How to Automate Blog Writing with AI — Without Sounding Like a Robot
- AI can handle the tedious parts of blogging (outlines, research summaries, meta descriptions) while you focus on voice and expertise.
- The trick to avoiding robotic AI content is using AI as a drafting partner, not a replacement writer.
- I’ve used this workflow to publish 3x more content without sacrificing quality — here’s exactly how.
Let me be honest about something: you can absolutely tell when a blog post was 100% written by AI. It’s generic. It’s bland. It hits all the SEO checkboxes without saying anything original. You’ve read posts like this — and you probably bounced after 30 seconds.
But here’s what most people miss: the goal isn’t to have AI write your posts. It’s to have AI handle the parts of blogging that drain your energy so you can focus on what makes your content worth reading — your actual experience and perspective.

My AI Blogging Workflow (Step by Step)
I start by asking ChatGPT or Perplexity to give me a rundown of what’s already been published on the topic. Not to copy — but to find gaps. What are the top 10 articles missing? What questions aren’t being answered? This takes 10 minutes instead of an hour of Googling.
I give Claude a rough idea of my angle and ask for 3 different outline options. Then I pick and mix sections from each. The AI suggests structure; I decide what matters based on what I actually know about the topic.
This is the important part — I don’t ask AI to write the whole post at once. I draft each section individually, feeding it my notes and opinions. “Here are my thoughts on X. Turn this into a polished paragraph that keeps my voice.” The AI polishes; it doesn’t create from scratch.
After the AI draft, I go through and add specific personal experiences, numbers, and opinions. “After testing for 3 months, I found…” — this is what AI can’t generate, and it’s what readers actually want.
I let AI handle meta descriptions, tag suggestions, and internal linking recommendations. This is where AI truly shines — the boring, repetitive optimization work that nobody enjoys doing manually.

What Makes AI Content Sound Robotic (And How to Fix It)
| Robotic Pattern | Why It Happens | How to Fix It |
|---|---|---|
| “In today’s digital landscape…” | AI defaults to generic intros | Start with a specific story or question |
| Every paragraph is the same length | Models optimize for consistency | Vary paragraph length deliberately |
| No personal opinions or experiences | AI can’t invent real experiences | Add your own stories after drafting |
| Overuse of “Furthermore” and “Moreover” | Model training artifacts | Replace with casual transitions |
| Perfect grammar, zero personality | AI plays it safe | Break rules intentionally (fragments, contractions) |
Before using AI, I published about 4 posts a month. Now I publish 10-12. My average writing time per post went from 4 hours to about 1.5 hours. But here’s the thing people don’t mention: the time savings mostly come from research and outlining, not from the actual writing. The writing still needs my brain. I’d estimate AI handles about 40% of the total work, and I handle the other 60% — the 60% that actually matters.