LINK TO PROMPT GENERATOR: 27 ARCHETYPES PROMPT
DATA COLLECTION
| Participant | AI platform |
|---|---|
| Allison Wentworth Ross | Claude |
| Louise Mosley | |
| Sibylle Stehli | |
| Participant 4 | |
| Participant 5 | |
| Participant 6 | |
| Participant 7 | |
| Participant 8 |
| Participant | Industry, offering, ideal client, and inspiration |
|---|---|
| Allison Wentworth Ross |
Industry: Marketing Your offering: I integrate human intelligence, artificial intelligence, and permutation to create interactive marketing engagement tools that make marketing simple, accessible, affordable, and sustainable. Solo entrepreneurs can reclaim their time and financial costs while amplifying their knowledge and impact. Ideal client: Solo entrepreneurs ready to embrace artificial intelligence as a thinking partner instead of just a productivity hack. Inspiration: Different types of trees |
| Louise Mosley | |
| Sibylle Stehli | |
| Participant 4 | |
| Participant 5 | |
| Participant 6 | |
| Participant 7 | |
| Participant 8 |
| Participant | Welcome |
|---|---|
| Allison Wentworth Ross |
Welcome! There's something genuinely rare happening at the intersection you're working in. Most marketing tools are built for marketers — but you're building for the solo entrepreneur who is the marketer, the strategist, the creator, and the service provider all at once. That changes everything about what "simple and sustainable" actually needs to mean. What makes your work distinct is that you're not just offering AI tools — you're inviting a mindset shift. The solo entrepreneur who sees AI as a thinking partner rather than a shortcut is operating from a fundamentally different place than one who's just looking to automate a task. That internal orientation is where the real differentiation lives, and it's exactly what we'll be mapping. The marketing industry is flooded with "do more, faster" messaging — but your ideal client is quietly asking a different question: "How do I do this in a way that actually feels like me?" That tension between efficiency and authenticity is the heartbeat of the archetypes we're about to uncover together. |
| Louise Mosley | |
| Sibylle Stehli | |
| Participant 4 | |
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| Participant 8 |
| Participant | AI's Suggestions for Question 1 |
|---|---|
| Allison Wentworth Ross |
QUESTION 1 At the heart of your work is a solo entrepreneur who has to be the business — the thinker, the doer, and the face of it all. Before we can understand how AI fits into their world, we need to understand how they relate to their own knowledge and expertise. This dimension will reveal how your customers fundamentally differ from each other at the most foundational level: their inner relationship with what they know and what they're here to offer. Here are 3 ways to ask it: 1. When it comes to sharing your expertise with the world, what feels most true for you right now? 2. How do you currently experience the gap between the knowledge you have and the impact you're making? 3. What is your relationship with your own expertise as a solo entrepreneur? Which one feels right to you? Just type the number (1, 2, or 3). |
| Louise Mosley | |
| Sibylle Stehli | |
| Participant 4 | |
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| Participant 8 |
| Participant | AI's Option Suggestions for Question 1 |
|---|---|
| Allison Wentworth Ross |
Lovely! You chose: What is your relationship with your own expertise as a solo entrepreneur? Here are six ways people might answer that question. Please feel into what may resonate most with what they're experiencing: 1. I know what I know, but I struggle to articulate it in a way that lands with the right people 2. I have more expertise than I give myself credit for — I just haven't found the right way to share it yet 3. My expertise is constantly evolving and I find it hard to package something that keeps moving 4. I'm confident in my expertise but overwhelmed by how much is required to market it effectively 5. I sometimes wonder if what I know is valuable enough for people to pay for 6. I feel like my expertise is my greatest asset, but I'm not leveraging it the way I know I could Pick your top 3 by typing the numbers (e.g., "1, 3, 5" or "2, 4, 6"). These will become the three options to your first question. |
| Louise Mosley | |
| Sibylle Stehli | |
| Participant 4 | |
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| Participant 8 |
Form not found.
