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We content creators live in a miraculous time. We can talk to more people than ever before in history. The power of marketing is astronomically stronger than it's ever been. Our audience knows no geographical limit.
The real foundation for all of this power and reach is the content we produce. We can publish for free anytime we want--and people will listen. We can be our own TV station, our own radio network, our own newspaper.
And now, thanks to Artificial Intelligence tools like ChatGPT, we don't even have to write the material ourselves. There's an army of robots ready and eager to write blog posts, send emails, or even deepfake podcasts and videos. We can publish as often as we want to, for free, with almost no effort.
Here's the really amazing part: more content is still more important than good content. Quantity still beats quality in the online marketing game. Show up more often, and you'll win.
This perfect storm of free attention won't last forever. It probably won't last more than another year or so. Eventually, Google or another search engine will figure out how to filter content that's been written by robots, and find the real stuff. The real tech race is actually between the robots that produce content and the robots that find and filter content. But for now, everyone can--and IS--producing a ton of content that would earn you a B+ grade in most high schools.
It's amazing news for everyone who should be publishing more, but isn't.
It can seem like scary news for content producers who are worried their hard work will be buried by blogging droids.
Here's how to make your content stand out from ChatGPT content and other content-bots.
The more valuable you are to your audience, the more irreplaceable you become.
How to Lose to AI
Be vague.
Be general.
Hold back your best advice.
Talk about trends and industries instead of Jack and Mary.
Share opinions instead of experience.
I see "gym business advice" from robots every day--and I see people reading it and believing it and saying "great article". Most of it is directionally correct, but not directive--like "survey your gym members". No one would argue with that, right?
But what do you ask your gym members? When do you send the survey? How long should it be?
What will you do with the results? How should you interpret the answers?
...should you do it at all? Why or why not?
In time, search engines and media platforms will learn to filter the best content. Someday, schools might even teach students how to be skeptical about what they see online. Entrepreneurs will develop mental filters to help them filter the A+ material from the fluff.
Until then, we have a massive opportunity to stand out: to be better than the robots. To use the AI engines to push us to be more valuable. Start with the tips above.
Connect with Chris Cooper:
Website - https://businessisgood.com/
5
44 ratings
We content creators live in a miraculous time. We can talk to more people than ever before in history. The power of marketing is astronomically stronger than it's ever been. Our audience knows no geographical limit.
The real foundation for all of this power and reach is the content we produce. We can publish for free anytime we want--and people will listen. We can be our own TV station, our own radio network, our own newspaper.
And now, thanks to Artificial Intelligence tools like ChatGPT, we don't even have to write the material ourselves. There's an army of robots ready and eager to write blog posts, send emails, or even deepfake podcasts and videos. We can publish as often as we want to, for free, with almost no effort.
Here's the really amazing part: more content is still more important than good content. Quantity still beats quality in the online marketing game. Show up more often, and you'll win.
This perfect storm of free attention won't last forever. It probably won't last more than another year or so. Eventually, Google or another search engine will figure out how to filter content that's been written by robots, and find the real stuff. The real tech race is actually between the robots that produce content and the robots that find and filter content. But for now, everyone can--and IS--producing a ton of content that would earn you a B+ grade in most high schools.
It's amazing news for everyone who should be publishing more, but isn't.
It can seem like scary news for content producers who are worried their hard work will be buried by blogging droids.
Here's how to make your content stand out from ChatGPT content and other content-bots.
The more valuable you are to your audience, the more irreplaceable you become.
How to Lose to AI
Be vague.
Be general.
Hold back your best advice.
Talk about trends and industries instead of Jack and Mary.
Share opinions instead of experience.
I see "gym business advice" from robots every day--and I see people reading it and believing it and saying "great article". Most of it is directionally correct, but not directive--like "survey your gym members". No one would argue with that, right?
But what do you ask your gym members? When do you send the survey? How long should it be?
What will you do with the results? How should you interpret the answers?
...should you do it at all? Why or why not?
In time, search engines and media platforms will learn to filter the best content. Someday, schools might even teach students how to be skeptical about what they see online. Entrepreneurs will develop mental filters to help them filter the A+ material from the fluff.
Until then, we have a massive opportunity to stand out: to be better than the robots. To use the AI engines to push us to be more valuable. Start with the tips above.
Connect with Chris Cooper:
Website - https://businessisgood.com/
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