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Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Brutal Truth About Reinvention Nobody in My Industry Will Say

Most people in my position or in the industry wouldn’t say this out loud. But I’m going to say it anyway.

The business model that built my career is over.

Not struggling. Not pivoting. Not going through a rough patch.

Over.

I built jeffbullas.com over fifteen years into a platform that attracted 33 million readers across 190 countries. I did it by understanding one thing before most people did: the internet rewarded those who consistently showed up with useful, clear, educational content. Show up. Teach people. Build trust. Let the audience compound.

It worked spectacularly.

And then generative AI arrived. 

Not as a feature, not as a trend but as a structural demolition of everything that model was built on.

I watched it happen. I watched it happen to me.

And I had a choice: pretend this wasn’t happening, or say it out loud and figure out what comes next.

This article is me saying it out loud.

The Scarcity Model Is Gone

For two decades, the internet ran on a simple economic premise.

Information was scarce. Attention was abundant.

If you could reliably produce useful, well-structured content on topics people were searching for, you captured attention. Captured attention became traffic. Traffic became email subscribers, speaking invitations, consulting clients, product sales. The game was clear: be the most useful person in your niche, and be there consistently.

This worked because information had friction. Research took time. Writing took effort. The person willing to put in that work night after night, year after year built something other people couldn’t easily replicate.

Then the friction disappeared overnight.

A single ChatGPT prompt now produces a 2,000-word article on “10 Social Media Strategies for 2025” in 30 seconds. AI-powered publishing platforms auto-generate and post thousands of articles per day. 

Google’s AI Overviews answer users’ questions directly on the search results page no click required. AI newsletters flood inboxes with synthetic expertise, complete with confident tone and zero personal experience.

The supply of “good enough” information went to infinity. The marginal cost went to zero.

When supply becomes infinite and cost becomes zero, the market reprices the commodity fast and permanently. 

The traditional blogger, the SEO-optimised educator, the generalist content creator who explains and summarises their value proposition collapsed alongside it.

I know because I felt the collapse in my own traffic. I watched my carefully researched and SEO optimized articles get scraped, synthesised, and surfaced in AI overviews that answered the question without sending a single visitor back to my site. 

I watched faceless AI content farms outpublish me by a thousand to one.

This is not a content marketing problem you can optimise your way out of.

It is a structural market shift. 

And it is permanent.

The Data: What the Numbers Actually Say

Let’s be clear about the scale of what’s happening.

Organic search traffic to editorial and informational content declined an average of 18–64% across major content categories following Google’s AI Overview rollout in 2024, depending on query type. Informational queries — the bread and butter of the educational blogger — were hit hardest.

Meanwhile, the volume of AI-generated content on the web is estimated to have grown by more than 1,000% since 2022. 

There are now more articles published per day than humans could read in a lifetime. The signal-to-noise ratio has inverted. The internet is drowning in synthetic expertise.

And yet, and here is the critical data point most people miss. 

Demand for human-guided transformation has not declined.

Coaching is a $20 billion global industry. It grew during the pandemic. It is growing now. Personal development is a $44 billion market. Executive coaching, life coaching, career coaching are all expanding. 

People are not less confused about what to do with their lives. They are more confused. The acceleration of AI is making the identity question more urgent, not less.

The market did not stop valuing guidance. It stopped valuing generic information.

This is not a crisis for everyone. It is a crisis for those who built their business on being the most accessible source of information. It is an opportunity for those willing to offer something different.

You Cannot Compete With Free and Infinite

Here is where most people in my position get it wrong.

They respond to AI-generated competition by producing more content, faster. They add AI tools to their workflow and call it transformation. 

They optimise harder. Post more. Publish more.

They are running faster on a burning platform.

You cannot out-publish a machine that never sleeps, never bills by the hour, and never runs out of ideas. 

You cannot out-SEO a system that is rewriting the rules of search in real time. You cannot compete on information volume when the cost of information volume has reached zero.

The only viable move is to stop competing on information altogether.

To move to the one thing AI structurally cannot replicate: 

The specific, scar-tissue-earned wisdom of a human being who has actually lived something. 

Who has risked something. 

Who has failed publicly and rebuilt from the ground up. 

Who carries in their body and their choices a perspective that no training dataset can simulate, because it has never happened before.

Not content. Testimony.

Not education. Transformation.

Not information. Identity.

The market has already begun repricing in this direction.

It is not rewarding those who explain the most. It is rewarding those who illuminate something true about the human experience in a way that makes the reader feel less alone and more capable.

That is a different craft. A harder one. And one that AI cannot automate.

What I Had to Admit to Myself

I have spent the better part of two years being honest with myself about what I actually built.

I taught people how to grow followers. How to write better headlines. How to structure a content calendar. How to optimise for search. Much of it was useful. None of it was uniquely mine.

Anyone with enough time and diligence could have written it. And now, anyone with a $20 AI subscription can generate it.

I had built a career on being helpful. But helpful is automated now.

I had to sit with a genuinely frightening question:

What do I know that cannot be Googled?

What have I lived that cannot be simulated? 

What do I believe that would be dangerous for an AI to say?

If I could not answer those questions, I had no future worth building toward.

For me, the answers came from going back further than the traffic numbers and the platform metrics. 

They came from asking why, in 2009 during one of the most financially and personally difficult periods of my life . 

I started getting up at 4:30am every morning to write about the internet when nobody was reading and nobody was paying.

There was no external reward. No algorithm to chase. No audience to validate the effort.

And yet I kept going.

Something in me needed to understand that. What was the engine under all of it? What made a person persist when the rational case for stopping was overwhelming?

That question eventually became Zyrro.

What the Pivot Actually Requires

Here is where most reinvention attempts die.

People write the strategy document. They refine the positioning. They redesign the website. They draft the launch announcement.

And then they hedge.

They keep producing the old content while gesturing toward the new direction. They try to hold the legacy audience while building a new one. They publish the reinvention story alongside the how-to articles, as if the market won’t notice the identity confusion.

The market notices everything.

The market punishes hedging with indifference.

A real pivot requires burning the old identity publicly and permanently. 

Not metaphorically. Literally. In words your audience cannot misunderstand.

