The landscape of content creation is undergoing a profound transformation, driven by the rapid advancements in artificial intelligence. While AI excels at execution – writing, structuring, summarizing, and iterating content with unprecedented speed and efficiency – this very capability is shifting the fundamental challenge for creators. The constraint is no longer production volume, but rather the quality of judgment and insight that makes content truly valuable and discoverable in an increasingly saturated digital ecosystem. This evolution necessitates a renewed focus on human "taste," which, in this context, translates to discerning decision-making, strategic clarity, and editorial rigor.
The discussion around AI’s impact on human creativity was recently amplified by a LinkedIn post from Ethan Smith, who posed the question: "Is AI replacing human taste?" Brittany Lieu, a Marketing Consultant at Heinz Marketing, argues that while AI is not yet replicating human taste, a significant shift is underway. "I don’t think we are there," Lieu stated, "But I do think something important is shifting." The core of this shift lies in the fact that AI has democratized content production. With the ability to generate vast amounts of text, visuals, and other media quickly and cost-effectively, the barrier to entry for content creation has been significantly lowered. This means that the sheer volume of content is no longer the primary determinant of success. Instead, the focus must pivot to what makes any given piece of content stand out and resonate with its intended audience.
The Shifting Constraint: From Production to Judgment
The ease with which AI can execute content tasks can be deceptive. While the output may appear cleaner, faster, and more polished than ever before, a critical observation emerges: much of this AI-generated content begins to feel remarkably similar. This is precisely where the concept of "taste" becomes paramount. In the realm of content, taste is not merely a matter of subjective preference or stylistic flair. It is, in essence, applied judgment. It encompasses the ability to discern what is truly worth saying, what should be omitted, and how deeply an idea needs to be explored. This manifests in crucial editorial decisions: the angle chosen for a piece, the selective inclusion or exclusion of information, and the determination of whether new value is being added or simply a reiteration of existing knowledge.
The danger, as Lieu points out, is that "Most content does not fail because it is wrong. It fails because it does not add anything. It is fine, but forgettable." This tendency is amplified when AI is involved. If the foundational input is based on average thinking or a lack of strategic direction, the output will be average content at an unprecedented scale. This is the sophisticated iteration of the age-old adage: "garbage in, garbage out." The scale at which AI can operate means that the quality of the initial conceptualization and strategic framing becomes exponentially more critical.
Understanding "Taste" in the Age of AI
Taste, in this professional context, is more accurately understood as a form of sophisticated compression and refinement. It’s about the ability to strip away extraneous noise, to distill complex ideas into their essential, impactful forms without sacrificing nuance or meaning. This capacity is not innate; it is cultivated through extensive experience and exposure to a wide array of information and perspectives. This exposure allows for the recognition of patterns, the identification of what is truly novel, and the understanding of what will resonate most effectively with a specific audience.
While AI can generate a multitude of variations on a theme, it currently lacks the nuanced understanding of context and audience to reliably determine which variation holds the most strategic value. An AI might produce ten grammatically correct and logically structured pieces of content on a given topic. However, it still requires human judgment to select the most impactful version, or to recognize that none of the generated options truly meet the strategic objectives. As the volume of AI-generated content escalates, this gap between sheer output and genuine value becomes increasingly apparent. The more options available, the more critical the process of selection and refinement becomes.
Preserving and Amplifying Judgment in Scaled Content Operations
In an era where content execution is becoming increasingly commoditized, the true work for marketers and content creators shifts to protecting and enhancing human judgment within scaled production processes. This involves building robust structures around decision-making, not to introduce bureaucratic overhead, but to ensure clear ownership and accountability for editorial judgment.
1. Anchoring the Angle: Pre-Generation Strategic Clarity
A common pitfall in AI-driven content creation is the tendency to skip the crucial step of defining a clear angle or thesis before generating content. Many teams opt for broad prompts or briefs that leave too much to interpretation. In the B2B space, this often translates to generic requests like "Write a blog about AI in marketing" or "Create content on pipeline generation." Such open-ended directives are almost guaranteed to produce unremarkable output.
