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The Human Signals AI Can’t Fake (No Matter How Good the Prompt)

Today’s buyers are getting smarter. According to a recent report, 82% can spot AI-written content at least some of the time.

The problem is that your AI tool writes the same way as everyone else’s. The structure is clean, the points are valid, the grammar is perfect — and it leaves zero impression. When your content sounds like everything else, it stops building trust, even when the information is accurate.

Where AI falls short in marketing content
AI can’t replicate the signals that come from actually knowing something or having lived through something. Buyers may not be able to name these signals, but they can feel it.

Doesn’t have a genuine point of view. AI is very good at presenting all sides of an argument with careful, balanced neutrality. What it won’t do is tell you what it thinks, because it doesn’t. Real thought leadership requires a real thought.

Can’t speak from experience. Anyone can describe a concept. Not everyone can say “we tried this with a client last spring and here’s what happened.” That kind of detail is earned.

Won’t admit what it doesn’t know. Readers trust brands that are willing to be straight with them. That means sometimes saying something didn’t work, something surprised you or you’re still learning about a new concept. AI is too busy being thorough and helpful, and admitting uncertainty isn’t in its programming.

Can’t deliver on timeliness. Responding to something that just happened, before the consensus forms and before everyone else has weighed in, signals that a real person is paying attention. AI can summarize the conversation after the fact. But it’s never the first voice in it.

Fails to read the room. Humor and AI don’t exactly go hand in hand. There’s a reason some brands make you smile and others just try to. Knowing what’s funny to a specific audience, at a specific moment, is something you learn from being in the room with them. AI can write a punchline, but getting one to land is another story.

Questions many companies are asking

Is AI content hurting my brand?
When your content sounds like everyone else’s, it stops building the trust and credibility that turns readers into customers. In a long consideration cycle, that adds up to reputational damage and opportunities lost.

How much AI content is too much?
A brand publishing AI-informed content can still build trust if every piece has a clear point of view and a human touch. Use it as much as you want to brainstorm topics or fine-tune an idea; just don’t let it replace your thinking.

Should we disclose when I use AI to create content?
There’s no universal rule, but transparency tends to pay off. Readers aren’t necessarily against AI-assisted content — they’re against content that feels hollow or generic. If AI helped you draft or organize your thinking, what matters most is that your point of view and judgment are genuinely present in the final piece. When they are, disclosure becomes less fraught because there’s something real to stand behind.

 How do I make my content sound more like me?
Start before you write. The brands getting the best results from AI are briefing better. That means giving AI your actual point of view, your audience’s specific concerns and examples of your voice, while letting AI handle the structure. You supply the substance that makes it yours.

Does Google penalize AI-generated content?
Google’s official position focuses on quality, not origin. Content that’s helpful, accurate and written for people — not search engines — is what tends to perform. The practical issue isn’t a penalty; it’s that AI-generated content often lacks the specificity, originality and experience signals that Google increasingly rewards. If your content could have been written by anyone about anything, it probably won’t rank well regardless of how it was produced.

Stop letting AI be the only voice in the room
AI is a good tool for structure, research, brainstorming and first drafts. But none of that replaces what your audience is truly looking for: a point of view they haven’t heard before, a detail that could only come from experience and a voice that feels like a real person showed up to write it.

The brands winning with content right now aren’t the ones using the most AI. They’re the ones using it for the right things — and knowing exactly where to step in and take over.

Authored by: Lauren HarrisThe Human Signals AI Can’t Fake (No Matter How Good the Prompt)
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