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The AI Advantage

126.4k members • Free

3 contributions to The AI Advantage
🤝 Your Clients Now Expect AI Speed. Did You Actually Agree to That?
Something has been shifting quietly across most client-facing industries over the past year, and it's worth naming directly because it's rarely discussed as its own phenomenon. Turnaround expectations have been resetting, not because clients are asking for faster service explicitly, but because the fastest available option in any given market becomes the invisible new baseline everyone gets measured against, whether or not they agreed to compete on that basis. The professionals absorbing the most pressure from this shift are often the ones who haven't addressed it directly at all. They're not failing to deliver quality. They're being quietly judged against a speed standard they never negotiated and may not have the workflow to consistently meet. ------------- Context ------------- Client expectations are relative, not absolute. A three-day turnaround felt reasonable when three days was close to the market standard. As AI-assisted competitors compress turnaround times across an industry, three days starts to feel slow, even though nothing about the underlying work or its value has changed. The client isn't necessarily aware they're comparing you to a faster competitor. The comparison happens quietly, in the background of their overall impression, and it shows up as a vague sense that something feels slower than it should, even if they can't articulate exactly why. This dynamic is particularly tricky because it happens without any explicit negotiation. Nobody sits down and renegotiates the terms of a service relationship because a competitor got faster. The expectation just shifts, gradually, and the professional operating at the old pace finds themselves falling short of a standard that was never discussed. A freelance graphic designer noticed this pattern directly when a long-standing client mentioned, almost in passing, that they'd been surprised by how quickly a different vendor had turned around a similar project. The comment wasn't a complaint, and the designer's work quality hadn't changed. But the remark signaled that the client's baseline expectation had shifted, and the designer's usual turnaround, which had been perfectly acceptable for years, was now being measured against a faster standard she hadn't been consulted on.
🤝 Your Clients Now Expect AI Speed. Did You Actually Agree to That?
0 likes • 28m
@Scott King I have future clients tell me no other attorney mediator was willing to speak to them personally. The policy is to retain objectivity and neutrality but you have to gather enough facts to set up a mediation or establish what you are dealing with. Then attorneys are being told if they are not fast enough on AI their bills will not get paid. Thus, I do not do legal representation any longer.
AI Assistant to maintain neutrality
I do have calls coming in but to remain neutral and unbiased I am limited to what I can discuss. I want my AI assistant to do the AI intake information. This helps me retain objectivity.
Paid AI is this right one.
I went to sign up for Claude and got Use AI instead. IS that the same thing? It says it gives access to all the search engines.
0 likes • 35m
@Michael Robert yes but I paid back in November
0 likes • 34m
Sorry Useai a paid service that claims to have all the AI resources.
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Karen Crosby
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3points to level up
@karen-crosby-6165
Karen Matcke Crosby Attorney/Mediator P.C in Concord is a California licensed attorney practicing law over 37 years, and is highly regarded

Active 6m ago
Joined Apr 21, 2026
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