Battling AI Slop and Human Slop
Consider the following three scenarios:
1.) Staff member of a prestigious institution sends out a typo-laden email (two of which were in the final sentence) regarding the subject: “accurate reporting”.
2.) Part-time entrepreneur starting a cybersecurity business outsources typo-laden, error-filled blogs for his site via India, which he promotes.
3.) Nonprofit founder in the mental health space (suicide prevention) has live web copy with incomplete sentences, misspellings, typos and disjointed formatting.
These are all real-life encounters I’ve had in just the last two months. When you recognize high-level sloppiness, it's a reminder to battle-test what you attach your name to.
This is the reason I produced: Combat Writing. It’s a methodology for anyone preparing a high-stakes project that will be published internally or to the public. One that uniquely carries their name or represents their company. The framework is about orchestrating different perspectives, feedback loops, and sharing what survives. Its motto: Reading is peace. Writing is war.
Why such an aggressive stance? Bullshit detectors need fine-tuning. This happens when we have dialogue about our work, whether with colleagues, teammates, or multiple AI.
[Join the Combat Writing Pilot: 3 live sessions (multi-AI analysis included), field manual + workspace. Solo founders/execs: $200, small teams (up to 5): $400. Apply here: https://www.learningproducers.com/services]