Skip to content
← All content

Created from a single voice note with Agent Craft

X (Twitter)

ChatGPT burned you. I know because I hear some version of this almost…

ChatGPT burned you. I know because I hear some version of this almost every week from founders and SMB execs. They spent hours writing prompts, got something back that sounded like a press release written by a committee, published it anyway, and then wondered why nobody engaged. Or worse, they published it and someone called them out for sounding nothing like themselves. So go ahead. Tell me your ChatGPT horror story. I'm genuinely asking. Because here's what I've come to believe after watching this pattern repeat itself: the problem isn't AI. The problem is that most people are using it to do the wrong job. They're letting AI write the message. That's the mistake. This is really critically important. The message should come from you. Your words, your opinion, your voice. AI's job is to take that and distribute it efficiently. Not to author it. The moment you hand the authorship to the machine, you've handed away the one thing your audience is actually responding to, which is you. I'm going to give you a concrete example. The words in this post started as a voice note I spoke into my phone. One minute, maybe a little more. My actual thoughts, said out loud, in the way I actually talk. From there, AI formatted it for this platform, matched the image, referenced my known phrases and how I tend to structure an argument. What you're reading now sounds like me because it started as me. That's not a small distinction. That same approach put my message in front of tens of thousands of people. Not because the AI was clever. Because the message was real. The founders who got burned by ChatGPT were asking it to generate authenticity. You can't prompt your way to a genuine voice. What you can do is speak for sixty seconds, let the machine handle the formatting and distribution, and end up with something that actually sounds like the person behind the brand. People can sense the difference. They've always been able to. A message that originates from a real human voice builds connection in a way that generated copy just doesn't, and audiences are getting better at spotting the gap every month. So the question I'd push back with, to everyone who's written off AI marketing because ChatGPT produced something generic: did you give it your voice to work from, or did you just give it a prompt and hope for the best? Those are completely different inputs. They produce completely different outputs. Do you have one minute per day to dedicate to good marketing? I think you do. I think we all do. If you want to see what this looks like in practice, go to agentcraft.ai and try it yourself. And drop your ChatGPT horror story below. I'm reading every one.

Mark HadfieldJun 6, 2026Published to X - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

More content from Agent Craft