Every person will have different attributes of build and strengths in their hands or legs or core and range of motion limitations in certain areas.... This is the exact reason we will never look like someone else when we swing a golf club.
No-one will ever say that my golf swing looked like Ben Hogan's when compared on video or when comparing still static pictures. However the dynamics of the motion are much closer when viewed below than most people would see or believe.

One of my major dislikes in modern golf instruction is when during a lesson the teacher films the students swing and then compares it on a split screen next to Tiger Woods or Ian Poulter or whomever they think has a good swing to compare the student to. This practice is totally wrong as like I said there is no use in comparing static looking positions during a swing because every person is different in their strengths and ranges of motion and pressures they exert though their feet and legs and trunk and hands and so on.
The golf swing is an entire process of dynamics of motion, range and pressures that give it the view others witness from the outside. What we see from the outside is based on the forces created on the inside.
Trying to stick the club in a look or a position is a futile exercise and the downfall of many golfers and instructors alike. The look of a golf swing is based solely on how we balance and pressure in the body against the movement of the golf club that is whirling around us and trying to throw us off balance and trying to make us stop and compensate and disrupt the flow.
My golf instruction is very much based around allowing the student to feel for themselves through specific drills what pressures and motion is involved to control and power the golf club based on that person themselves and their capabilities at that time. Through hard work they change their muscle structure and their swings. Eventually their swings alter for the better as they strengthen and work the correct golf muscles that allow change to become reality and the end result becomes lower scores with a better shot dispersion- where the good shots not only become better but the bad shots become significantly more manageable and playable- and that is the key to better golf.
From the confidence of better struck straighter shots comes the ability to add more shots to the repertoire- the addition of building blocks that will enable the golfer to control the ball better and access dogleg shapes and pin positions and trouble shots to a higher degree.
Confidence stems from these new found capabilities and as a result better course management and planning reveals itself and the player becomes progressively more complete in every aspect and the scores drop and the handicaps plunge.
As time goes on the student understands -It's not the player that hits the most good shots. It is the player that hits the best bad shots that ends up reaping the rewards.