| Participant | Your final three questions and options |
|---|---|
| Allison Wentworth Ross |
Question 1: What is your relationship with your own expertise as a solo entrepreneur? Answer A: I have more expertise than I give myself credit for — I just haven't found the right way to share it yet Answer B: My expertise is constantly evolving and I find it hard to package something that keeps moving Answer C: I feel like my expertise is my greatest asset, but I'm not leveraging it the way I know I could Question 2: When you think about the time and energy you spend on marketing, what feels most true? Answer A: Marketing takes so much time that it consistently pulls me away from the work I actually love doing Answer B: I've tried to be consistent but I keep running out of steam before I see results Answer C: I've accepted that marketing is part of the job, but I haven't found a way that feels natural yet Question 3: What is your honest reaction when someone suggests AI could amplify your impact? Answer A: I'm intrigued but I worry that AI will make my work sound generic and lose my voice Answer B: I've experimented with AI but I'm using it for tasks, not as a real thinking partner Answer C: I'm skeptical that AI can understand the nuance of what I do well enough to actually help |
| Louise Mosley | |
| Sibylle Stehli | |
| Participant 4 | |
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| Participant | AI's description of yellow, green, and orange rooms |
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| Allison Wentworth Ross |
🟡 THE YELLOW ROOM (Archetypes 1-9) The Underestimated Root These are the solo entrepreneurs who carry more wisdom than they've ever claimed. They answered: "I have more expertise than I give myself credit for — I just haven't found the right way to share it yet." What separates the nine people in this room is how they experience time and energy in marketing, and where they stand with AI. 🟢 THE GREEN ROOM (Archetypes 10-18) The Ever-Shifting Canopy These are the solo entrepreneurs whose expertise is alive and in motion — always growing, always changing, always one step ahead of their ability to capture it. They answered: "My expertise is constantly evolving and I find it hard to package something that keeps moving." What separates the nine people in this room is how they experience the cost of marketing, and where they stand with AI. 🟠 THE ORANGE ROOM (Archetypes 19-27) The Unleveraged Crown These are the solo entrepreneurs who know exactly what they have — and feel the gap between that knowledge and their current impact most acutely. They answered: "I feel like my expertise is my greatest asset, but I'm not leveraging it the way I know I could." What separates the nine people in this room is how they experience the cost of marketing, and where they stand with AI. |
| Louise Mosley | |
| Sibylle Stehli | |
| Participant 4 | |
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| Participant | Archetypes 1, 10, and 19 |
|---|---|
| Allison Wentworth Ross |
ARCHETYPE #1: The Buried Seed INSPIRATION: The Sequoia Tree WHY? The Sequoia holds the potential to become the largest living thing on earth — but only if its seed finds the right conditions to crack open. This archetype has everything needed for monumental growth, waiting for the right environment to release it. Who They Are: They have spent years accumulating wisdom — through experience, study, and hard-won lessons — but have never quite believed it was enough to put a stake in the ground. They are quietly capable, privately doubting, and sitting on a forest worth of knowledge that the world hasn't seen yet. What They're Experiencing: Marketing already pulls them away from the work they love, and the fear that AI will flatten their voice into something unrecognizable stops them from experimenting. They spend hours on content that doesn't feel like them, then abandon it. They want a way to share their expertise that doesn't require them to choose between authenticity and efficiency. The idea that AI could be a thinking partner sounds appealing in theory but threatening in practice. Words of Wisdom from The Sequoia to those experiencing this: "My seed sat dormant for years before the conditions were right — that wasn't failure, that was preparation. When the fire came, it was the fire that finally let me grow." ARCHETYPE #10: The Seasonal Bloom INSPIRATION: The Magnolia Tree WHY? The Magnolia blooms before its leaves arrive — it leads with beauty before it has the full picture. This archetype's expertise arrives in waves of insight that are stunning in the moment but hard to hold onto, and they pour energy into marketing before they've found a sustainable structure to support it. Who They Are: They are visionary, generative thinkers whose expertise evolves faster than any single framework can contain. Marketing pulls them away from the thinking they love most, and every time they sit down to create content, their ideas have already moved on from what they were going to say. What They're Experiencing: They lose hours to marketing that could be spent developing the ideas that actually differentiate them. By the time a piece of content is ready to publish, it already feels outdated to them. AI intrigues them as a potential solution to this gap, but the worry that it will flatten their voice into something generic is a genuine blocker. They need a way to capture their evolving thinking in real time without sacrificing the texture that makes it worth sharing. Words of Wisdom from The Magnolia to those experiencing this: "I bloom before the leaves come because waiting for perfect conditions means never blooming at all. The beauty was never in having everything ready — it was in showing up before I was fully formed." ARCHETYPE #19: The Crowned Sapling INSPIRATION: The Tulip Poplar WHY? The Tulip Poplar grows faster than almost any hardwood tree — it knows what it's capable of and moves toward the light with urgency. But without the right conditions, that speed becomes scattered growth rather than directed power. This archetype has the same quality: clear potential, real urgency, and not yet the right structure to direct it. Who They Are: They are ambitious, self-aware, and acutely conscious of the gap between their potential and their current output. Marketing steals hours from the work they know would demonstrate their expertise most powerfully. AI worries them specifically because their voice is their most valuable asset and they've seen what generic AI content looks like. What They're Experiencing: They feel the cost of underleverage in a concrete, daily way — every hour spent on marketing that doesn't convert feels like a direct tax on their impact. They've looked at AI tools and stepped back because the outputs they've seen look nothing like them. They need to see a version of AI-assisted marketing that is so distinctly theirs that they couldn't imagine anyone else producing it. Until then, they'll keep doing it manually, even at a pace that frustrates them. Words of Wisdom from The Tulip Poplar to those experiencing this: "I don't grow fast because I'm impatient. I grow fast because I know what I'm here to become, and standing still feels dishonest. The urgency isn't anxiety — it's clarity." |
| Louise Mosley | |
| Sibylle Stehli | |
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| Participant | Link to Quizzy-Cal |
|---|---|
| Allison Wentworth Ross | https://quizzy-cal.click/allisonwentworthross |
| Louise Mosley | |
| Sibylle Stehli | |
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