Migrate from Type Ai to Jasper.
2 documentation-derived translation patterns — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
Type's Generate Draft and Jasper's AI Content Generation both turn a short brief into a full first draft grounded in your own reference material, so the workflow maps almost one-to-one. In Jasper, draft inside Canvas: pick one of the 100+ marketing Apps (or an Agent) that matches the doc type you used Type for — blog post, article, listicle, product description, brief — and write the same prompt you gave Type's Generate box. Re-attach the reference files: where Type let you drop 'knowledge attachments' (PDFs, Word docs, images, other Type docs) per draft, upload those once into Jasper Knowledge so every generation is grounded in them automatically rather than re-attached each time. Keep Jasper (the team already uses it); cut Type. Export any in-flight Type drafts to DOCX or Markdown first (Type's toolbar export) and paste them into Canvas so nothing in progress is lost.
- Warning: Type is a single-author long-form writing tool (documents up to ~150,000 words, novel/screenplay framing); Jasper is marketing-copy-first. Very long manuscripts are not Jasper's sweet spot — if the team's Type use was book-length creative writing rather than marketing content, Jasper Canvas is a weaker fit and you should confirm the actual documents before cutting.
- Warning: Per-draft attachments do not transfer: Type accepts ad-hoc knowledge attachments on each Generate, whereas Jasper grounds generations through workspace Knowledge assets, and Pro caps those at 5 (Business is unlimited) — consolidate your recurring reference docs into that budget.
- Warning: Type runs on a Speed/Power model toggle (Anthropic/OpenAI/Google); Jasper routes its own best-LLM backend and exposes no equivalent quality/speed switch, so expect to re-tune prompts rather than assume identical output.
- Warning: Jasper's entry price (Pro ~$59/seat/mo billed annually, 1 seat) is well above Type's $8-$64/mo tiers, so cutting Type only saves money if the team is already paying for Jasper — the win is removing a duplicate subscription, not a cheaper seat.
Type's custom writing rules ('amplify the quirks that make your writing unique') and Jasper's Brand Voice both lock a consistent voice that the AI applies to every generation, so the control maps directly. In Jasper, recreate each Type writing-style rule set as a Brand Voice: instead of hand-writing rules, let Jasper analyze representative samples of the target voice — upload up to 8 examples (.txt, .pdf, .docx) or paste URLs — and Jasper builds the voice descriptor and the tone/formatting rules ('so Jasper's writing always sounds like you'). Set that voice as the workspace default so it auto-applies to every Canvas draft, Agent run, and Chat, the way Type's rules steered every generation and rewrite. Any hard formatting rules (grammar/style conventions) belong in Jasper's Style Guide under Jasper IQ. Keep Jasper; cut Type.
- Warning: The two represent voice differently: Type stores hand-authored prose rules, while Jasper derives a voice from samples — there is no rule-text import, so plan to re-express each Type rule as either an uploaded example or a Style Guide instruction, then re-tune outputs rather than expect identical phrasing.
- Warning: Brand Voice count is plan-limited: Jasper Pro includes only 2 Brand Voices (Business is unlimited). A writer who kept several distinct Type rule sets (e.g. one per genre or client) may exhaust the Pro allotment and need Business.
- Warning: Private-to-user voices (visible only to the creator) are a Business-tier feature; on Pro every Brand Voice is shared across the single workspace seat, so solo-author privacy that Type gave by default is not reproduced on Pro.
- Warning: Jasper actively flags deviations from the Brand Voice in real time, which Type's rules did not do — useful, but it will surface corrections mid-draft that Type users are not used to seeing.