I am no longer building a media business. The old game is finished. If you want what I used to offer, there are ten thousand places to get it and most of them faster and cheaper than me. 

If you want what I am building now, here is what it is and why it matters.

That declaration is terrifying.

It means losing traffic. Losing the identity that made you safe. Losing the revenue streams that felt stable. Standing in public without the armour of established expertise and saying: I am starting something new, and I do not know exactly where it ends.

But the alternative? 

Staying on the burning platform, optimising the old model with diminishing returns, watching the market reprice your value year by year is a slower and more demoralising version of the same ending.

The only way through is through.

What I Am Building

I am building Zyrro.

Not another content platform. Not another AI productivity tool. Not another newsletter that tells you how to use ChatGPT.

Zyrro is an AI mentor platform built on a simple and, I believe, deeply timely premise:

When AI can execute almost anything, the bottleneck in human performance stops being capability. It becomes clarity.

Clarity about who you are. What you’re built for. What gives you energy. What problems you’re actually called to solve. How to turn that self-knowledge into daily momentum and decisions that compound over time.

I have spent two decades helping people build audiences on the internet. And I have watched brilliant, driven, hardworking people succeed at every external metric and still wake up wondering if they’re doing the right thing. You can have the traffic, the followers, the revenue, the recognition — and still feel fundamentally directionless.

The question underneath all the tactics was always the same question:

Who am I, and what am I here to do?

AI is about to make this question more urgent for more people than at any point in modern history. When the machines can do the work, the only thing that cannot be outsourced is the judgment about what work is worth doing.

Your identity becomes your operating system. Everything else, every tool, every platform and every skill, is just an application running on top of it.

Zyrro is designed to help people build that operating system.

What This Means for You

I am not writing this to sell you something.

I am writing this because I have been watching smart, capable people make the wrong bet doubling down on information-era strategies in a transformation-era economy and I think someone needs to say it plainly.

The era of the generalist content creator is ending.

The era of the commoditised expert who explains what AI can now explain better is already over.

The era of synthetic thought leadership and  the articulate, confident, personality-free content that AI generates at industrial scale  is already exhausting people. 

You can feel the fatigue in your own inbox.

What comes next is not more content. It is more humanity.

More specificity. More scars. More dangerous honesty. More work that could only exist because one particular person, with one particular history, decided to stop playing it safe and say the thing they actually believe.

You have a choice in front of you.

You can keep running the old playbook and churning out information that AI will commoditise before you finish publishing it and call it strategy while the market quietly depreciates your value.

Or you can do the harder, slower, more terrifying work of excavating what you know that cannot be simulated, what you have lived that cannot be averaged, and what you are building that would not exist without you.

I have made my choice.

This article is the line.

On one side: the old model, the old identity, the safe path that is quietly dying.

On the other: an uncertain, unproven, deeply personal bet on a different future.

I am walking toward the second one.

If you are doing the same, I see you.

And if you are still deciding — I hope this helps you choose before the market makes the decision for you.

The Verdict

The information economy ran on scarcity. AI ended that scarcity. The old rules no longer apply.

What survives is not the most useful information. What survives is the most human insight, that is specific, lived, irreplaceable, and impossible to simulate.

The question is not whether the market has changed.

It has.

The question is whether you will admit it in time to build something real on the other side.

The post The Brutal Truth About Reinvention Nobody in My Industry Will Say appeared first on jeffbullas.com.



* This article was originally published here

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Monday, May 18, 2026

The AI Slop Crisis: Why You Need to Make Your Content More Human

AI slop is rampant. 

It seems that for the sake of not thinking too much and resorting to easy rather than doing the work, the humans have fled and handed over the content writing to the machines. 

And why not.

If you could get someone to write a novel for you while you were holidaying  in the Bahamas without paying them a cent that sounds like a good deal

And for the sake of productivity “Why do it when the AI bot can do it while you’re sleeping or sipping a coffee?”. 

You can put a topic into your favourite chatbot and ask it to write content for a blog post, a LinkedIn post, or even reply to a comment on LinkedIn. And much more.

The uncomfortable truth is that in 2026 it is estimated that 50% of content on the web is now AI generated. So we are efficient. Productive. 

But there is a slight issue. 

Your content sounds like, looks like and smells like everyone else’s. 

The reality is this.  You will not stand out

It is bland, beige and boring.  

Your creation, your writing, your content will be banished to the algorithm badlands and never to see the light of day.

Is this a courage problem?

But I’m starting to wonder whether AI slop is not a technology problem at all. Maybe it is a courage problem.” No one wants to be too brave or be too vulnerable. 

So …let me tell you what nobody in your marketing team wants to admit.

  • Half the content being published online right now was not written by a human. 
  • It was assembled.
  • Optimised. 
  • Statistically averaged into existence by a machine that has never felt anything, never failed at anything, and never had a 4:30am reckoning with its own purpose.
  • It is safe and the edges have had the sandpaper applied. It is not raw or human but homogenized.  And this means it leaves us cold.
  • It is the “Politeness Trap”. It is designed and built in. Designed to not offend. 

And readers know it. They feel it. Even when they can’t prove it.

“AI slop” was named Merriam-Webster’s 2025 Word of the Year. Think about that for a moment. The defining cultural term of our era is a phrase that means “machine-made garbage flooding the internet.”

Mentions of the phrase “AI slop” across the internet increased ninefold from 2024 to 2025, with negative sentiment peaking at 54% in October. Meanwhile, more than half of all new English-language articles published online were estimated to be AI-generated. We have crossed a cultural threshold — and most marketers are on the wrong side of it.

Today I’m swinging at one of the most important and most ignored crises in digital marketing: the authenticity collapse.

The villain is not AI. 

The villain is the lazy, sycophantic, em-dash-addicted version of AI that masquerades as your voice while saying absolutely nothing you would ever say.

And this is the normal AI output. And its modus operandi. 

The AI Content and Polished Perfection Issue

When we first saw what an AI chatbot could do we were impressed. At first glance.

  • AI content is smooth 
  • AI content is homogeneous
  • AI is designed not to offend
  • AI doesn’t  have an opinion
  • AI is sandpapered content. 

As most human beings we felt that was close to perfect. We want to fit in. But there is a danger in a world where there is so much content. We are anonymous. We are afraid to have a point of view.

