The free guide to

The Free Guide to Using AI writing tools

AI writing tools can speed up drafting dramatically — but used carelessly they produce bland, generic content that hurts rather than helps. This free guide shows how to use them as an assistant, not a replacement for thinking.

Writesonic helps you draft content faster across blogs, ads and more — a practical place to start with AI writing.

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What AI writing is good (and bad) at

Good at: first drafts, outlines, rewording, beating the blank page, and variations. Bad at: original insight, accuracy on niche facts, and sounding like a real person without editing. Treat output as a fast first draft, never as the finished article.

Keep quality high

Give the tool context and a clear brief, then edit hard: add real examples, your own opinions, and accurate detail. Fact-check anything specific. The brands that win with AI use it to produce more genuinely useful content, not more filler.

Use it ethically and transparently

Do not pass off unchecked AI text as authoritative advice, and disclose where it matters. Quality and honesty protect your reputation far more than volume does.

Choosing a tool

Look at the type of content you write most, whether it fits your budget, and how much editing the output needs. Writesonic is a widely used option that covers blogs, ads and short-form content.

Frequently asked questions

Will AI writing hurt my SEO?

Only if it produces thin, generic content. Helpful, accurate, well-edited content performs well regardless of how the first draft was produced.

Can AI replace a writer?

Not for content that needs real insight, accuracy and voice. It is best used as an assistant that speeds up drafting.

How much editing do AI drafts need?

Usually a fair amount — for facts, examples, tone and originality. Budget time to edit, not just generate.

Writesonic helps you draft content faster across blogs, ads and more — a practical place to start with AI writing.

Get started with Writesonic →