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Are Humans Starting to Sound Like AI?

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I was just writing an email to a client, and realised I was sounding like… AI? I have always been able to switch on a formal tone when writing business emails and things alike, so this style of writing isn’t new for me… so why does it only feel so wrong now?

I pondered the thought (see, formality is in my nature!) and noticed a lot of similarities in my writing to something that Gemini or ChatGPT would produce. So I wondered, does writing formally automatically make you sound robotic? Let’s dive deeper.

How Does AI Formulate Its Tone

By now, we know that AI uses Large Language Models (LLMs) to learn how humans speak. Artificial intelligence has learned from millions of emails and figured out the common vocabulary, sentence structure, and tone with which they’re written.

Naturally, AI follows a very strict structure with a set of rules, which can lead to results that sound cold, neutral, and overly corporate. AI is known for its excessive use of hyperbole and adjectives that a sentence could definitely do without.

When AI has spent so long scanning text across the entire internet, it’s obvious that it was eventually going to pick up on these patterns. Yet in doing so, it believes that it is doing what it is supposed to in order to sound ‘formal’ or ‘correct’, but instead it’s making its results sound lame and predictable.

Does Prompting Solve the Issue?

With the growth of AI, I have seen people put a growing emphasis on the importance of prompting. I remember trying it for myself at the beginning of ChatGPT, and I did indeed notice a difference in responses.

What always irritated me the most about language models was the introductory paragraph to their responses:

  • ME: I am struggling with X, can you please do Z
  • AI: It’s the classic X problem… [speaks about X for a line or two]. Here is Z that we can do to help you…

Or something like that… every TIME. What I’m getting at was that this slowed once I prompted AI to stop doing it – so can’t we do the same for drafting emails?

To a certain degree, yes. There are certain patterns and traits that an AI passage of text has, that when commanding it to exclude, can make it slightly harder to detect. Some of these traits include:

  • Em dashes (—)
  • Rule of Three: “It’s not X, it’s not Y, but it’s Z”
  • Repeated clarifications and over-explanations
  • Overuse of metaphors and similes that don’t work

These are four, to name a few. But don’t get ahead of yourself, because even with their absence, it is likely that people will still be able to detect AI in your writing. According to a 2024 study by Bynder, 55% of US consumers surveyed could accurately identify AI-generated content. So… you’re probably going to get caught out.

Will AI Ever Become Undetectable?

There are constantly more advanced AI models being released that claim to be less detectable. At this point in time, there are no models that are 100% undetectable to everybody.

Whilst researching for this section, I came across Undetectable AI. I wanted to test if this actually works to make an AI passage undetectable, so I asked ChatGPT to write a paragraph on whether AI will ever become fully undetectable – what a mind f*ck, huh? Here’s what it produced:

AI becoming completely undetectable is unlikely in any absolute sense, but it will continue to get close enough that detection becomes unreliable in practice. Detection systems rely on statistical patterns, training data fingerprints, and behavioral cues, all of which can be iteratively minimized or adversarially optimized away by more advanced models. However, there’s a structural limitation: any system producing outputs at scale leaves traces—whether in distributional quirks, metadata, or interaction patterns—so detection shifts from content analysis to context and provenance. The real outcome isn’t “perfectly undetectable AI,” but a collapse of trust in detection tools themselves, forcing platforms to rely more on cryptographic verification, watermarking, and source authentication rather than trying to infer authorship after the fact.

Besides the em-dashes, I wouldn’t say this was horribly ‘AI-y’. I would say vocabulary such as ‘iteratively’ and ‘adversarially’ are a bit excessive, but I don’t doubt that an uber-clever person writing a thesis on this topic wouldn’t potentially utilise those words as well. Whilst not necessarily the Rule of 3, you can also see a repeated use of comparison in the writing, as well.

Oop – time’s up! Undetectable AI just produced it’s passage and-

It is unlikely that the complete lack of detectability of the AI would become an absolute reality, although the level of proximity to it will increase. This will happen because of the fact that detection tools work based on statistics, data training fingerprints, and behavior of AI itself, which can be gradually reduced by even more sophisticated AI. Nevertheless, one should note another limitation, namely, the presence of a trace left by the program, no matter how subtle it may seem, because detection changes from the analysis of the output itself to the context and provenance of the output. Thus, the result does not lie in the creation of a “perfectly undetectable” AI, but in the loss of reliability of detection systems.

