Let’s get this out the way: AI isn't the enemy. Unless you write generic listicles for a living. In which case, yeah. Good luck...
But if your job involves actual creative thinking like strategy, tone, structure or storytelling, then AI isn't a threat. It's a force multiplier.
We need to stop framing AI tools as replacements for human creativity. They don't replace it. They scale it. They give you time back. They reduce grunt work. They get you from 0-70 faster and they can take your raw ideas and help you turn them into something usable, earlier.
But that bit—the raw ideas? The voice, the argument, the insight? That still comes from you.
When used thoughtfully, AI tools can play a useful supporting role in the creative process. I occasionally lean on them when:
I need help brainstorming headline variations
I want to summarise a dense PDF into bullet points I can fact-check
I need to adapt a strong idea into multiple formats
This isn’t about cutting corners. It’s about cutting friction. The real writing still happens in my brain, but AI helps me skip the blank page bit. It helps me move faster from idea to execution.
If you're leading a lean team and also need to deliver more content, faster these are some simple ways to start using AI today. No overhaul. No heavy lifting. Just practical stuff you can do right away.
Kickstart your outlines, generate angles, test alternative approaches. And then apply your voice and experience (because that's what they're paying you for).
Use AI to adapt longform content into bite-sized formats: email sequences, social posts, video scripts.
Let AI summarise articles, scrape bullet points, or surface patterns — but your value is in connecting the dots.
AI lets you test more headlines, intros, angles. Create without pressure. Discard fast. Keep the gold.
Yeah, yeah AI can write. But it doesn’t know what matters. Don’t EVER copy/paste. Curate, rewrite and polish instead.
I think of AI as a creative studio assistant. It can't be the creative director (not least because I am). It can tidy up your ideas, suggest tweaks, catch typos and help translate your thoughts into a new format. But it can't make the strategic calls. It can’t prioritise what your audience needs. It can’t speak from experience, or tell a story that makes someone feel something real.
That bit's still on you.
But with the right tools, you can do it more often, in more formats and for more people. And that’s what scaling creativity looks like.