This shows exactly why LinkedIn comments are often so boring. This was just a test—don’t use it 📛 It’s the worst example of using AI 😨 👉 However, you can use AI the right way. Tools like the “Improve style” or “Fix grammar” buttons are helpful. I use “Fix grammar” myself; it helps me correct my mistakes and makes my writing clearer for others. If you are interested in trying the "Fix grammar" or "Improve style" tools, let me know in the comments 👇 #AI #Grammar #ContentCreation #AIWriting
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Winning on Linkedin is so easy. But only if you are doing these: - be original and authentic - never use AI 100% to write your posts - the ideas should be yours -> AI can write the in-betweens Its easy because so many people use AI in a lazy way to write their posts You can spot it by a mile.
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Just getting started with AI? You’re not alone. And your clients aren't either. One of the simplest ways to build confidence is to start with the language. AI comes with new terms, and understanding them is a significant first step for using them in writing and when speaking with your clients. In our next series, we’ll break down new/common AI terms into bite-sized, plain-English posts you can easily share with your clients. Because moving forward with AI starts with understanding it. #Reskilling #AIReadiness #AIImpact #FutureOfJobs #WorkEvoluation
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I like using AI. I use it to refine my language when I know exactly what I want to say but grammar and spelling used to get in the way. It’s also great for playing with images and for sparking ideas I might not have landed on otherwise. Where I know I’m underusing it is in the day-to-day work. The small, practical tasks. The things that quietly take more time than they should. So I’m curious. What’s your best AI “trick”? The one simple way you’ve built it into your routine that actually makes your work easier. I’m looking for ideas worth stealing.
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Most people are using AI. But honestly: very few are using it well. Not because they don’t get it. But because it’s more work than it looks. You have to: ➖ phrase things precisely ➖ provide context ➖ iterate ➖ recognize mediocrity ➖ and know when an answer sounds good but actually says very little We all seen the posts on how to use frameworks, make very long complicated prompts, but ... who has the time and the energy to dive deep into that. That’s not a tooling problem. That’s an interface problem. We have incredibly powerful AI systems, yet we keep approaching them with an empty text box and the hope that it’ll work out. And so we get: ❌ vague answers ❌ generic writing ❌ output that’s “fine,” but never truly good I started wondering: what if this could be different? What if there were a tool that: ✅ doesn’t force you to learn better prompting ✅ doesn’t explain frameworks ✅ but automatically guides you toward better output Not smarter. Not more creative. Just… clearer. I’ve been building something around that idea lately. Very early. Very small. But designed specifically for people who want results, not complexity. More soon. (If this resonates, let me know. It helps to know I’m not the only one.)
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Yesterday, I was scrolling my LinkedIn feed at 2:21 AM at night, and back to back I saw seven posts that were clearly AI-written. 🤯 That too with the same kind of formatting, the “not X, not Y, just Z” pattern. It irritated me so much that I started writing this post at 2:22 AM. 😭 I think AI written content is great, it helps save a lot of time, but if you want your content to stop sounding like AI, here are a few things you should genuinely keep in mind. 1. Ask your AI model, whether it’s GPT, Claude, or Gemini, to avoid negative contrasting completely. Give a clear prompt to not use words like not, doesn’t, isn’t, more, less anywhere in the post. The "not this, but that" structure has become so overused that it immediately signals AI writing. 2. Always edit the post after it comes out. Even if the draft looks decent, it still needs your human touch. Read it once like a reader and you’ll instantly spot what feels off. 3. Give detailed input to the model. The more context you provide, the more the output sounds like you. 4. Create a saved chat/ folder for yourself and always work through that. Explain your tone and keep building from there instead of starting fresh every time. AI is a tool, use it to speed up your process, but never let it replace your personality. 🥹