It’s… worse?

I think it’s safe to say that AI is not going to be wholly undetectable anytime soon. But if that’s the case, why does my human-written content sound AI-written?

Why is Authentic Writing Starting to Sound AI?

In an effort to be formal, it is easy to adopt the patterns that AI has learnt. We, too think we are sounding ‘correct’ or professional, but as I previously mentioned, we end up sounding predictable.

When AI was trained on ‘good’ human writing, it makes sense that it shares similarity with authentic content. It hasn’t created this tone out of nowhere, but rather mimicked the performative formality that we see in day-to-day life. At the end of the day, formal writing is a performance of sorts, as true informal writing is messy and sporadic (to a certain degree). AI is simply bridging this gap.

Also, it’s a fair point to raise that our increased exposure to AI written content could be causing us to subconsciously mirror it, and adapt certain patterns that it utilises. In wanting to sound polished, we are perhaps inadvertently sounding robotic.

I have previously spoken in other blog posts about people craving human authenticity, and I think that’s becoming true even in formal mediums such as an email or a LinkedIn post. The easiest way to mitigate the risk of sounding like AI is to add your own personal flair into your writing, such as using particular words or phrases that you personally like to use. This individuality is what will make you sound human – we are not meant to create perfect emails! It’s definitely a lesson that I myself need to learn, too.

Final Thoughts

I remember I once posted a passage online for review, and somebody in the comments claimed it was clearly written with AI. They were absolutely adamant. I was gobsmacked and a little offended because it felt like my hard work was being taken away from me. However, perhaps this was a compliment – my writing was being compared to a model that has literally learned what is ‘good’ writing. Hats off to me, I guess.

I don’t need to give another cliché, powerful sentence about how AI is taking over, and we need to learn to adapt – you know this (and if you don’t, read my other blog posts). But what this lesson has taught me is that maybe there is logic in making your emails a little more you, and a little less everybody else.

Client

The Seasonal Retreats

Overview

Lydia, the founder of The Seasonal Retreats, came to me wanting a website that perfectly reflected her retreats; calm, relaxed and simple. She wanted to display all of her packages in a way that was easy to interpret for new retreat attendees.

Scope of Work

  • Logo creation
  • UX/UI redesign
  • Website development
  • Typography & colour system
  • Full copywriting
  • Photo editing

Solutions

I utilised white space to allow the website elements to breathe, in order to create that relaxed feel. The muted colours don’t scream at clients, making the user experience slower and more enjoyable. 

In sections that were information-dense, I leveraged graphic elements and visual hierarchy to reduce copy and in turn boost engagement. 

Final Outcome

Lydia is very happy with the finished site, and has reported being complimented on it by others. It performs well at getting her message across whilst relaxing her site visitors in a way that directly links to the service she is providing.

Client

Scope

Overview

Scope is a vacuum travel bag which can store up to 55% more space than a regular bag. The site needed to be sleek and attractive, as well as building trust straight away in order to optimise sales. 

Scope of Work

  • Logo creation
  • UX/UI redesign
  • Typography & colour system
  • Full copywriting
  • Photo production & editing

Solutions

I prioritised white space and minimal changes to typography and colours across the site, so that it was coherent and easy to follow.

I opted for three simple pages to make the user journey more efficient and optimise engagement and sales.

Final Outcome

Scope’s site is sleek as easy to use, which is perfect for visitors coming from social media marketing channels. Scope are seeing consistent daily sales.

Client

Northshore Dental

Overview

Northshore Dental is a modern private dental clinic offering general and cosmetic dental services. Here, I created a Home Page design focusing on calls to action and building trust.

Scope of Work

  • Logo creation
  • UX/UI redesign
  • Typography & colour system
  • Full copywriting
  • Graphic design

Solutions

The brief emphasised reassuring nervous clients and creating the impression of a comforting, relaxing dental studio. The main goal was to build trust and funnel that into increased bookings. To do this, I used neutral colours and minimalist visual elements and typography to avoid feeling overly clinical or daunting.