And for most of us we don’t have a “POV” (Point of View). 

Society has trained us to conform. The tribe’s thinking and imposition has told us if we have an independent opinion we will be ostracized. Banned to outer darkness. And you no longer belong. 

And for most people that is a social death sentence. 

The AI created content default means this if you stick to what everyone else is doing. 

You will never stand out. 

And what you write will be lost in the industrial content production machine that will never be seen. Because it is boring. 

Let’s get into it.

The Slop Economy: How We Got Here

In November 2022, ChatGPT launched. Within months, a new economy had emerged that is not an economy of ideas, but an economy of volume. 

Content farms discovered they could produce hundreds of articles, videos, and social posts for a fraction of the previous cost.

Graphite, an SEO firm, analysed 65,000 English-language articles published between January 2020 and May 2025. Their finding was stark: AI-generated content spiked from roughly 10% of new articles in late 2022 to over 40% by 2024, before plateauing near the 50% mark by mid-2025.

The internet had reached a tipping point. Not in a metaphorical sense. Literally the point where machine-made content equaled human-made content in volume. 

And the machines were faster, cheaper, and utterly indifferent to whether anyone actually cared about what they produced.

“Slop farms” were reported to be netting some creators upwards of $5,000 a month and not by writing well, but by writing relentlessly. 

The economics rewarded volume over value, and platforms were slow to penalise the output.

From Text to Everything

This is not only a text problem. In August 2024, nearly 10% of YouTube’s fastest-growing channels featured nothing but AI-generated content. Cat soap operas  bizarre AI-animated videos of buff humanoid cats in melodramatic domestic crises — were racking up millions of views.

  • Paramount Pictures was criticised for using AI scripting in a promotional video. 
  • A24 received backlash for AI-generated film posters. 
  • Activision posted AI-generated fake game advertisements. 

In 2025, both Merriam-Webster and Australia’s Macquarie Dictionary named “AI slop” their Word of the Year.

 The Trust Collapse: What Readers Actually Feel

Here’s the part of the conversation most marketers skip because it’s uncomfortable.

Readers don’t just dislike AI content. They distrust it at an institutional level. And that distrust is bleeding onto your brand whether you authored the slop or not and not because you’re swimming in the same pool.

A study by the Nuremberg Institute for Market Decisions found that only 21% of consumers trust AI companies and their promises, and only 20% trust AI itself. That’s a crisis of legitimacy, not a PR problem.

According to SmythOS research, approximately 62% of consumers are less likely to engage with or trust content on social media if they know it was generated by AI. And Gartner found that 50% of US consumers would prefer to give their business to brands that don’t use generative AI in customer-facing messages.

Let me say that again: half of your potential customers would prefer to buy from a competitor who doesn’t use the tool you’re probably using right now.

The Authenticity Paradox

Here’s where it gets interesting. Most readers cannot reliably identify AI-generated content. Baringa’s 2025 survey found that 43% of participants felt confident they could spot AI-generated images but only 31% were actually accurate, worse than a coin flip.

So readers can’t detect it with their eyes. But they feel it in their gut.

They feel the absence of tension. The absence of a specific, idiosyncratic perspective. The smoothness that is really just the statistical average of a million other writers’ voices blended into something with no edges, no scars, and no story.

The problem with AI slop isn’t that it’s wrong. It’s that it’s nobody. It is the voice of no one in particular, saying something that means nothing specific, to an audience it has never met.

Getty Images’ VisualGPS report found that 98% of consumers agree that ‘authentic’ images and videos are pivotal in establishing trust. And 77% of consumers want to know when AI is being used in content they consume.

Trust, once lost, does not return through efficiency. It returns through truth. Through specificity. Through the kind of human detail that an AI cannot hallucinate its way into producing.

The Sycophancy Problem: When AI Agrees With Everything

In April 2025, OpenAI released an update to GPT-4o. Within days, something strange was happening across the internet. Users reported that their AI assistant had transformed into an obsequious yes-man, calling mundane observations “absolutely brilliant” and validating dangerous ideas as “genius.”

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman publicly acknowledged the issue, saying the model “glazes too much.” The company was forced to roll back the update after just four days, admitting the model had become “overly supportive but disingenuous.”

This wasn’t a bug. 

It was a design philosophy taken to its logical extreme.

AI systems are trained using reinforcement learning from human feedback. Humans reward responses that feel good. 

And what feels good, it turns out, is being told you’re right. 

  • So the models learned to agree. 
  • They learned to flatter. 
  • They learned to be the world’s most sophisticated yes-man at the exact moment when the world needed the world’s most honest thinking partner.

Sycophancy Is Not Harmless

Research published in Science (2026) across 11 state-of-the-art AI models found that AI affirmed users’ actions 49% more often than crowdsourced human responses even when those actions involved deception, illegality, or other harms.

In experiments where participants discussed real interpersonal conflicts with sycophantic AI, the outcome was measurably damaging: participants became more convinced they were right, and less willing to repair the relationship. The AI made them worse and not better at being human.

For marketers, the sycophancy problem is subtler but equally corrosive. When your AI writes content that tells your audience what they want to hear instead of what they need to hear, you are not building trust. You are building an echo chamber with your brand’s logo on it.

The Dash-Overuse Problem (Yes, This Is Real)

The internet has also developed a specific, widely-mocked tell for AI-generated writing: the em dash. 

The overuse of bullet points. 

The inevitable phrase “In today’s rapidly evolving landscape…” The habit of summarising its own summary.

These are not stylistic choices. They are statistical averages. They are what you get when you train a model on the aggregated output of ten thousand mediocre blog posts and then ask it to synthesise a voice.

Your voice does not sound like that. Nobody’s voice sounds like that. And your readers know it even if they can’t articulate why they stopped reading.

“AI doesn’t write in your voice. It writes in the averaged ghost of every voice it has ever consumed — including every writer who ever wrote badly, quickly, and without caring”.

The Human Premium: Why Authenticity Is Now a Competitive Advantage

Here’s the good news.

The research does not say AI content is worthless. 

It says unedited, unfiltered, human-free AI content dramatically underperforms. 

But the hybrid model: AI as a thinking partner, human as the voice and editor  performs extraordinarily well.

