# Audience Intelligence: Grammarly for lawsuits

A non-prisoner pro se civil litigant or solo/SMB owner (e.g. a freelancer or small landlord) handling a debt-collection, eviction, small-claims, or employment dispute without an attorney they cannot afford is the first audience because the report already names a repeated pain, reachable channels, and a validation test that can be run before software is complete.

## Segments
- **A non-prisoner pro se civil litigant or solo/SMB owner (e.g. a freelancer or small landlord) handling a debt-collection, eviction, small-claims, or employment dispute without an attorney they cannot afford**: Self-represented litigants and small businesses draft demand letters and court filings blind: they don't know the correct legal language, procedural formalities, or jurisdiction rules, so filings get rejected or weakened. General chatbots make it worse by inventing fake case citations that lead to sanctions, while a single attorney-drafted letter or motion costs hundreds to thousands of dollars per document. Trigger: U.S. Courts data: 27% of all federal civil cases filed 2000-2019 had at least one pro se plaintiff or defendant, and access-to-justice studies estimate roughly 3 of 5 people in civil cases appear without a lawyer. Budget signal: Freemium SaaS: free single-letter draft, then per-document credits (~$15-40 per finished filing) plus a $29-49/month subscription for multiple active matters; B2B tier for legal-aid orgs and paralegal teams
- **Budget owner who feels the operational cost of the broken workflow.**: Unauthorized practice of law (UPL) exposure: drafting filings and flagging legal sufficiency can be construed as legal advice, creating bar-regulatory and liability risk that varies by state. Trigger: AI-assisted product work and managed infrastructure reduce the first-version cost. Budget signal: $49-$499/month
- **Hands-on operator willing to pilot a narrow tool before a full rollout.**: Citation hallucination / accuracy liability: a single fabricated citation can get a user sanctioned, so the verification layer must be near-perfect or the product actively harms its buyer and reputation. Trigger: Freemium SaaS: free single-letter draft, then per-document credits (~$15-40 per finished filing) plus a $29-49/month subscription for multiple active matters; B2B tier for legal-aid orgs and paralegal teams Budget signal: $99-$1,000/year add-on
- **A non-prisoner pro se civil litigant or solo/SMB owner (e.g. a freelancer or small landlord) handling a debt-collection, eviction, small-claims, or employment dispute without an attorney they cannot afford who still run the workflow in spreadsheets, generic docs, email, or chat threads.**: Self-represented litigants and small businesses draft demand letters and court filings blind: they don't know the correct legal language, procedural formalities, or jurisdiction rules, so filings get rejected or weakened. General chatbots make it worse by inventing fake case citations that lead to sanctions, while a single attorney-drafted letter or motion costs hundreds to thousands of dollars per document. Trigger: The wedge is specific enough to test without claiming the whole market. Budget signal: Custom

## Channels
- **Reddit / forums**: Look for complaints, workarounds, and repeated questions. First move: Post a problem teardown for Legal tech / access-to-justice software for self-represented (pro se) litigants and small businesses pursuing civil disputes, demand letters, and small-claims filings and ask how people solve it today.
- **Launch communities**: Launch traction shows whether the promise is legible. First move: Ship a narrow demo and watch which promise gets clicks.
- **Review and alternative pages**: Pricing and alternatives expose buyer objections. First move: Write an alternatives page that owns one narrow use case.
- **Community pain posts**: Use communities and forums where A non-prisoner pro se civil litigant or solo/SMB owner (e.g. a freelancer or small landlord) handling a debt-collection, eviction, small-claims, or employment dispute without an attorney they cannot afford already describe the painful workflow. First move: Problem teardown, interview ask, and short demo clip
- **Direct outreach**: Direct conversations are the fastest way to verify budget ownership and switching cost. First move: Concierge pilot offer with a manually prepared sample

## Intent Keywords
`grammarly workflow`, `lawsuits validation`, `grammarly ai`, `lawsuits automation`, `legaltech`, `access-to-justice`, `ai-drafting`, `pro-se`, `micro-saas`, `compliance`, `Legal tech / access-to-justice software for self-represented (pro se) litigants and small businesses pursuing civil disputes, demand letters, and small-claims filings`

## Messaging Angles
- Grammarly for lawsuits should be tested as a narrow first-win workflow for A non-prisoner pro se civil litigant or solo/SMB owner (e.g. a freelancer or small landlord) handling a debt-collection, eviction, small-claims, or employment dispute without an attorney they cannot afford.
- Replace a narrow workflow that reaches value without configuration-heavy onboarding. with a focused first-win workflow.
- Promise proof around problem resonance: 5+ calls or 10+ detailed replies..
- De-risk adoption with concierge review or paid template.

## Objections
- Unauthorized practice of law (UPL) exposure: drafting filings and flagging legal sufficiency can be construed as legal advice, creating bar-regulatory and liability risk that varies by state.
- Citation hallucination / accuracy liability: a single fabricated citation can get a user sanctioned, so the verification layer must be near-perfect or the product actively harms its buyer and reputation.
- Incumbents and free public tools: court self-help portals, Prosei AI, and broad assistants like CoCounsel/Clio compete, and courts themselves are launching free guided chatbots (e.g. NDNY 'Pro Se Pal').
- Low/episodic purchase frequency for individual litigants makes CAC payback hard; most users have one dispute and churn, pushing the model toward SMB/legal-aid recurring buyers.
- Needs real buyer access, not only desk research.
- Needs proof of budget or repeated urgency.