Final Outcome

The homepage provides reassurance to patients and focuses on the appointment booking CTA. The calming design helps address Northshore’s challenge of earning client trust.

instagram and facebook growth statistics

Results

60,000+ Views | 9,000 Reach | 50% Increased Clicks

Overview

The Personalised Flower Box is a local florist. Pauline discussed wanting to grow her audience as she moved towards a new niche. Her focus was on showcasing her personality, which we achieved through static and video content I produced.

Scope of Work

  • Branding & identity
  • Social strategy
  • Consistent posting
  • Photo editing & graphic design
  • Audience engagement

Process

Pauline provided me with static content, which I edited and adapted to align with her relevant strategy. These were posted twice a week across Facebook and Instagram.

Simultaneously, I produced and edited long-form video content for Pauline, which was posted on YouTube and gained traction with the second video, with clients noting it was useful and entertaining.

Results

Pauline saw significant growth across her social media platforms. Increased engagement and reach on Instagram and Facebook led to more traffic to her website, and Pauline noted a noticeable increase in sales and enquiries.

Tutorials posted on YouTube helped attendees of her workshops understand wreath making, making classes smoother, more efficient, and more engaging.

Results

152,000 Followers | 1,000,000+ Engagement

Overview

During lockdown, I created a themed Instagram account. It was a growing, competitive niche, so I had to learn how to adapt to the community and its expectations. What began as a hobby turned into a thriving community and business that lasted just under half a decade.

Scope of Work

  • Branding & identity creation
  • E-commerce store
  • Social strategy & posting
  • Audience engagement
  • Branded advertisements 

Results

In just 12 months, I grew this account to over 100,000 followers, reaching 150,000 only a few months later. At its peak, my daily posts were receiving up to 75,000, and the page was attracting more than 1 million monthly visitors.

I am incredibly proud of the community I created. I hosted giveaways, developed a merch line, partnered with brands for paid advertisements and received hundreds of messages from people sharing what the page meant to them. 

In January 2024, I took the step to stop posting. Rather than selling the account, despite receiving several strong offers, I decided to leave the page as a digital time capsule that people, including myself, can return to forever. 

This project is one of my favourite examples of what good strategy, consistency, and creativity can achieve. It’s also the basis of the work I do for clients: helping them to build brands, content and communities that genuinely resonate and grow. 

Client

ClearLedge

Overview

ClearLedger is a speculative modern accounting platform for non-finance founders who don’t understand traditional accounting tools. Here, I was tasked with Home Page design, focusing on visual hierarchy, calls to action and building trust.

Scope of Work

  • Logo creation
  • UX/UI redesign
  • Typography & colour system
  • Full copywriting
  • Graphic design

Solutions

I prioritised ensuring the site didn’t feel daunting or too corporate by using minimalistic colouring and typography. White and light blue create a fresh, sleek feel.

I focused on CTAs to align with the main goal of increasing free-trial signups among first-time visitors. Furthermore, this goal made trustworthiness and credibility paramount, which I ensured through social proof and human support cues. 

Final Outcome

The homepage communicates trust and reliability, making the daunting topic of finances more accessible for non-finance founders.

Client

The Personalised Flower Box

Overview

Pauline Brunsdon, at The Personalised Flower Box, expressed a desire to rebrand her business ahead of opening an E-Commerce store and YouTube channel. The existing visuals of her website were inconsistent and unclear, making for a difficult user journey and experience and failing to communicate value quickly. 

Scope of Work

  • Logo creation
  • UX/UI redesign
  • Typography & colour system
  • E-commerce setup & launch
  • Rewrites of key messaging

Solutions

To solve these issues, I began by designing a sleek yet on-theme logo, as well as a smaller version for the favicon and social media profile pictures. I composed set typography and colour schemes to use across platforms, creating a more cohesive and recognisable brand identity.

Refining the User Experience and Interface (UX/UI) improved professionalism and built trust from a visitors first impression. Furthermore, a cleaner structure made browsing faster, easier and more enjoyable.

Final Outcome

Pauline was delighted with her new website and branding. Post-launch, she saw an increase in engagement across her website and social media platforms. This has led to an ongoing collaboration for social media and website management.