When ChatGPT landed in everyoneâs workflow, the content world kind of panicked.
Suddenly, every founder, marketer and thought leader was cranking out LinkedIn posts, AI-written blogs, and perfectly SEOâd website pages â all without a copywriter in sight.
I get it. Itâs fast. Itâs free. And when you're short on time or ideas, it feels like a no-brainer.
But speed doesnât always equal success. And content doesnât always mean connection.
Just because somethingâs written doesnât mean itâs saying anything useful. Just because it sounds professional doesnât mean it builds trust. And just because you hit publish doesnât mean anyoneâs reading it.
So⊠does AI content actually work?
Kind of. But not always in the way you think.
Why AI is so tempting for B2B teams
For a lot of B2B and SaaS teams, AI feels like a godsend. Youâve got a hundred content ideas, zero internal writers, and not enough time to brief anyone properly. So you open a doc, drop in a prompt, and boom â thereâs your draft.
And honestly? Sometimes thatâs all you need. A bit of structure. A way to get past the blank page. Something you can tweak and push live before the next meeting rolls around.
Thatâs why itâs so tempting. It keeps things moving. It gives you volume. It feels productive.
But when that AI draft becomes the final version (when it goes straight from prompt to publish) thatâs when things start to fall apart.
Because while it might look like content on the surface, itâs often missing the very thing that makes it work: perspective.
What AI content usually gets wrong
Itâs not that AI writes badly. It writes fine. Itâs grammatically correct (sometimes), mostly on-topic, and sounds professional. But thatâs also the problem.
Most of the time, it sounds like everyone else.
No strong point of view. No real personality. No actual insight. Just neatly structured paragraphs saying things your audience has read a hundred times before.
Itâll tell you that âcontent is kingâ or that âcustomer-centric messaging matters,â but it wonât say anything new â or anything that sounds like you.
And in B2B, thatâs a problem. Because if youâre selling something technical, intangible or high-trust, your content needs to do more than just fill a page. It needs to build confidence. It needs to feel sharp, specific, and well thought through.
AI doesnât know your customers. It doesnât know your product. It doesnât know what your team argued about in the last marketing meeting. So it defaults to vague.
And vague content doesnât convert.
What AI actually does well
For all its limitations, AI isnât useless. I mean I use it almost every day.
Not to write finished content, but to make the process faster, easier, and a lot less painful.
Itâs great for getting you started. Writing prompts, outlining sections, summarising transcripts, rewording awkward sentences â AI can handle the grunt work. It can also help repurpose content across different formats, so that podcast episode doesnât just sit there collecting digital dust.
But itâs not just about speed and ideas. Itâs also a really useful second set of eyes.
It can help you spot gaps in your logic. Flag when your tone sounds off. Push back with questions a reader might ask. Even point out things that feel vague or over-explained. When youâre too close to your own content, that kind of feedback is gold.
But the key is knowing where to stop.
Because the minute you rely on it to replace strategy, voice, or judgment, the cracks start to show. AI can give you a head start, but you still need someone who knows what good looks like.
How to get the best of both worlds
AI works best when itâs part of the process, not the whole thing.
Itâs great for helping you shape an idea. You can throw in a jumbled brain-dump and get back a rough outline, or ask it to rewrite a messy paragraph so itâs easier to work with. You can even use it to turn half-formed notes into a first draft, or draft a clearer brief for your writer.
But thatâs where the handover matters.
Because while AI can give you the bones of something, it still takes a human to bring it to life â to push the structure, sharpen the message, and make it sound like it came from your brand (not a template).
Used well, AI helps you move faster. It gives you momentum. But working with a good writer means what youâre putting out actually connects, not just ticks a box.
The takeaway
AI isnât the enemy of good content. But itâs not a shortcut to it either.
It can help you move faster, get your thoughts out, and spot things youâve missed, but it wonât replace the judgment, voice, or strategy that makes content actually work. Especially in B2B, where trust and clarity matter more than ever.
If you're trying to scale your content and stay human in the process, you don't need to choose between AI and a writer. You just need the right mix: tools that speed things up, and a human who knows how to make it land.
If youâve got a rough idea, an overstuffed doc, or content that just isnât hitting the mark, thatâs where I come in. I help founders, marketers and teams turn half-baked drafts (or AI-generated ones) into sharp, clear, conversion-friendly content, without losing their voice in the process.
Got a draft thatâs not quite working? Book a 1:1 session and Iâll help you shape it into something worth publishing.