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What you must know to get AI Overview / AI-suggested results (List): 1. Give the direct answer in the first line 2. Write headings as real user questions 3. Keep one page = one main topic 4. Use simple, easy words 5. Write short sentences 6. Use lists and steps 7. Do not repeat the same idea 8. Add new information in every line 9. Avoid guessing or unsure statements 10. Write with real knowledge and confidence 11. Skip long introductions and stories 12. Keep the conclusion very short (2–3 lines) 13. Keep the same focus in headings and content 14. Use a clean, easy-to-scan format 15. Write content that clearly answers the question
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bAIsics 5 Day-Challenge: Day 2 — PROMPT Everyone still with me? Day 1 wasn't too bad, right? OK, lets keep it moving! Yesterday was about understanding what AI actually is (without doing anything fancy). Today is about something very simple, but very important:👉 how you ask AI for things. Most frustration with AI doesn’t come from the tool itself — it comes from unclear prompts. The good news is… this is very easy to improve. Here’s all I want you to do today: 👉 Ask your AI tool:“Help me write a clearer prompt for something I do regularly.” That could be: writing an email planning a task learning a topic organizing ideas Read the improved version. Try it if you want — or don’t. Either is fine. 💬 Comment below with one word or phrase that describes the difference you noticed (if any). That’s it for Day 2 🙂
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Here's what nobody tells you about AI. 🔥 Three months ago, I realized I've been using it completely wrong since late 2022. For the first year, I was lazy. Copy-paste machine. AI would write something, I'd slap it on LinkedIn without touching it. Felt like a cheat code. Fast. Easy. Garbage. ❌ And now I'm watching thousands of people do exactly what I did. Dumping raw AI output all over social media like it's content. It's not. It's slop. You can spot it immediately. Generic opening hook. Hollow middle. Weak close. No personality. No real thought behind it. Just raw AI that nobody bothered to refine. Nobody bothered to think through. Nobody bothered to make their own. Then something shifted for me. I started actually working with AI instead of letting it work for me. 💭 Instead of "write me a post about X," I'd say "here's the concept I want to convey: [specific idea]. Now write it." AI generates. I read it. Something's off. I push back. "No, I actually meant this, not that." We iterate. 🔄 Back and forth until the post actually says what I mean. It takes a little longer. But it's mine. It has my voice. It has my thinking behind it. ✅ Don't use AI as your 𝗕𝗥𝗔𝗜𝗡. 🧠 Use it as a 𝗧𝗢𝗢𝗟. 🛠️ 𝙔𝙤𝙪𝙧 𝘼𝙄 𝙤𝙪𝙩𝙥𝙪𝙩 𝙞𝙨 𝙤𝙣𝙡𝙮 𝙖𝙨 𝙜𝙤𝙤𝙙 𝙖𝙨 𝙮𝙤𝙪𝙧 𝙞𝙣𝙥𝙪𝙩 𝙖𝙣𝙙 𝙮𝙤𝙪𝙧 𝙬𝙞𝙡𝙡𝙞𝙣𝙜𝙣𝙚𝙨𝙨 𝙩𝙤 𝙧𝙚𝙛𝙞𝙣𝙚 𝙞𝙩. Are you collaborating with your AI, or are you dumping its first draft and calling it content? 🎯 #AIForBusiness #ResponsibleAI #ContentStrategy #ThoughtLeadership #Leadership
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I now see flawless grammar, flowing language everywhere, especially on LinkedIn. AI should absolutely be used to enhance your writing. Tools available should absolutely be used. But I also see a lot of content where probably everything was written by AI. Because this ‘tool’ can create human quality output by itself, we have to be deliberate about using it as a tool. #ai #genai
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Using AI and not getting the results you want? There are about five simple changes you can make now to get the AI outputs you're seeking. 🐕 Use multiple platforms, not just Chat GPT. My daily use platforms include Google Gemini, Anthropic's Claude, Julius.ai, and Perplexity, which acts more like a search engine. 🐱 Switch among platforms to check your work and see which platforms work best for particular needs. Try prompting two platforms the same way and see what happens! 🐇 Give AI reference materials, like writing samples and other 'starting point' documents and images. Try giving AI some of your own writing and then ask it to write like you! 🦜 Know what you want the end product to be. If you aren't sure what you want AI to do, your prompts probably won't be successful. This is a really common problem and you'll know you're doing it when you say things like, "Fix this," or "Make this better." 🦁 Don't try to do everything in just one prompt. Try breaking up big problems or questions into smaller ones. You might need to work in a few steps to get the output you are looking for. AI is an assistant so you will need to clarify, fine-tune, and correct. Want to learn how to become proficient in AI? Sign up for my upcoming five-week course here: https://lnkd.in/gZTq5T9T
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