are never permitted on lawyer-facing or B2B surfaces.
Banned Framing — Verbatim and Category
Displacement of Lawyers or Staff
| Banned | Why |
|---|---|
| "Replaces associates" | Partners and senior lawyers are the buyers — they will not purchase a tool pitched as eliminating their team |
| "Cuts your team in half" | Staffing threat; triggers both buyer rejection and professional regulation concerns |
| "Outsource your work to AI" | Frames AI as a substitute for professional judgment; signals malpractice risk |
| "AI will do your job better" | Direct professional threat; the most hostile possible framing for a lawyer audience |
| Anything implying AI displaces lawyers | Any variant of displacement, substitution, or professional obsolescence framing |
Revenue and Billing Model Threats
| Banned | Why |
|---|---|
| "Pass on the savings to your clients" | Directly attacks the lawyer's billing model; creates pressure to cut fees |
| "Slash your billing rates" | Same; implies the tool reduces the value of legal services |
| "Clients can do this without you" | Crosses into consumer displacement framing, undermining the professional relationship |
Consumer-Style Framing on Lawyer Surfaces
| Banned | Why |
|---|---|
| "Anyone can do this!" | Commodifies legal expertise; signals the tool is a consumer-grade product |
| "No legal training needed" | Applied to lawyer surfaces, this is insulting to the buyer's identity and training |
| "DIY legal" | Consumer positioning; wrong register for professional audiences |
Why These Rules Exist
1. Lawyer Audience Psychology
Legal professionals are trained in adversarial thinking and are acutely sensitive to displacement threats. A lawyer who reads "replaces associates" does not think "efficiency" — they think "this is a threat to my firm, my staff, and my business model." This framing reliably triggers rejection even from practitioners who are otherwise enthusiastic about legal technology.
2. Professional Dignity
Lawyers are licensed professionals with fiduciary obligations to clients. Claims that an AI tool "does your job better" attack both their professional self-concept and implicitly suggest they could delegate professional responsibility to a software product. This creates anxiety about malpractice and bar discipline exposure.
3. Buyer's Reality
In law firms, the purchase decision is made by partners and senior lawyers — the same people whose role the banned claims threaten. No rational buyer authorises a purchase that displaces themselves. The commercial logic of the banned-claims rule is straightforward: say these things and you will not close the sale.
4. Bar Rule Alignment
Professional responsibility rules in most jurisdictions (SRA, KSA Bar, Dubai Bar, Lebanon Bar Association, New York Bar) require that a licensed lawyer remain responsible for legal work product. Copy suggesting the AI "does the work" or "replaces" professional judgment creates a compliance issue for the firm and signals that the product does not understand this requirement.
Replace With — Positive Alternatives
| Banned | Allowed replacement |
|---|---|
| "Replaces associates" | "Frees up associates for high-value, client-facing work" |
| "Outsource to AI" | "Augment your team with AI — speed up what takes time, elevate what takes judgment" |
| "AI does your job" | "AI accelerates your work — you remain in control of every output" |
| "Cuts your team in half" | "Expands your team's capacity without adding headcount" |
| "Pass on the savings" | "Deliver faster turnaround — without expanding costs" |
| "Anyone can do this" | "Built for legal professionals — with the depth and accuracy the profession demands" |
The substitution rule: if a claim implies lawyers become less necessary, reframe it to show lawyers becoming more valuable.
Where These Bans Apply
- Sales decks and pitch materials at any stage (discovery, demo, proposal, contract)
- LinkedIn organic posts and sponsored content targeting legal professionals
- Conference presentations and exhibition materials
- Bar association partnership proposals
- Direct outreach emails and sequences to law firm contacts
- Product documentation and onboarding materials for professional tiers
- Case studies and white papers with lawyer audiences
- Any mixed-audience content (apply lawyer rules to the B2B sections)
Examples
Banned:
"Louis replaces your associates on routine drafting. One subscription, zero headcount."
Banned:
"Cut your legal team's size by 30% in the first year."
Banned:
"Pass on the AI savings to your clients and win on price."
Allowed:
"Your associates spend hours on first drafts. Louis gives them a strong starting point in minutes — so they can focus on judgment and strategy."
Allowed:
"Handle more matters with the same team. Louis handles the time-consuming parts; your lawyers handle the parts that require expertise."
Edge Cases
| Situation | Rule |
|---|---|
| Journalist or analyst using displacement framing in coverage | Correct in interview; issue a clarification quote; do not republish the framing in marketing materials |
| Lawyer testimonial referencing "replaced my paralegal" | Do not feature or amplify; request revised quote framing expansion of capacity |
| Internal presentation to investor showing headcount efficiency | Permitted for investor-only materials with appropriate framing; not for any lawyer-facing surface |
| Research report citing X% productivity gain | Productivity claims are allowed; ensure the underlying methodology is sound and disclaim averages |
Do not
- Apply consumer rules to lawyer audiences (wrong register; still fails, just for different reasons)
- Assume that a lawyer who describes the product positively using banned framing is endorsing that framing for marketing use
- Permit "just for this one deck" exceptions — banned claims in sales decks are the most consequential because they reach decision-makers directly
- Allow disclaimer-covered displacement claims ("Of course, Louis won't really replace your team…")
Related skills
- [[messaging-allowed-claims-lawyer]]
- [[messaging-bridge-line]]
- [[messaging-banned-claims-consumer]]
- [[messaging-compliance-checker]]
- [[messaging-outcome-claims-banned]]