The problem with most AI-generated content is not the writing. It is the thinking. Generic briefs produce generic output. If you ask Claude or GPT-4o to "write a blog post about email marketing," you get a blog post that reads like it was trained on every average blog post about email marketing, because it was. The solution is not a better AI model. It is a better brief.
1. The brief is everything
Every piece of AI content at Koldconvert starts with a brief that specifies: the target reader (not a demographic, a specific person), the one thing they should believe after reading this, the specific angle that makes this piece different from the ten existing articles on the same topic, the three to five unique points or claims the piece must make, any proprietary data or specific examples to include, and the brand voice rules.
A brief like this takes 20 to 30 minutes to write and produces an AI draft that is 70 to 80 percent complete. A vague brief takes 5 minutes and produces an AI draft that is 20 percent complete, meaning the editor has to rewrite most of it. The brief is the leverage point. Invest in the brief.
2. Human expertise first, AI expansion second
The most effective workflow for high-quality AI content at scale: a human expert records a 5 to 10 minute voice memo or writes a rough outline with their key points, specific claims and any data or examples they want to include. AI expands this into a structured 800 to 1,200 word post with proper headings, intro and conclusion. A human editor reviews for accuracy, trims anything that is filler, and adjusts the voice. Total human time: 20 to 30 minutes for a finished 1,000-word post.
The human expertise is the differentiating ingredient. AI cannot generate your specific case study, your proprietary data point, or your contrarian opinion. But it can take those inputs and turn them into clean, structured, readable copy faster than any human writer.
3. Build a voice document
Your brand voice is the most important input that most teams skip. A voice document for AI content specifies: tone (direct, specific, no jargon, no fluff), sentence length (short to medium, avoid multi-clause sentences), things to never say (vague qualifiers like "very," "significantly," "robust"), things to always say (use specific numbers when making claims, address the reader as "you"), and two to three annotated examples of ideal content.
This document lives in your system prompt for every content-generating AI call. Update it as you notice patterns in what your editor keeps correcting. After 2 to 3 months, it becomes a reliable voice filter that makes AI output consistently on-brand.
4. Where AI content excels for B2B
The content types that benefit most from AI at scale: email sequences (AI drafts all 5 emails in a nurture sequence in 15 minutes), LinkedIn posts (AI generates 10 post variations from one brief, human picks and refines 3), FAQ content for service pages (AI drafts 10 Q&As per page from a one-sentence brief per question), sales deck copy (AI drafts each slide's headline and body copy, human edits for claims and specifics), and how-to blog posts like this one. For these formats, AI-assisted production is 3 to 5 times faster than traditional copywriting with comparable output quality when the brief is strong.
5. Where AI content fails for B2B
AI produces weak output for: thought leadership that requires a genuinely contrarian position (it tends toward consensus), anything requiring verification of specific facts (it confidently states false statistics), personal narrative content (it has no personal experiences), and anything where the unique value is the author's specific earned insight. For these, use AI for structure and editing, not for the core substance.
AI does not replace the thinking in great B2B content. It replaces the typing. The teams winning with AI content are the ones who do the thinking better, not the ones who prompt AI the most.
Frequently asked questions
Will Google penalise AI-generated content?
Google rewards high-quality, original content regardless of how it was produced. Generic, thin or inaccurate AI content is penalised, same as generic human content. Quality and originality are what matter.
What types of content work best with AI?
How-to guides, listicles, email sequences, LinkedIn posts, FAQ pages and comparison posts. AI performs worst on personal narrative and content requiring proprietary insight or verified specific claims.
How do you maintain brand voice with AI?
Through a detailed voice document embedded in every prompt: sentence length preferences, words to use and avoid, tone descriptors with examples. The more specific the document, the more consistent the output.