Not long ago, I heard another marketer admit they stripped bullets, bold text, and horizontal lines out of their blog because they feared it “looked too AI.” That’s like hiding the calculator because people might think you didn’t do the math by hand.
Here’s the truth: if you’re not using AI in your work at an agency or as a consultant, you’re probably making your customers pay too much for too little. If you work as a knowledge worker at a company you are not only undercutting your own potential productivity, you are also spending the time you get paid to do meaningful work hiding the usage of one of the most powerful tools at your disposal.
AI is not a shortcut. It’s leverage. Don’t hide that you are using the right tools.
That being said. As AI drafts, organizes, and accelerates. It cannot decide what matters. That’s your job. Professionals who avoid AI out of pride or fear aren’t protecting their craft—they’re forcing inefficiency on the very people who trust them.
The anxiety is understandable. In a world drowning in machine-made noise, professionals worry about looking generic, derivative, or replaceable. They fear their work will be dismissed as “just AI.”
But this misses the point. The problem isn’t using AI. The problem is using it without adding your human signal—your judgment, empathy, and lived experience. Use the time you have saved writing the perfect sentence to make sure you write about meaningful topics and provide really novel answers, provide a real opinion, take a stand, or share a new perspective.
In a market where anyone can generate infinite content, value shifts to those who create clarity. That means professionals who know how to feed AI the right inputs and edit its outputs into something sharp, human, and lasting.
Think of AI as the world’s fastest intern. It can draft a hundred options before lunch. But only you can decide which one deserves daylight. Only you can add the context, story, and ethical judgment that transforms draft into signal.
The future belongs to professionals who:
Don’t waste energy worrying that your work “looks like AI.” Worry instead about whether you’re delivering clarity. Worry whether you’re creating order from the chaos, or just adding to the noise.
That’s what clients truly care about. Not whether you bolded a phrase. Not whether you used bullets. But whether you used every tool available to deliver more signal in less time.
The shame isn’t in using AI. The shame is in making people pay for inefficiency.