Friday, April 24, 2026

Humanize Your Text


I finished writing the third and final draft of a piece and out of curiosity (or mild self-sabotage) ran it through an AI detector. It came back: 61% AI-generated.

Sixty-one.

Then, like a cheerful barista upselling oat milk, it asked: “Would you like to humanize your text?”

I had to sit with that for a second.

Let me get this straight. I write the thing. The machine tells me it sounds like a machine wrote it. Then the same machine offers to make it more human. It’s like a plastic fruit offering to teach an apple how to grow on a tree.

I get that language has patterns. Maybe after years of writing, my fluency itself is starting to look suspicious: too smooth, too balanced, too … competent. As if being clear and structured is now evidence of artificial origin.

Have we’ve reached a point where writing well can count against you?

What bothers me isn’t that the tool got it wrong. Tools get things wrong all the time.

What bothers me is the quiet confidence to essentially say: We know what human sounds like now. And this isn’t it.

Since when?

But real writing isn’t a filter. It’s choices. It’s quirks, blind spots, weird metaphors that somehow land. It’s the slightly crooked sentence you leave alone because straightening it would kill it.

If anything, the more I’ve written over the years, the less interested I’ve become in sounding “perfect.” Perfect is sterile. Perfect is showroom lighting. Perfect is a couch no one is allowed to sit on.

So no, I didn’t click “humanize.”

If I start letting a machine teach me how to sound like myself, I think I’ve missed the point somewhere along the line.


_________________________


NOTE: For what it's worth, I posted this on LinkedIn and enjoyed over 1,300 responses,
over 225 comments, over 120 reposts, and over 50,000 impressions.



Thursday, April 23, 2026

White Space Isn’t Empty


White Space in Marketing Design

It seems like website designers are terrified of empty space.

Web pages are packed like overstuffed suitcases … buttons, banners, pop-ups, chat bubbles, floating discount offers. If there’s a patch of screen not doing something, someone in a meeting starts sweating.

“Should we put something there?”

Apparently, the answer is always, “Yes.”

Which is unfortunate, because white space -- the space between things -- is not wasted room on a page. It guides the eye, directing the reader where to look first (and second and third).

When everything’s crammed together, the eye has nowhere to land. It skims. It bounces. It gives up.

White space fixes that. It quietly tells your eye: start here. Then go here. Then here. No arrows required.

Crowded design, on the other hand, has the energy of a junk drawer. You know the one. Batteries. Rubber bands. Three mystery keys. A takeout menu from 2014. Something sticky that no one wants to investigate. Technically there’s a lot in there. Functionally, you just close the drawer again.

Users do the same thing with crowded pages. They glance. They hesitate. Then they quietly leave. Not out of anger, out of exhaustion.

It’s a simple brain rule at play: crowded information is harder to process. When text and visuals are packed together, your brain has to work overtime just to sort it out.

White space isn’t empty. It’s not wasted space. It’s restraint. The quiet confidence to say, “This part matters enough to stand alone.”

And in a world that keeps trying to add one more thing, one more feature, one more blinking box asking if you'd like 10% off your first order … a little space can be welcome. And help lead prospects comfortably towards the decision you want them to make.



Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Copywriting Litmus Test

Years ago, an ex-partner and mentor Tom Dombrosky would get our client brainstorming back on track with one question:

“What’s the big idea?”

Not the hook. Not the headline. Not the targeting. The idea.

His litmus test (which I’ve since heard called the Barstool Test) was: if you can’t explain it in two sentences over a drink (in Tom’s case Stolichnaya), it’s not ready.

Barstool test for marketing copy

Every idea had to pass four filters:

  • Is it simple enough to say in one breath?
  • Is it emotional enough to make someone feel something?
  • Is it relevant to what’s happening right now in the prospect’s world?
  • Is it consequential enough to demand action.

If it didn’t clear those, it didn’t leave the room.

Most modern marketing skips this part. We optimize headlines, tweak funnels, and let algorithms decide what survives. It’s efficient and measurable, but a lot of it feels like carefully engineered noise.

Great copy doesn’t start big. It starts small with a specific detail, then tension is built so the reader feels something before you explain anything. Then, once they’re leaning in and emotionally vested, you reveal the big idea.

That’s the difference between information and persuasion.

You can automate distribution. You can A/B test until your eyes bleed. But you can’t automate a clear idea.

If you can’t pitch it casually, cleanly, in two sentences without sounding like you swallowed a marketing podcast, it’s not done.

Start smaller. Tighten it. Make it matter.

Then put it out into the world.


_________________________


For a few years, Tom and I were partners in a small advertising agency in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He was the senior. I was the junior. I learned a lot, made a lot of money, and had one helluva good time. Here are a few Dombrosky stories you might appreciate:

Chutzpah

Research

It Wasn't Pretty

Kicking Butt in Restaurant Marketing



Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Today's Consumer

 

Today's Consumer

Today’s consumer doesn’t browse. They feed.

An endless buffet of reels, memes, and microwave moments, shoveled down by the algorithm’s invisible hand.

Each of us wandering our own little maze of “for you” content … curated chaos, served a la carte.

The scroll never sleeps. It knows what we like before we do. And just as quick, we’re bored again.

Attention spans? Vapor.

Every ad, another reflexive flick of the thumb -- skip, skip, skip -- the modern heartbeat of distraction.



Humanize Your Text

I finished writing the third and final draft of a piece and out of curiosity (or mild self-sabotage) ran it through an AI detector. It came ...