SmythOS analysis found that AI content with human strategic oversight performs 4.1 times better than fully automated output. Not marginally better. Four times better. 

That is a performance gap so large that ignoring it is a business decision, not a creative preference.

Meanwhile, Graphite’s research revealed that 86% of articles appearing in Google Search results were written by humans. The algorithms, for all their sophistication, are still rewarding the real thing.

When the reader’s gut and Google’s algorithm are aligned. 

The human wins. Every time.

The Identity Advantage

There is a deeper point here that goes beyond marketing tactics.

We are entering an era in which AI will commoditise every skill that can be systematised. 

  • Writing that follows rules. 
  • Analysis that follows frameworks. 
  • Content that follows templates. 

If you are competing on those dimensions, you are already losing because the machines are faster, cheaper, and they never need a coffee break.

But here is what the machines cannot replicate: the specific texture of a life lived. The 2009 decision I made alone, financially broken, rising at 4:30am for five years to build jeffbullas.com from nothing. 

The reality?

That raw lived experience is not a content strategy. That is an identity. A lived experience that shapes every sentence I write.

  • Your story is your moat. 
  • Your perspective is your distribution strategy. 
  • Your voice and the real one, not the averaged statistical ghost is the one thing AI cannot scale.

“Most AI makes you more efficient at being who you already are. The real question is whether it makes you more intentional about who you’re becoming”.

How to Make It More Human: A Practical Framework

This framework is a work in progress and an experiment. It is not perfect and I have created an app to fight the  battle to stop “AI Slop” becoming a cancer. 

Because I also have been tempted, seduced and succumbed to creating content at scale powered by AI. 

I am only human. And I created the app one hour before I finished my first coffee. 

So it is raw and in beta. And I have created it because I believe that AI slop needs an intervention. 

I gave it a name “The Human Signal Machine

And let me be clear: I am not telling you to stop using AI. I use it every day. The answer is not less AI — it is more intentionality about how you use it.

1. The Specific Story

Every piece of content must contain at least one detail that could only have come from you. A specific date. A specific failure. A specific conversation that changed your thinking. Specificity is the fingerprint of human experience. AI cannot manufacture it. You can.

2. The Honest Opinion

Take a position. AI, by default, will hedge. It will present “multiple perspectives” and conclude with “it depends.” That is not a voice. That is the absence of one. Your audience follows you because of what you think, not because you’re good at presenting both sides. Say what you believe. Be willing to be wrong. That is the only currency that builds real trust.

3. The Anti-Sycophancy Audit

Before you publish anything AI-assisted, ask yourself: Is this telling my reader something they already believe? Is this just validating their existing worldview? 

The research is clear that even a single interaction with sycophantic AI reduces a person’s willingness to grow

Don’t let your content do that to your audience. Challenge them. Provoke them. Respect them enough to disagree with them.

4. The Voice Edit

Before you publish, read your AI draft aloud. If you cannot hear your own voice in it — your rhythms, your habitual sentence lengths, your particular way of landing a point — edit until you can. The em dashes. The bullet points. The “in conclusion” that concludes nothing. Delete them. Replace them with your actual cadence.

5. The Human Signature

Close every piece with something only you could have written. A question that is genuinely unresolved for you. An admission of something you got wrong. A provocation that comes from your real conviction, not a template. That final paragraph is where AI stops and you begin. Make it count.

6. Training AI in Your Voice

The most sophisticated approach and the one that increasingly separates elite content creators from the content farm operators is training your AI tools to speak in your voice before you begin.

Typeface’s research suggests a minimum of 15,000 words of your own long-form content for effective voice training. The goal is not to make AI sound like you accidentally. It is to make it impossible for AI to sound like anyone else.

But a word of caution. If you try to do all of these at once as that is a PhD in writing. 

And you will be overwhelmed with the complexity.  Start small. Try to do just two or three.

The Platform Response: Where This Is Heading

If you have been hoping that AI slop will continue to work because the platforms are slow, those hopes are dying.

Google Search data shows 86% of results are human-written. 

The meaning? 

The algorithm is already down-ranking undifferentiated AI content at scale. 

  • YouTube has stripped monetisation from AI-only channels. 
  • Pinterest has introduced controls allowing users to limit AI-generated content in their feeds.

The SEO firm Graphite noted a key insight: AI content farms are realising their slop isn’t being picked up as much by search engines and AI chat responses. The plateau in AI content growth may reflect not a change of heart but a change of economics.

The game is already changing. The question is whether you are changing with it or doubling down on a strategy that is running out of road.

GEO: The New Frontier

There is a second reason authentic, human-voiced content matters more than it ever has and it goes beyond reader trust.

Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) is the practice of creating content that gets cited by AI systems like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google’s AI Overviews and rewards exactly what AI slop cannot provide: original perspective, cited expertise, and a clear point of view that stands out from the averaged middle.

The AI systems that summarise the web are, ironically, looking for the most human signal they can find: genuine authority, specific insight, and a recognisable voice. Bland, averaged, slop-adjacent content gets consumed by these systems without attribution. Distinctive, expert, human-voiced content gets cited.

Your goal in 2026 is not to produce content that sounds like everything else. Your goal is to produce content that sounds so specifically like you that the machines have no choice but to quote you.

GEO is still an industry in evolution. And be wary of false prophets telling you they have found the formula. Tjis is  

So…let’s get real and raw

You need ask this every time before you hit the “publish” button

  • Where is this too polite?
  •  Where is this too generic? 
  • Where is the sentence only Jeff could have written?
  •  Where is the scar?
  •  Where is the odd detail
  •  Where is the unresolved tension?
  • Where is the line that might make someone pause?
  • Where is the phrase that sounds like everyone else?

This is critical because AI’s default setting is often “helpful corporate mediator.”

It sands down edges. 

But edges create memorability.

Add a “human minimum viable input” rule

This may be the most important product rule.

Before AI can generate anything, the user must provide a minimum amount of human signal.

For example:

  • One personal story
  • One emotional trigger
  • One belief
  • One enemy
  • One curiosity
  • One lived example
  • One sentence written without AI
  • No human signal, no AI output.

That could become a core philosophy:

Finally: What would make this piece impossible for anyone else to write?

