The rhythms and tone of AI-assisted writing are now pretty much endemic on LinkedIn

And I get why: GenAI copy is generally pretty tight, pretty focused, and flows pretty well. Certainly better than most non-professional writers can manage on their own.

Hell, it sounds annoyingly like my own natural writing style, honed over years of practice…

But people I’ve known for years are starting to no longer sound like themselves.

Their words are too polished, too slick, too much like those an American social media copywriter would use, no matter where they’re from.

None of this post was written with AI.

And despite (because of?) being a professional writer/editor, It took me over half an hour of questioning myself, rewriting, starting again, looking for the right phrase. Doing this on my phone, my thumbs now ache and the little finger on my right hand, which I always use to support the weight while writing, is begging for a break.

With GenAI I could have “written” this in a fraction of the time, and it would have been tighter, easier to follow.

But it wouldn’t have been me – and I still (naively) want my social media interactions to be authentically human to human.

(Of course, the AI version would probably have ended up getting more engagement, because this post – as well as going out on a Sunday morning when no one’s looking, and without an image – is now far too long for most people, or the LinkedIn algorithm, to give it much attention. Hey ho!)