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As AI tools enable marketers to produce more content, engagement is dropping for overly polished materials. Marketers are seeing better results with authentic, "lo-fi" content like screenshot testimonials and "day-in-the-life" videos that feel more human and trustworthy, even in formal B2B industries.
In an era of AI "slop," content that signals humanityâbackground noises, unpolished phone videosâconverts better. Instagram's head even advocates for including imperfections like a dog barking to boost engagement, as it signals authenticity to viewers.
The flood of low-quality, AI-generated content is not a threat but an opportunity. "AI slop" devalues generic content and makes genuinely educational, entertaining, and human-centric material stand out more. This raises the bar, rewarding brands that invest in real expertise and authenticity.
AI video tools like Sora optimize for high production value, but popular internet content often succeeds due to its message and authenticity, not its polish. The assumption that better visuals create better engagement is a risky product bet, as it iterates on an axis that users may not value.
As AI floods markets with polished, generic content, brands will differentiate by being raw, live, and unscripted. This 'handcrafted humanity' builds trust and connection in a way slick AI output cannot, creating a powerful competitive advantage.
As audiences grow tired of generic, low-effort AI content, brands can gain a competitive advantage. Focusing on authentic, human-driven, and even imperfect content will become a key differentiator and a core growth tactic in a saturated digital landscape.
As AI floods the internet with generic content, consumers are growing skeptical of corporate voices. This is accelerating a shift in trust from faceless brands to authentic individuals and creators. B2B marketing must adapt by building strategies around these human-led channels, which now often outperform traditional brand-led marketing.
Data shows raw, authentic 'lo-fi' content significantly outperforms polished material. LinkedIn posts see 144% more engagement, Instagram gets 220% more, and email click-throughs rise 88%. This strategy works for all industries, including 'boring' B2B, because authentic human connection wins.
Overly polished video content in B2B can signal "advertisement" to users, causing them to disengage. Lower-fidelity, more authentic content often performs better because it feels more organic and native to social media feeds, focusing on the message rather than slick production.
Polished, high-budget B2B videos can be counterproductive by appearing as ads, which audiences ignore. Heike Young argues that lower-fidelity, authentic content often performs better because it feels organic and trustworthy within a social feed, breaking through the noise of overly produced corporate messaging.
As audiences push back against AI-generated and overly polished stock imagery, featuring real people in authentic situations will be critical for engagement. Showcasing your team, customers, or volunteers in natural settingsânot on a green screenâbuilds trust and connection, making genuine humanity the key to cutting through the noise.