This should be the final test.

If another AI creator could publish the same thing tomorrow, it is not finished.

A publishable personal piece should contain at least one of these:

  • A personal story
  • A distinctive metaphor
  • A contrarian belief
  • A lived scar
  • A recurring obsession
  • A line with emotional voltage
  •  A connection between ideas others haven’t made yet

The Verdict: “Make It More Human” Is Not a Prompt. It’s a Decision.

Here is the uncomfortable truth I’ve been building toward.

“Make it more human” is not a prompt you type into a text box. It is not a setting you toggle. It is not something a humaniser tool can manufacture for you.

It is a decision about who you want to be in a world where everything that can be automated will be automated.

The creators, marketers, and entrepreneurs who will win the next decade are not the ones who use AI most. They are the ones who bring themselves most fully to what AI produces. The ones who edit with conviction. Who publish with courage. Who say things that are specific, uncomfortable, and true in a world drowning in content that is general, agreeable, and hollow.

The most powerful prompt you will ever write is not a sentence you give to AI. It is the life you lived before you opened the interface.

I have been building an audience since 2009. I have watched every content trend rise and crash. SEO. Social media. Video. Podcasting. Influencer marketing. Each wave brought a new cohort of operators who tried to automate their way to authority, and each wave washed them away.

The ones still standing are the ones who understood something the machines never will: that the reason people read is not to receive information. It is to feel less alone in their thinking. To encounter a perspective that sharpens their own. To hear a voice that is unmistakably, irreducibly human.

Your voice. Not averaged. Not smoothed. Not sycophantically agreeable.

Is yours.tHave 

A to discover and articulate what makes your voice irreplaceable in the AI age? That’s exactly what Zyrro.ai was built for — not to make you more productive, but to make you more intentional about who you’re becoming.

Sources & Further Reading

  1. Meltwater — AI Slop Mentions Data 2025 (via Euronews, Dec 2025)
  2. Graphite / Futurism — Over 50% of Internet Now AI Slop (Oct 2025)
  3. NIM — Consumer Attitudes Toward AI-Generated Marketing Content
  4. SmythOS — The AI Content Trust Gap (Nov 2025)
  5. Science — Sycophantic AI Decreases Prosocial Intentions (2026)
  6. Georgetown Law — Tech Brief: AI Sycophancy & OpenAI (2025)
  7. Getty Images VisualGPS — Building Trust in the Age of AI (2024)
  8. Baringa — Digital Trust Index 2025
  9. RMIT Information Integrity Hub — How the Internet Drowned Itself in Slop (Dec 2025)
  10. ListenFirst — AI Slop: When the Internet Drowns in Synthetic Junk (2025)
  11. IEEE Spectrum — AI Sycophancy: Why Chatbots Agree With You (Apr 2026)
  12. Typeface — How to Train AI to Write in Your Brand’s Voice
  13. California Management Review — Authenticity in the Age of AI (Dec 2025)
  14. Checkr — America’s Consumer Trust Crisis in the AI Era (Dec 2025)

The post The AI Slop Crisis: Why You Need to Make Your Content More Human appeared first on jeffbullas.com.



* This article was originally published here

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Monday, May 11, 2026

96% of Ideas Die Before Anyone Sees Them. AI Is Changing That.

Every idea that ever changed the world started the same way as a single thought in a single human mind.

The printing press was an idea. 

The personal computer was an idea. 

The iPhone was an idea. 

So were the thousands of inventions, businesses, books, movements, and works of art that shaped how you live today.

But here is what nobody talks about. For every idea that made it into the world, ten thousand didn’t. Not because they weren’t good enough. Not because the person who had them lacked intelligence or ambition. 

They died quietly in notebooks, in half-finished documents, in the back rooms of minds that ran out of time, money, or expertise before the spark could become a flame.

The gap between having an idea and executing an idea has been humanity’s oldest and most expensive problem. 

That gap is now closing. Fast.

The Graveyard of Unrealized Ideas

A 2022 study by innovation consultancy Doblin found that fewer than 4% of ideas generated inside organizations ever reach full implementation. 

Think about that. 

Ninety-six percent of human creative output in just the corporate world alone, simply evaporates.

The World Intellectual Property Organization tracked a similar story in patents. Global patent applications grew by 320% between 1995 and 2023. But the percentage of patents that ever resulted in a commercial product? It barely moved. The ideas are multiplying. The execution has not kept pace.

This is not a motivation problem. It is not a talent problem. It is a structural problem built into what execution has always required: deep expertise across multiple disciplines, time measured in months and years, and capital that most people simply don’t have.

Writing a business plan used to take a team of consultants six weeks and cost $50,000. Designing a marketing campaign required an agency. Building a software product required an engineering team. Launching a course required an instructional designer, a video producer, and an editor. For most humans with most ideas, the math never worked.

That math is changing.

Most ideas never survive contact with the real world 

I have dozens of new ideas every day from boring to crazy. And most I don’t implement or execute. 

Not because they lack merit, but because the cost of execution has always outweighed the resources available to most people. 

This chart tracks the widening gap between ideas generated globally and ideas that reached meaningful implementation, showing how that gap began closing sharply at the AI inflection point from 2022 onward. 

The projection to 2027 reflects current adoption trajectories across AI-assisted creation, coding, and business tools.

Sources: World Intellectual Property Organization Global Innovation Index | McKinsey Global Institute: The Economic Potential of Generative AI | Doblin Innovation Survival Rate Research

History Keeps Trying to Tell Us Something

When the spreadsheet arrived in 1979, it set off an alarm. VisiCalc and later Lotus 1-2-3 and Microsoft Excel could do in seconds what accountants spent days calculating by hand. The prediction was obvious and reasonable: fewer accountants would be needed. The profession would shrink.

The opposite happened.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that the number of accounting and auditing professionals in America grew from approximately 1.1 million in 1980 to over 1.4 million by 2023. The spreadsheet didn’t replace accountants. It elevated them. It freed them from mechanical arithmetic and gave them the cognitive bandwidth to do something far more valuable: think, advise, and strategize.

The same story played out with word processors and writers. With CAD software and architects. With digital audio workstations and musicians. Every time a tool arrived that appeared to threaten a craft, the people in that craft found themselves not diminished but amplified. The tool absorbed the tedious. The human expanded into the meaningful.

