Stop the AI Slop: Why Human-Centered Content Needs to Make a Comeback

Illustration showing an AI robot with stop and warning signs

There’s more content than ever … and much less worth reading.

Every day, more than 7 million new blog posts are published across the internet — and that’s just one slice of the content explosion we’re living through. With content volume growing faster than anyone can read it, noise now outweighs meaning.

There’s certainly no Internet content shortage. There is, however, a credibility crisis.

Scroll any feed, skim any search results page, or open your inbox.

You’ll see the same thing:

  • Endless “thought leadership” that says nothing new.
  • Blog posts engineered for keywords instead of clarity.
  • Social captions that are technically polished and completely forgettable.

Welcome to the era of mass-produced, AI-generated, low-effort content built for algorithms, not actual humans. In other words, the era of slop.

People are tired of it.

What Is “Slop,” and Why Is It Everywhere?

AI tools have made it possible to generate content at scale in seconds. That’s not inherently bad. But when speed replaces thoughtfulness, and volume replaces value, we get “AI slop.”

It’s content that:

  • Repeats what’s already been said
  • Lacks lived experience or original perspective
  • Optimizes for search engines over people
  • Prioritizes output over impact

Slop floods the internet because it’s cheap and fast to produce. But when everything sounds the same, nothing stands out.

The Real Cost of AI Slop

Slop clutters the internet, no doubt. But more importantly, it erodes trust.

When audiences repeatedly encounter generic, surface-level content, they disengage. They skim. They scroll. They stop believing brands actually understand them.

Over time, that has consequences:

  • Lower engagement
  • Weaker brand loyalty
  • Shorter attention spans
  • Growing skepticism

The more slop we create, the harder it becomes to break through the noise.

Why Human-Centered Content Needs a Comeback

Human-centered content doesn’t mean writing without AI. It means writing with intention.

Human-centered content starts with real people — their challenges, emotions, motivations, and context — not keywords or trending topics.

Here’s what human-centered content does differently:

1. It Leads With Empathy

Instead of asking, “What will rank?” it asks, “What does my audience actually need right now?”

Empathy creates resonance. Resonance creates loyalty.

2. It Shares Real Perspective

AI’s great at remixing information, but it falls short at replicating lived experience.

Your point of view is shaped by your failures, insights, conversations, and convictions. That’s your competitive advantage. When you share real perspectives, you stop sounding like everyone else.

3. It Values Depth Over Volume

Human-centered brands create less content with greater intention and avoid chasing daily output just to stay visible. 

One thoughtful article that genuinely helps someone is more valuable than 10 generic posts every time.

4. It Respects Attention

Attention is the most valuable currency online.

When you publish something meaningful, you’re signaling, “Your time matters, and I’m not here to waste it.”

That respect builds trust — and trust builds business.

The Brands That Win Will Be the Ones That Care

We’re at a tipping point. As more companies automate their content, the brands that double down on authenticity, clarity, and real human insight will stand out in the best possible ways.

Gone are the days of standing out because you’re louder. Now, it’s all about being real.

The Muscular Dystrophy Association, one of our clients, has long embraced being real. Its Quest Media program — which today encompasses a print magazine, digital content hub, podcast, and e-newsletters — has been a trusted and valued resource for the neuromuscular disease community for more than 25 years. Here’s how they do it:

  • They bring in the top researchers and experts to give an insider’s view of the latest research and advancements in neuromuscular disease care.
  • They give members of the neuromuscular disease community a platform for sharing their own unique stories.
  • They provide practical, problem-solving tips for niche topics like adaptive products and assistive technologies.

In other words, they’re providing valuable content that their community couldn’t get anywhere else and that was custom-built just for them.

Another client, enSYNC, pivoted this year to lean into human-led content. They launched a content campaign, Sounding Off: Senior Living Execs on Finance & Tech, to spark meaningful conversations with industry leaders and to establish themselves as a valuable resource. Through a series of videos, senior living operators uncover real financial and operational pain points and solutions. From these long-form videos come video snippets for social, blog posts, and other short-form content. 

In the world of AI slop, substance becomes a differentiator, care becomes disruptive, and humanity becomes a competitive edge.

Stop the Slop

AI is a tool. It can help brainstorm, refine, and accelerate workflows. But it should amplify human creativity, not replace it.

If you want to stand out: Say something only you can say, solve a real problem, speak like a human, and publish with purpose.

When it comes to content, the future belongs to the human creators, not the fastest ones.

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