Consultancy firms thrive on delivering precise, data-driven insights—but the manual process of compiling reports from interviews, organizational documents, and policy analyses can be a bottleneck. Our client, a mid-sized consultancy, faced this exact challenge. Their teams spent weeks sifting through hours of interview transcripts, internal policies, and compliance documents to draft client-specific reports. Not only was this time-consuming, but inconsistencies in formatting and occasional human errors risked undermining their credibility. The volume of data also made it difficult to maintain a coherent narrative, especially when synthesizing qualitative feedback from stakeholders with quantitative policy details. The client sought a solution to automate the drafting process without sacrificing accuracy or the nuanced understanding their human analysts provided. Their goal was clear: transform raw data into polished, structured reports faster, while ensuring every claim was traceable to its source.
To address this, we developed an LLM-driven pipeline tailored to their needs. First, we trained a large language model on a curated dataset of their historical reports, enabling it to grasp the firm’s preferred structure, tone, and analytical frameworks. This ensured the AI-generated drafts mirrored their established standards. Next, we integrated the client’s repository of interview transcripts, policy documents, and organizational guidelines as the model’s knowledge base. By grounding the LLM’s responses exclusively in this verified data, we minimized hallucinations—a critical step, as the consultancy required all findings to be factual and directly tied to evidence. To further enhance reliability, we implemented a “source preference” mechanism, where the model prioritized direct quotes from interviews or explicit policy clauses over inferential statements. The final output was a structured Word document, complete with placeholder tables, headings, and citations, serving as an editable draft. This approach reduced the initial drafting phase from weeks to hours, allowing analysts to focus on refining insights rather than compiling data.