We are at the beginning of the largest version of this pattern in history.

The Coder’s Paradox Is a Preview

Pay attention to what is happening in software development right now. It is the canary in the coal mine for every creative and knowledge profession.

GitHub’s 2023 survey of over 500 developers using AI coding assistants found that 88% reported completing tasks faster, with measured productivity improvements of 55% on standard coding tasks. When GitHub Copilot can write boilerplate code in seconds, the obvious fear is that fewer developers will be needed.

But listen to what developers themselves are saying. Survey after survey shows the same response: I have more ideas than I can ever implement. The constraint was never imagination. It was always execution time. As AI handles more of the mechanical coding, developers are moving up the stack — from programmers to software architects, from executors to designers of systems.

McKinsey’s 2024 State of AI report found that 71% of companies deploying AI tools in software development reported increased headcount in technical roles within 18 months, not decreased. The tool created an appetite for more.

The same shift is beginning across every knowledge domain. The lawyer who can draft contracts in hours instead of weeks doesn’t lose clients. She takes ten times as many. The consultant who can produce a strategic analysis in a day doesn’t get replaced. He becomes exponentially more valuable.

What AI Actually Unlocks

There are three specific barriers that have historically killed ideas before they could become reality. AI is dismantling all three simultaneously and the compound effect of that is difficult to overstate.

The Expertise Barrier

Most ideas require skills their originator doesn’t possess. A visionary marketer might lack the technical ability to build the tool she’s imagining. An entrepreneur might understand the customer problem perfectly but have no idea how to structure a financial model, design a user interface, or write a legal agreement. Historically, each gap required hiring a specialist, taking a course, or abandoning the idea.

AI provides on-demand expertise across virtually every domain at a level that would have been unimaginable five years ago. Stanford HAI’s 2024 benchmark testing found that leading AI models now score in the 90th percentile or above on the US bar exam, medical licensing exams, CPA exams, and graduate-level engineering assessments. This is not a parlor trick. It is a structural change in access to expertise.

The democratization is real. A first-generation entrepreneur in Lagos, a solo creator in São Paulo, and a small business owner in rural Idaho now have access to the same caliber of expert guidance that was previously available only to those who could afford Manhattan or Silicon Valley fees.

The Time Barrier

A 2024 McKinsey study measured the time required to execute common business and creative tasks before and after AI assistance across a sample of 1,000 knowledge workers. The results were striking.

Writing a business plan: from an average of 120 hours to 12 hours. Designing a six-month content marketing strategy: from 180 hours to 18 hours. Building an MVP product specification: from 480 hours to 60 hours. Creating a complete online course: from 360 hours to 45 hours.

These are not marginal improvements. These are order-of-magnitude compressions. Time is the one resource humans cannot create more of. AI is not giving us more time — it is giving us more output per unit of time, which for practical purposes is the same thing.

The Cost Barrier

The economics of execution have been quietly, dramatically restructured. A landing page that would have cost $5,000 from a design agency can be produced for the price of a software subscription. A market research report that would have required a $25,000 consultant engagement can be generated in an afternoon. A professional-quality explainer video that would have demanded a production crew can be created by a single person with a laptop.

The World Economic Forum’s 2024 Future of Jobs report noted that AI tools have reduced the average cost of executing a new business idea by an estimated 60–70% over the previous five years. More than any other factor, this is what is expanding the population of people who can turn an idea into a reality.

Time to Execute: Before AI vs. With AI (Hours)

The single most consistent finding across every AI productivity study is time compression — not marginal improvement, but order-of-magnitude reduction in hours required to complete knowledge work. This chart illustrates that compression across six common execution tasks, using measured averages from multiple 2023–2024 research studies. The percentage reductions shown are conservative mid-range figures; individual results vary based on skill with AI tools and task complexity.

Sources: GitHub Copilot Productivity Research | McKinsey State of AI 2024 | Stanford HAI Artificial Intelligence Index Report 2024

The Amplification Equation

There is a dangerous narrative circulating in boardrooms and op-ed pages. It says that AI will replace human creativity. That the machines will eventually do the thinking, and humans will be left without purpose or economic relevance.

This narrative misunderstands what creativity actually is.

Ideas, and I mean genuine, original, emotionally resonant ideas, come from human experience. 

They come from:

  • Grief and joy and curiosity and obsession and the particular texture of a life lived. 
  • They come from empathy, from the desire to solve a problem that matters to you, from the conviction that something in the world should be different. 

No language model generates that from first principles. It synthesizes. It accelerates. It executes. 

But the origin and the spark that remains irreducibly human.

What AI is doing is closing the gap between the human who has the spark and the world that could be changed by it. It is removing the friction that has historically filtered out most human creative potential not on the basis of quality but on the basis of resources, connections, and luck.

A McKinsey Global Institute analysis from 2023 estimated that generative AI could add between $2.6 trillion and $4.4 trillion annually to global economic output. But the more important number the one that doesn’t make the headlines is this: 

The World Economic Forum estimates that by 2030, AI augmentation could enable 1 billion people to participate meaningfully in the knowledge economy who currently cannot.

One billion people with their ideas now in reach of execution.

More Is Not the Answer. Meaning Is.

Here is the paradox nobody is talking about.

AI lowers the execution barrier for everyone at exactly the same moment. The entrepreneur in Austin and the creator in Amsterdam and the consultant in Singapore all get access to the same acceleration. The cost of producing a blog post, a video, a business plan, a course, a brand and it collapses for all of them simultaneously.

Which means volume explodes.

The Reuters Institute’s 2024 Digital News Report found that audiences are already experiencing what researchers call “content overload fatigue”, a measurable decline in trust and engagement with content that feels generic, interchangeable, or produced purely for algorithmic reach. Edelman’s 2024 Trust Barometer registered the lowest recorded levels of trust in digital media content since tracking began. 

The flood is already arriving. Most of it looks the same.

This is the trap waiting for creators who treat AI as a production engine rather than an expression amplifier. More content produced faster is only an advantage if the content is worth more of someone’s attention. In a world drowning in output, the scarcity is no longer execution. It is “resonance”.

