Does AI ever help you write texts? Does it suggest ideas, conduct research, and throw links at you faster than you can blink? And did you know that in Polish, these texts are not linguistically perfect? Beware of textual nightmares that you may inadvertently serve up to your readers.
The noble Dracula
Eloquent, well-read, omniscient – that’s how he thinks of himself. And to configure the form and add the call to action (cta) reader – a stuck-up jerk, stiff as a stake.
“I want to provide you with extremely valuable content that will contribute to the further development of your business activities”
“Noble assumptions related to the final goal of the project”
It sounds smart, but… somehow this vocabulary doesn’t fit internet texts. More like a letter from the office. And does anyone like reading such letters? I don’t.
When I go on Instagram or a blog, I either want to have a moment of fun or learn something relatively quickly. “Noble assumptions related to the final goal of the project” will neither entertain nor captivate me.
What to do?
If you feel like using digital marketing for more targeted messages has fed you the words of Majestic Dracula, try to find them, underline them, and change them to less flowery and eloquent ones. Simply – write as you speak.
Poltergeist Parrot
Do you know what a poltergeist is? It’s a sg number spirit. The one that creaks the closet door in a haunted house, shuffles with invisible feet around the upstairs room, and throws objects that aren’t there on the floor.
AI text can also get jarring if a Parrot Poltergeist creeps in and repeats the same phrases over and over. Do you know why that happens?
ChatGPT reproduces the patterns it was trained on, meaning it uses some words and phrases more often than others. These phrases aren’t bad in and of themselves, but for a reader familiar with AI texts, they make them suspicious that the text they’re reading was generated by AI.
These include phrases such as:
“In Today’s World” – especially in the introduction.
“Critical”
“Key”
“It is important” – especially in the summary.
What to do?
Stay alert. Look at your texts and see if certain phrases appear more often than others.