You know that feeling when you scroll through LinkedIn and every post sounds exactly the same? "In today's fast-paced digital landscape, businesses are leveraging AI to revolutionize their social media strategy." Cool. So is everyone else.
I've been managing social media professionally for years, earned my chartered institute of marketing merit in social media, and I'm watching the same problem play out across every platform: AI tools are making content creation faster, but they're also making everything look identical.
The question isn't whether to use AI for social. That ship has sailed. The question is how to use it without becoming another clone in the feed.
This isn't another "10 best AI tools" listicle (but don’t get me wrong, we do love a listicle). This is about spotting when your content looks generic, choosing tools that work effectively for social, and building a workflow that saves time without sacrificing what makes your brand yours.
The AI sameness problem
Look at your LinkedIn feed right now. How many posts could you swap the logo on and they'd work for a completely different brand? That's the problem.
Dom, our CTO, put it perfectly: "it's because of how it's trained and how it reacts to how most people write. Most people aren't that original, so they get a formula back at them. Nobody really knows but that's the theory!"
Translation: AI learns from existing content. When everyone uses the same prompts ("write a LinkedIn post about..."), They get variations of the same output. It's not the ai's fault. It's giving you what you asked for, based on what worked before.
The data backs this up. Sprout social's 2026 research found that 56% of social media users see ai-generated content often or very often, with 83% encountering it at least sometimes. And the numbers are climbing. Analysis shows that 71% of social media images are now ai-generated, with platforms producing 34 million AI images daily.
But here's what makes it worse: the problem isn't just that ai-generated content looks similar, it's that most people don't realize this when they're publishing it.
Tell-tale signs you're reading AI content
As someone who reads hundreds of social posts a week (occupational hazard), I can usually spot AI content in about three seconds. Here's what gives it away:
Visual red flags:
Images that look "too perfect" in that uncanny AI way
Generic stock-photo vibes but clearly not stock photos
That specific Midjourney aesthetic where everything's slightly too artistic
Caption red flags:
Opens with "in today's X..." Or "as a y professional..."
Every sentence is the exact same length
Emoji usage that feels algorithmic (🚀💡✨ in predictable patterns)
Generic hooks that could apply to anything: "here's what I learned..." "This changed everything..." "You need to know this..."
The personality test: cover the logo. Could this post be from literally any brand in your industry? If yes, it's probably ai-generated without editing.
And audiences are noticing. Research from the Nuremberg institute for market decisions found that labeling content as ai-generated leads consumers to see it as less natural and less useful, even when the content is identical to human-created versions. In advertising specifically, genZ consumers are 39% likely to feel very or somewhat negative about ai-generated ads, nearly double the 20% rate among millennials.
The most striking stat? 98% of consumers agree that authentic images and videos are pivotal in establishing trust with brands.
The biggest mistake (according to someone who builds products)
Ben Gabler, our chief product Officer, sees this play out constantly: "I think the biggest mistake is not realizing they're losing their personality (or the brand) when using AI generated content. Anyone can go to the LLMs and type in a prompt to generate content that is effectively the same tone and voice, along with the same content."
His solution flips the typical workflow: "they could start by writing their own post and then having AI check for grammatical errors."
Read that again. You write. AI edits. Not the other way around.
This is what I do in practice: I'll brain-dump a rough post in about 90 seconds (typos, incomplete thoughts, whatever), then use Claude or ChatGPT to tidy it up. The ideas are mine. The voice is mine. AI just makes sure I didn't write "their" instead of "there."
And this matters to your bottom line. Lucidpress research found that consistent brand presentation can increase revenue by up to 33%, with brand visibility becoming 3.5 times higher for consistently presented brands. When AI makes your brand sound like everyone else's brand, you're leaving money on the table.
AI tools that work for social (and how to use them without becoming generic)
Let me be specific here because vague advice is useless.
For ideation (when you're stuck):
ChatGPT, Claude, Jasper
How to use without losing yourself: ask for frameworks, not finished content. "Give me 10 angles for a post about X" gets you ideas. "Write a post about X" gets you generic output.
Example prompt I use: "I want to write about [topic]. What are 5 unexpected angles someone in my industry wouldn't immediately think of?"