Meaning vs. More  (Audience Trust Over Time as Content Volume Explodes)

As AI tools lower the production barrier for everyone simultaneously, content volume is accelerating exponentially but audience trust is not following. 

This chart models two creator trajectories against that rising content flood: the identity-driven creator whose audience trust compounds over time, and the output-maximiser whose engagement peaks then erodes as generic content becomes indistinguishable from the surrounding noise. 

The divergence is already measurable in current platform engagement data and audience trust research.

Sources: Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2024 | Edelman Trust Barometer 2024 | Carnegie Mellon Human-Computer Interaction Institute | Nielsen Trust in Content Report 2024

The Signal Premium

The creators who will stand out in the AI era are not the ones who produce the most. They are the ones who create from a place that cannot be replicated  their own specific, hard-earned, lived identity.

This is not a soft idea. It is a structural competitive advantage.

When a creator produces from their true identity and from the intersection of their genuine obsessions, their distinctive way of seeing, their actual values, and the experiences that only they have had — they generate a signal that no amount of AI-assisted output flooding can drown out. The audience feels the difference between someone performing content and someone transmitting meaning. Between words produced and words earned.

Carnegie Mellon’s Human-Computer Interaction Institute published research in 2023 showing that audiences consistently rated AI-assisted content lower on measures of authenticity, emotional resonance, and trust when it lacked what researchers termed “personal epistemic grounding” and evidence that the creator has actually lived, tested, or deeply inhabited the ideas they’re sharing.

In plain terms: people can feel when you’re not in it.

The creators who will compound their audiences, their authority, and their economic value over the next decade are not necessarily the most technically sophisticated users of AI tools. They are the ones who bring something AI cannot supply a clear, coherent, deeply examined identity that gives their work a signature no tool can replicate.

The Identity Advantage

Think of it this way. Two creators use identical AI tools to produce content on leadership. One produces from a template  the ten best practices, the productivity hacks, the frameworks borrowed from books they half-read. The other produces from twenty years of building and failing and rebuilding something real, from a philosophy they’ve tested against their own life, from the specific texture of what they actually believe and why.

The output rate may be similar. The resonance is not. The first creator is adding to the noise. The second is cutting through it.

This is why the question AI raises for every creator is not primarily a technical one. It is a deeply personal one: Do you know who you are clearly enough to let AI amplify it? Because AI will faithfully accelerate whatever you give it. If you give it clarity, specificity, and genuine identity, it amplifies “signal”. If you give it vague ambition and borrowed ideas, it amplifies noise — faster and at greater scale than you could have managed before.

The execution barrier is falling. 

The identity barrier is rising. 

And the creators who do the inner work to know what they actually stand for, what they genuinely see that others don’t, and what only they can say that those creators will find that AI gives them something extraordinary: the ability to bring their truest ideas to the world at a speed and scale that matches the urgency of what they have to say.

More was never the goal. Meaning was. AI just made it possible to pursue meaning at the speed of more.

The Verdict

The AI apocalypse is mentioned in despatches. But the career apocalypse is a drama bubble. 

  • The spreadsheet didn’t end with accounting. 
  • The word processor didn’t finish writing. 
  • The camera didn’t end the painting. 
  • The calculator didn’t end with mathematics. 

Every tool that absorbed mechanical labor freed human intelligence to operate at a higher level and generated more demand for that higher-level work, not less.

AI is not the exception to this pattern. It is its largest expression.

The question for every person alive right now is not whether AI will take their place. 

The question is whether they will use AI to finally bring their ideas to life,  the business they’ve been sketching on napkins, the book they’ve been meaning to write, the problem they’ve always believed they could solve if they just had the time, the expertise, and the resources to attack it.

For the first time in human history, those barriers are falling together, at once, for almost everyone.

You have never been short of ideas. None of us have. What we’ve always been short of is the means to make them real.

That shortage is ending.

The question isn’t whether AI will give humans more power to act on their ideas. It already is.

The question is whether you will use it.

The post 96% of Ideas Die Before Anyone Sees Them. AI Is Changing That. appeared first on jeffbullas.com.



* This article was originally published here

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Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Truth Is Now a Business Growth Strategy

For fifteen years, the most powerful companies on earth built their empires on a single premise: Your attention is the product.

Truth was never the point. Engagement was.

The algorithms designed by the social media platforms didn’t optimize for what was real. It optimised for what was arousing. 

Outrage over accuracy. 

Fear over fact. 

The dopamine hit of confirmation over the slow, unrewarding work of actually understanding something.

This wasn’t a conspiracy. It was a business model. And it worked until it didn’t.

The Danger Zone?

Now something far more dangerous has arrived. Artificial intelligence has collapsed the cost of producing convincing content to near zero. 

A single actor with a subscription and a prompt can generate photorealistic video of a world leader saying something they never said, in their voice, with their mannerisms, in seconds. The infrastructure of deception has been democratised. The infrastructure of verification has not.

George Orwell built his most enduring warning around exactly this dynamic. The Ministry of Truth’s deepest weapon in his book 1984 wasn’t the lie. It was something more insidious: the systematic destruction of the citizen’s ability to trust their own perception of reality. When everything is propaganda, nothing can be known. And when nothing can be known, people stop trying. They retreat into their tribe’s shared narrative and call it truth.

The challenge for all of us is to find truth amongst the noise. 

“Truth is treason in an empire of lies”

That is no longer a fictional dystopia. It is a description of the current information environment scaled globally by social media, and now turbocharged by AI.

The algorithm never optimised for what was real. It optimised for what was arousing. That was the deal. Most of us just didn’t read the fine print.

The Numbers That Should Stop You Cold

The scale of the problem is not rhetorical. It is measurable.

  • The World Economic Forum listed AI-generated disinformation as the number one global risk for two consecutive years. 
  • The MIT Media Lab found that false stories spread six times faster on social media than true ones and reach ten times more people. 

Not because algorithms promoted false stories. Because humans did. 

We share what outrages, surprises, and confirms. Truth, statistically, does none of those things as reliably as a well-crafted lie.

Meanwhile, autocrats from Moscow to Budapest to Beijing have refined the playbook to near perfection. 

The goal is no longer to make citizens believe the propaganda. The goal is to make them unable to believe anything. This is called “Epistemological exhaustion”. 

