The failure mode of employee content at scale is sameness. One team writes for a whole roster, and within a month they all sound like the same competent, slightly bland LinkedIn presence. The audience cannot say why, but they can feel it. The posts stop sounding like a person and start sounding like a content calendar.
Voice is not a tone setting
People treat voice like a slider between formal and casual. It is not. Voice is the specific stuff: the words this person reaches for, the jokes they would and would never make, the way they open, the things they are willing to be wrong about in public. A casual setting does not capture any of that. It just makes everyone equally casual.
Capture the voice before you write a word
Before drafting for anyone, we read what they have actually posted and pull out the patterns. Not to copy lines, but to mirror cadence. How long are their sentences. Do they use lists or paragraphs. Do they land soft or land hard. What do they never say. That profile is the constraint every draft has to clear.
- Model the voice from real posts, not a questionnaire about how they like to sound.
- Keep an exclude list. The things this person would never write are as defining as the things they would.
- One voice profile per person, never a shared house style with names swapped in.
Why one shared style fails
The tempting shortcut is a single brand voice that everyone borrows. It scales beautifully and it reads like a press release. The whole point of employee voice is that a person, not a brand, is talking. The moment two of your people could have written each other's posts, you have lost the thing you were selling.
How buyWords holds the line
Every profile carries its own Voice DNA, built from how that person really writes. When you switch profiles, the whole room re-keys: the voice, the feed, the numbers. The assistant drafts inside that one person's constraints, so every voice stays its own, even when one team is behind all of them.
Scale is not the enemy of voice. Blending is. Keep the voices separate and you can write for a whole roster as easily as for one, without any of them noticing they share a desk.