The more effective approach is to meticulously define the core point of view in a single, concise sentence before any content generation commences. For instance, instead of a broad topic, a focused angle might be: "AI’s true value in B2B marketing lies not in automation, but in empowering human strategists to uncover deeper customer insights." Once this strategic anchor is firmly established and agreed upon, AI can then be employed to expand upon and flesh out this core idea. This methodology embeds critical human judgment at the earliest stage of the creative process, rather than relegating it to a post-production edit.
2. AI as a Draft Engine, Not a Strategy Layer
A subtle but significant trend is the creeping influence of AI into what should be exclusively human-led strategic decisions, such as messaging, positioning, and content themes. This infiltration is a primary driver of taste erosion. When AI begins to dictate what should be said, content inevitably trends toward generic outputs. This is because AI, by its nature, defaults to the most statistically prevalent framings of a topic based on its training data.

The optimal operating model is to position AI as a sophisticated draft engine. The workflow should be:
- Human Strategy & Insight: Define the core message, target audience, and unique value proposition.
- AI for Execution: Generate initial drafts, explore variations, or assist with structural elements based on human-defined strategy.
- Human Editorial & Refinement: Review, edit, and imbue the content with strategic nuance, brand voice, and original insights.
By adhering to this model, the integrity of human-led strategy and judgment is preserved, ensuring that AI serves as a tool to enhance, not replace, critical thinking.
3. Implementing a "No Publish" Filter for Editorial Integrity
A practical and highly effective method for safeguarding taste in B2B content workflows is the establishment of a rigorous "no publish" filter. Before any piece of content is deemed ready for release, it must successfully pass a series of critical checks. If it fails any of these, it is withheld, regardless of its technical polish. These checks should include:
- Does this content offer a unique perspective or insight not readily available elsewhere? This question probes for originality and added value.
- Does this content directly address a specific audience need or pain point in a way that resonates with them? This assesses relevance and audience-centricity.
- Does this content align with our core strategic objectives and brand positioning? This ensures consistency and strategic coherence.
While many content systems are designed to answer the question, "Is this good enough?", the true test of taste requires asking, "Does this content deserve to exist?" This higher bar ensures that only impactful and strategically sound material makes its way to the public.
4. Transforming Internal Expertise into Reusable "Thinking Inputs"
The conventional approach to scaling content often focuses on systematizing outputs through templates, workflows, and prompts. However, a more high-leverage strategy involves capturing and systematizing inputs – specifically, the underlying thinking processes of subject matter experts and seasoned strategists.
This entails meticulously documenting:
- Core assumptions and beliefs that drive strategic decisions.
- Key frameworks and mental models used for problem-solving.
- Nuanced understandings of market dynamics and customer behaviors.
- The "why" behind specific strategic choices.
These documented insights are not yet marketing assets; they are the raw, intellectual fuel that protects and amplifies taste when scaled through AI. Without this foundational layer of documented expertise, AI will inevitably amplify whatever existing thinking – including weak or unoriginal thinking – is present in the system, leading to a dilution of quality.
The Fundamental Shift: Content That Deserves to Exist
The implications of AI in content creation extend far beyond mere production efficiency. The true shift lies in redefining the conditions under which content achieves significance. When the scarcity of production is eliminated, the differentiator ceases to be volume and moves to the intrinsic quality and strategic intent behind what is produced. The ultimate question becomes not just what content can be made, but whether that content was truly worth making in the first place.
This is fundamentally a problem of judgment – a problem of taste. As AI continues to evolve, the human capacity for critical thinking, strategic discernment, and editorial rigor will become the most valuable assets in the content creation process, distinguishing truly impactful work from the vast ocean of the merely adequate.
For B2B brands seeking to navigate this evolving landscape and create content that not only stands out but also drives meaningful engagement and business outcomes, a strategic partnership can provide the necessary expertise. Connecting with specialists in effective content strategy and AI integration can unlock new levels of clarity and impact.