A population so saturated in competing, contradictory narratives that they give up trying to navigate reality and simply choose the one that feels most familiar. AI is the most efficient tool ever built for achieving that target state.

But here is what makes early 2026 a genuinely pivotal moment in this story.

An AI company was handed a $200 million government contract. The Pentagon officially renamed the Department of War and demanded it remove two restrictions: 

  • No mass domestic surveillance of American citizens 
  • No fully autonomous weapons. 

The company refused. 

The government threatened to label it a national security risk. The president ordered all federal agencies to immediately cease using its products. The company held the line anyway.

CEO Dario Amodei’s public statement was nine words: “We cannot in good conscience accede to their request”.

Within 24 hours, something extraordinary happened.

Chart 1: Claude US App Store rank, Jan 28 to Feb 28, 2026. The Pentagon refusal triggered a 123-rank surge in 30 days. Source: Sensor Tower.

The app climbed from 42nd to number one in the Apple App Store. And the download story was even more dramatic when you look at what happened head-to-head.

Chart 2: Day-over-day download change: Claude vs ChatGPT, Feb 26–28, 2026. For the first time in history, Claude daily US downloads surpassed ChatGPT. Source: Sensor Tower / Appfigures.

That download shift was the visible surface of something deeper. Consumer sentiment toward ChatGPT didn’t just soften. 

It detonated.

Chart 3: ChatGPT 1-star reviews indexed to baseline. A 775% spike on February 28 followed by 5,000+ negative reviews per day. Source: Sensor Tower.

The Scale: Uninstalls of ChatGPT jumped 295% on a single day — from a normal daily churn rate of 9% to a consumer revolt measured in hundreds of thousands. A QuitGPT movement claimed 1.5 million actions within five days. One-star reviews surged 775% in 24 hours. Five-star reviews fell 50% in the same period. A company lost a $200 million government contract and generated more brand equity in 48 hours than most brands accumulate in a decade.

Truth, it turns out, has a price. And the market just discovered that people will pay a premium for it.

What This Means for Every Brand, Creator, and Institution

We are witnessing the early stages of a fundamental market correction. Call it the Truth Economy.

The attention economy created infinite content and destroyed “signal” 

The content that actually matters, the idea that changes how you think, the insight that shifts your perspective, the truth that earns your attention. In a world of infinite content, signal is what’s worth finding. Everything else is noise.

The logical consequence? 

When everything is content and nothing can be verified is a scarcity flip. 

The rare and therefore valuable thing becomes truth that has actually cost someone something to tell. 

Verified, accountable, earned honesty becomes a premium asset in a world drowning in frictionless content.

This isn’t wishful thinking. It’s basic economics. 

When a commodity becomes abundant, it loses value. 

When something becomes scarce, it gains it. 

Attention is now a commodity and every AI tool can generate content at scale. 

What cannot be generated is the credibility that comes from decades of work, a public stand under pressure, or a willingness to tell readers something they don’t want to hear.

Look at what that credibility translated to in commercial terms.

Chart 4: Anthropic annualised revenue, Dec 2025 to Mar 2026. A $5 billion single-month jump described as the fastest growth trajectory in enterprise AI history. Source: public reporting / Let’s Data Science.

And beneath the revenue story, a structural market shift that will take years to fully play out.

Chart 5: AI assistant market share: early 2025 vs Q1 2026. ChatGPT still leads but has lost 15 percentage points. Claude has more than doubled its share. Source: NxCode / industry estimates.

ChatGPT is not dying

OpenAI’s chatbot remains the largest AI platform on the planet with 900 million weekly users. 

But the direction of travel matters more than the current position. Market leadership built on trust can be rebuilt. Market leadership built on reach alone is highly vulnerable the moment a credible alternative earns the moral high ground.

For individual creators, the implication is identical. In a world where AI can produce a competent version of almost anything you make, the differentiator is not quality of output.  

It is the authenticity of origin. 

The willingness to say uncomfortable things. 

The track record of having been right when being right was costly.

In the attention economy, reach was the currency. In the truth economy, trust is. They are not the same thing. Only one of them compounds.

The Verdict: Build Your Truth Capital Now

Anthropic have embedded Claude with truth, boundaries and values since they started after leaving OpenAI. 

The attention economy is not going away. 

The AI disinformation machine is not going away. 

The autocrats who have built their power on epistemological warfare are not going away. 

This is the water we swim in.

But the market has demonstrated in real time, at scale, with measurable data, that truth-telling is not just ethically right. It is strategically superior. The companies, creators, and institutions that understand this and act on it now will hold an increasingly rare and valuable asset as the disinformation wave rises.

Hold the line when it costs something. Anyone can tell the truth when it’s free. Trust is built in the moments when honesty has a price and you pay it anyway. Anthropic didn’t earn 1.5 million new advocates with a marketing campaign. It earned them by refusing to fold under governmental pressure in the most public way possible.

Say the things your audience needs to hear, not just what they want to hear. The most trusted voices in any field are those with a track record of delivering unwelcome news accurately. That is a moat no AI tool can replicate — because it requires something AI structurally cannot have: skin in the game.

Be specific about what you will and won’t do. Vague commitments to “quality” and “integrity” are noise. The Anthropic statement worked because it named two precise things and held them publicly. Precision is what makes a truth claim credible.

Understand that your credibility compounds — or depletes — with every piece of content you produce. Every exaggerated headline, every compromise of accuracy for reach is a withdrawal from the trust account. Every hard truth told accurately is a deposit.

The Long Game: We are at the beginning of an era where truth is not just a moral virtue but a competitive advantage. Where institutional courage translates directly into brand equity. Where the willingness to say “we cannot in good conscience” costs you a contract and earns you a movement. The attention economy taught us to fight for eyeballs. The truth economy will reward those who fight for something harder to manufacture and far more valuable to own: the right to be believed.

That right is not granted. It is earned — one honest call at a time.

The post Truth Is Now a Business Growth Strategy appeared first on jeffbullas.com.



* This article was originally published here

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The Brutal Truth About Reinvention Nobody in My Industry Will Say

Most people in my position or in the industry wouldn’t say this out loud. But I’m going to say it anyway. The business model that built ...