Then, finally, you want to give it feedback.
Every time it gives you output and you’ve added context, you’ve added storytelling, you’ve added expert-led insights, you’ve added anything, you’ve made changes, you take the final version of what you’ve written, for that section, and you give it back to the LLM. You say, “This is the final version I’m going with. I have made X, Y, Z changes because you did not include this, or you left this out, or you did this. You’ve gone against our guardrails. You have not followed our instructions.” You’re able to give it that feedback.
The more you give it that feedback, the fewer mistakes it’s going to make. The goal ideally, for me, is to get to 70% quality output. I’m not aiming for 100%. I’m not crazy. Seventy percent, that’s the goal. We want to get to 70% of great output so that we’re making fewer and fewer changes to the output.
Again, stop trying to automate content. I don’t think that’s really viable if you want to maintain quality. The trick is to write in batches, personalize the output, and then make it feel like you. But remember, you have to keep training these LLMs because they are machines at the end of the day.
And that, my friends, is how you write great content with LLMs. Thank you.















