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Figma's Loredana Crisan points to research indicating that people disengage when they perceive content as inauthentic and created solely by AI. This highlights the enduring value of a human point of view, positioning AI as a tool to enhance human expression rather than replace it entirely.
Users are dissatisfied with purely AI-generated creative outputs like interior design, calling it "slop." This creates an opportunity for platforms that blend AI's efficiency with a human's taste and curation, for which consumers are willing to pay a premium.
Using AI to save time on content can backfire if the audience expects authenticity. The value in human-created art, writing, or presentations often lies in the invested energy and personal story, which AI shortcuts can devalue in the customer's eyes.
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.
Studies show people often prefer AI-generated art based on quality alone, but their preference flips to the human-created version once they know the source. This reveals a deep-seated bias for human effort, posing a significant "Catch-22" for marketers who risk losing audience appreciation if their AI usage is discovered.
A flood of low-quality AI content won't devalue human creators. Instead, it makes established, authentic voices more valuable. In a noisy environment, consumers will gravitate towards the human connection and trust that AI cannot replicate.
AI excels at operational tasks and scaling processes. However, front-facing content should remain human-led. The coming flood of mediocre AI-generated content will make authentic, human-first material stand out and command a premium, as people can easily detect inauthentic content.
As AI makes content creation seamless and ubiquitous, consumers will increasingly crave authenticity and "realness." Marketers must recognize this counterbalance and not abandon raw, human-centric storytelling for purely AI-generated content.
As AI makes content creation ubiquitous, the internet is flooded with shallow, generic "AI slop." Consumers are adept at spotting it, with 59% saying it damages their trust in a brand. This creates a premium for human-crafted, authentic stories.
As AI tools make slick, polished content ubiquitous, it becomes ineffective "wallpaper." To stand out, marketers should focus on creating lo-fi, human-centric content like behind-the-scenes videos or unscripted moments. This authentic approach builds genuine connection and engagement where AI-like content fails.
Similar to how people developed "banner blindness" to ignore ads, users are now developing "AI blindness." Their brains are learning to subconsciously filter out and ignore content that lacks human stories and lived experience, perceiving it as low-value "slop." This makes authentic, personal narratives more critical than ever for capturing attention.