For caption writing:
Copy.AI, Jasper, ChatGPT
Brand risk: these tools default to marketing-speak. "Leverage," "revolutionize," "gamechanger" - all the words humans don't say.
How to fix it: give the tool your brand voice guidelines. At hosting.com, our rules are short sentences, contractions, no jargon, sound human. I literally paste these into my prompts.
At hosting.com, our brand voice document spells it out clearly: "sound human, not robotic." "Keep it tight. Short words. Short sentences. No fluff." These aren't suggestions. They're the difference between content that sounds like us and content that sounds like an algorithm.
For images:
Midjourney, DALL-E, Canva AI
Brand risk: George, our designer, can spot AI images instantly. The visual tells are real.
How to keep brand identity: use AI for concepts and rough drafts, then apply your brand colors, fonts, and style overlays. Don't just publish raw AI images.
For scheduling/analytics:
Later, buffer, Hootsuite (most have AI features now)
What works: ai-suggested posting times based on your actual engagement data. Buffer's analysis of 52 million posts found that the strongest signal for success wasn't a format trick or timing hack - it was replied. Creators who reply to comments consistently outperform those who don't.
What doesn't: ai-generated captions from these tools (same generic problem)
How to keep your brand voice when using AI
Daphne, our Head of Website & Content, manages brand consistency across our entire team. Her advice: "always have a list of ground rules that you can refer back to and feedback to AI. Be clear to your audience and the tone of your audience."
Here's what that looks like in practice:
Create a brand voice document AI can reference
Ours includes:
The four rules we write by (clarity comes first. Say it with a wink. Respect people's time. Sound human, not robotic.)
Specific banned phrases ("in today's fast-paced digital landscape" is in our "never say this" list)
Real examples of good vs bad copy
Use AI for first drafts, not final drafts
Write rough → AI refines → you polish. That order matters.
Build templates with your voice already baked in
I have a google doc of opening hooks that sound like us. When I need AI help, I give it three examples of our style first.
This approach isn't just about sounding better. Sprout social's 2026 research shows that 55% of social users are more likely to trust brands that publish human-generated content, rising to two-thirds among gen Z and millennials. Their number one priority for brands in 2026? Human-generated content.
A practical AI social media workflow (that saves time)
Here's what I do, step by step:
Research/ideation (10 mins): use ChatGPT for angles I haven't considered. Not for finished content.
Rough draft (5 mins): I write it. Badly. Full of typos. But it's in my voice.
AI polish (2 mins): paste into Claude with this prompt: "fix grammar and tighten this but keep the casual tone and don't change the structure."
Brand check (3 mins): read it out loud. If it sounds like a LinkedIn influencer wrote it, rewrite.
Visual (varies): if I need an image, I'll use Canva AI for ideas, then apply our brand templates.
Schedule: buffer or later, based on when my audience engages.
Time saved vs writing from scratch: about 40%. But quality hasn't dropped because I'm still the one driving the creative.
What to avoid (learn from my mistakes)
Things I've done wrong so you don't have to:
Publishing AI content without editing: did this once. Three people messaged me asking if i'd been hacked because it sounded nothing like me.
Using AI images without brand adjustments: posted a Midjourney graphic raw. It got half the engagement of our usual posts because it looked like everyone else's content.
Over-automating: tried using AI to generate a week's worth of captions at once. They were all formulaic and boring. Engagement tanked.
Asking AI for creativity instead of efficiency: AI is brilliant at taking your good idea and making it cleaner. It's terrible at having the idea for you.
Getting started this week
One thing you can try today:
Write your next social post yourself. Don't touch AI until you've got a rough draft down. Then use it to polish grammar and tighten sentences.
That's it. That's the whole experiment.
See if engagement changes. See if it feels more like you. See if people respond instead of just scroll past.
Ben's advice on picking tools applies here too: "what is the goal of this tool? In my opinion, this comes from unique content that helps represent your brand and mission."
The goal isn't to make content creation easier. It's to create content that connects with your audience. If AI helps with that, use it. If it's making everything sound the same, stop.
Dom said it best: "like with anything you get in what you put out, so the more you can give to AI the more it can give back."
Give it your voice, your ideas, your brand. Let it handle the polish.
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