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Using raw AI output on LinkedIn is a form of laziness that gets drowned out. Instead, elite sellers use it as a starting mold—a 'lump of clay'—which they must then personalize with their own authenticity and insights to make it valuable and unique.

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As LinkedIn becomes saturated with generic, AI-generated content, the bar for standing out has ironically lowered. Simple acts of authenticity, like a personalized voice note or video message, now cut through 99% of the noise and generate significantly higher response rates.

AI can accelerate content creation by producing a first draft quickly. However, a salesperson's wisdom and instinct are essential for rewriting and refining the copy to make it emotionally resonant and effective, a quality AI currently lacks. This hybrid approach maximizes both speed and impact.

As platforms like LinkedIn become saturated with generic AI content, authentic human voices stand out more than ever. A distinct, personal writing style—even with occasional typos—is becoming a powerful differentiator that cuts through the noise and builds trust.

Instead of prompting an AI to generate a full article, which often results in 'slop,' a better approach is to use it as an assembly tool. Feed the AI granular, pre-vetted pieces of unique business intelligence (like sales data or expert insights) to construct a higher-quality output.

Marketers often approach AI with inflated expectations, wanting a perfectly finished product. The correct mindset is to view AI as a tool to overcome the "zero to one" hurdle. It's a powerful assistant for creating a solid first draft or getting 50% of the way there, which a human then refines.

Instead of using AI for mass content creation, which leads to overload, leverage it to adapt a core value proposition into highly relevant messaging for each persona within a buying group (CEO, CTO, CFO), addressing their specific pain points.

AI makes it easy to generate grammatically correct but generic outreach. This flood of 'mediocre' communication, rather than 'terrible' spam, makes it harder for genuine, well-researched messages to stand out. Success now requires a level of personalization that generic AI can't fake.

AI tools are best used as collaborators for brainstorming or refining ideas. Relying on AI for final output without a "human in the loop" results in obviously robotic content that hurts the brand. A marketer's taste and judgment remain the most critical components.

In a world saturated with AI that can replicate any writing style, the only durable differentiator is your "verbal identity." This is the unique combination of your specialized knowledge, personal stories, and taste. This substance, not style, is what builds trust and authority with an audience.

AI should not be the starting point for creation, as that leads to generic, spam-like output. Instead, begin with a distinct human point of view and strategy. Then, leverage AI to scale that unique perspective, personalize it with data, and amplify its distribution.