Editing and tone
Oct 7, 2023 3:40:06 GMT -8
Post by account_disabled on Oct 7, 2023 3:40:06 GMT -8
Optimization
Generative AI can help you fine-tune your headline, headers, calls to action and more. It shouldn’t take the place of actual A/B testing, of course, but it can make it easier to settle on an effective headline.
For example, you can feed the AI your intro or headers and ask it to generate headlines. Or, you can give it a list of potential headlines and ask which one is most compelling. You can even take that response and ask it to further optimize the headline:
Despite our best human efforts, sometimes typos or errors Phone Number List in usage sneak into content. We can have multiple editors look at a piece and still miss a few corrections. Generative AI is already very good at catching things like misused homonyms (like where/wear or their/they’re/there) and will only get better over time.
You can paste an entire blog post into a tool like ChatGPT and ask it to edit. However, the more words you put in a single prompt, the longer it takes to generate results. You will have a better experience if you paste a paragraph at a time.
Generative AI can also analyze text for a specific tone of voice. For example, if you want to write in a helpful, personable way, you can ask if your tone is hitting the mark. Just say, “Please analyze the tone of this paragraph and tell me if it sounds friendly and helpful,” then paste your copy into the prompt box. And yes, you don’t have to say please and thank you, but it never hurts to be polite.
I gave ChatGPT a pretty dry paragraph full of passive construction and corporate speak, and it didn’t hold back on the critique.
“Overall, the paragraph comes across as informative and professional. It uses straightforward language and presents its points in a clear and concise manner. However, the tone is not particularly friendly or conversational.”
It even offered some suggestions to make the tone more personable.
Generative AI can help you fine-tune your headline, headers, calls to action and more. It shouldn’t take the place of actual A/B testing, of course, but it can make it easier to settle on an effective headline.
For example, you can feed the AI your intro or headers and ask it to generate headlines. Or, you can give it a list of potential headlines and ask which one is most compelling. You can even take that response and ask it to further optimize the headline:
Despite our best human efforts, sometimes typos or errors Phone Number List in usage sneak into content. We can have multiple editors look at a piece and still miss a few corrections. Generative AI is already very good at catching things like misused homonyms (like where/wear or their/they’re/there) and will only get better over time.
You can paste an entire blog post into a tool like ChatGPT and ask it to edit. However, the more words you put in a single prompt, the longer it takes to generate results. You will have a better experience if you paste a paragraph at a time.
Generative AI can also analyze text for a specific tone of voice. For example, if you want to write in a helpful, personable way, you can ask if your tone is hitting the mark. Just say, “Please analyze the tone of this paragraph and tell me if it sounds friendly and helpful,” then paste your copy into the prompt box. And yes, you don’t have to say please and thank you, but it never hurts to be polite.
I gave ChatGPT a pretty dry paragraph full of passive construction and corporate speak, and it didn’t hold back on the critique.
“Overall, the paragraph comes across as informative and professional. It uses straightforward language and presents its points in a clear and concise manner. However, the tone is not particularly friendly or conversational.”
It even offered some suggestions to make the tone more personable.