Grammarly’s New AI Learns Your Writing Style

More than 30 million Grammarly users can now use the AI editor/writer to mimic their writing style.

Granted, many other AI writers — including ChatGPT, Jasper and Anyword — also offer this feature.

But the capability with Grammarly reinforces the overall trend that in coming months, we’ll increasingly be seeing AI and its myriad impacts surfacing virtually everywhere in business software.

In other AI-generated writing news:

*In-Depth Guide: ChatGPT Plus: Now Clever at Creating Images, Too: Good news for ChatGPT Plus and ChatGPT Enterprise Users looking for images to augment their writing: You can now use those tools to auto-create images for free.

Wired writer Reece Rogers offers you the complete low-down in this piece on how to take advantage of this new beta tool, dubbed Dall-E-3.

One caveat: Dalle-E-3 runs on ChatGPT’s fastest software engine — GPT-4 — which is limited to 50 prompts every three hours.

A great companion to this article is Simon Wilson’s advice on how to communicate most effectively with Dall-E 3.

*Jasper’s CEO Shuffle Brings New AI Hustle: AI writing pioneer Jasper has a new CEO — and a new version of its AI writing tool it plans to hawk.

Freshly minted CEO Timothy Young says a rework of Jasper — slowly rolling out in beta form beginning in November — has been re-tooled to appeal directly to marketers.

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Specifically, the upgraded AI writer will feature:

~New performance analytics to optimize content

~A company ‘intelligence hub’ to align messaging with brand strategy

~Campaign tools to accelerate review cycles

*Writesonic’s Botsonic: Can we Finally Kiss Dumb Chatbots Goodbye?: Companies that have longed for chatbots that can truly text intelligently with customers may want to check-out Botsonic.

Released by Writesonic — a pioneer in AI writing — Botsonic promises to redefine “how businesses engage with customers, offering unprecedented autonomy and personalization,” says Samanyou Garg, CEO, Writesonic.

Yes, we’ve all heard this before with previous generations of customer chatbots — which have consistently disappointed.

But perhaps by adding a heavy dose of AI, Writesonic may have something here.

*Anyword Rolls-Out an Upgraded Business Version: Given ChatGPT’s overarching popularity in AI writing, pioneers in this software genre are scrambling to distinguish themselves from the mighty chatbot.

That’s great news for consumers, who stand to benefit hugely from the enhanced services and corresponding price war among AI writing providers.

Case in point: Anyword Business, which goes beyond simple automated writing (I guess we’re taking that for granted now) to also offer:

~Efficacy analysis of marketing copy performance

~The ability to train the AI writing on your brand’s voice

~The ability to train the AI writing on the audience it should be targeting

~The ability to create performance benchmarks for your marketing campaigns

*Justice Gets An Upgrade: How AI is Remaking the Practice of Law: If you’re looking for an extremely in-depth look at how AI is changing the law, this is the piece for you.

Rated at a 100-minute read, the overview offers an ever-growing number of articles — that taken together — will give you an extremely informed look at AI and the law.

Included are AI and the law trend pieces — as well as news stories chronicling specific, critical moves by companies offering products and services in the space.

*Red Flag: Microsoft Fumbles NFL Player Obituary: Apparently, merely human editors and writers still have the edge on AI when it comes to accuracy — at least for the time being.

Writer Victor Tangermann reports that Microsoft News published an AI-written, horribly mangled obituary recently that described a deceased NFL player as ‘useless.’

The story’s headline: “Brandon Hunter Useless at 42.”

*Real Estate Lease Renewals: Robots Lend An Understanding Ear: Realtors looking to hand-off much of the written communications associated with lease renewals now have a new tool that can do that: Lease AI.

Specifically, Lease AI is designed to:

~Use AI to engage residents ahead of the standard 90-day lease expiration timeline

~Capture resident feedback regarding resident pain points associated with renewals — such as maintenance issues

“Lease AI is an always-on extension of your team conversing with thousands of residents at any given time.

“With advanced analytics and business intelligence, Lease AI is a powerful renewals engine for property managers,” says Itamar Roth, CEO, Colleen — the AI-powered real estate platform that just added Lease AI.

*SurveyMonkey Adds AI-Powered Survey Creation: Fans of automated writing can now find that capability in SurveyMonkey, which now auto-creates surveys based on user descriptions of what they want.

” We have this almost 25-year-old business, which has this mass of data around a very specific use case that we can now apply against this incredible new technology — and marries seamlessly with what we’ve built and how we’re evolving our core platform,” says Eric Johnson, CEO, SurveyMonkey.

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*AI Big Picture: Majority of U.S. Workers Area Already Using Generative AI: Still a geeky curiosity this time last year, generative AI is now used by a majority of U.S. workers.

A new survey from The Conference Board finds that 56% of workers now use generative AI — the tech behind ChatGPT and similar wunderkinds.

Plus, 55% say that the AI tools they use for specific tasks match the quality of an experienced or expert human worker.

Share a Link:  Please consider sharing a link to https://RobotWritersAI.com from your blog, social media post, publication or emails. More links leading to RobotWritersAI.com helps everyone interested in AI-generated writing.

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Joe Dysart is editor of RobotWritersAI.com and a tech journalist with 20+ years experience. His work has appeared in 150+ publications, including The New York Times and the Financial Times of London.

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