Let’s get something straight: I was just like you. I spent months using ChatGPT and Gemini, feeling like I was talking to a sophisticated spam bot. The output? It was fine. Generic. It sounded like something written for a high school textbook, not for my real, human customers.
The worst part? I’d run it through ZeroGPT, and BAM! 50% AI. A massive headache. I knew Google would see that low effort, low quality stuff, and my site would tank.
I had to figure out a better way. I’ve spent the last year refining a method—not just to use AI, but to direct it like a proper human expert. This isn’t about secret keywords; it’s about mindset. If you want content that ranks, engages, and genuinely sounds like the business owner (that’s you!), then you need to stop asking the AI and start telling it. Here is the exact, personal playbook I use.
If you haven’t picked your essential AI tools yet, trust me, you need these.
Part 1: The R.A.F.T. System – My Proven Formula for Undetectable Prompts
When I started, I’d type a sentence and hit enter. Disaster. Now, I use this simple framework. It’s what changed everything for my content’s quality and, frankly, our search ranking. This ensures I always inject the “Experience” and “Trustworthiness” that Google loves.
1. Role: Get Specific. Get Weird.
Here’s where you signal your Expertise (the “E” in EEAT). Don’t just say “copywriter.” Give it a life. Give it history.
- The Old Way: “Act as a marketing consultant.” (Too generic!)
- My New Way (The Human Way): “Act as a tired, but highly passionate freelance baker who sells out of a small kitchen. You only have 30 minutes a day for marketing. Your voice is wry, honest, and slightly chaotic.”
2. Action: Tell It Your Intent (Don’t Ask)
Use strong, commanding verbs. Think of the AI as your executive assistant—you need to give an order, not a suggestion.
- Human Verbs I Use: Challenge, Validate, Restructure, Personalize, Inject, Simplify, Oppose.
- Example: “Inject three instances of personal frustration into this product description,” or “Challenge the common myth that my service is only for big companies.”
3. Format: Control the Presentation (For Readability)
Let’s be real, no one reads a 10-line paragraph on a phone. Good readability is paramount! We need simple, easy-to-scan blocks.
- Must-Have Formats: A two-sentence summary, a three-point checklist, an FAQ section using questions from my recent DMs.
- My Prompt Detail: “The final output must be three distinct paragraphs, with the second paragraph being only one sentence long for dramatic effect,” or “Use a bulleted list but start each bullet point with a verb, please.”
4. Task Details & Tone: This Is Where You Win
This is your human fingerprint. This is what destroys the AI score. I always drop in specific, unique details that the AI couldn’t possibly know. This is your “Authoritativeness.”
- Context/EEAT: Mention a specific date, a customer’s first name (change it if you’re nervous!), your town, or a funny failure you had last week.
- Example Prompt Section: “The final paragraph must mention the time I almost quit, but a customer named ‘Sarah’ convinced me to keep going. The tone should be uplifting, but grounded in that specific moment of struggle.”
Part 2: Three High-EEAT Prompts That Actually Work
These are the exact templates I use to automate 80% of my writing. They’re built for real small business problems, not theory.
1. The “My Hands-On Experience” Prompt (Marketing)
This is how I turn a boring product announcement into a story that only I can tell.
“Act as a fiercely loyal brand founder and the only one who has ever used this product. My audience is [new parents who prioritize organic products but are always rushing].
Action: Rewrite the technical specs below into a compelling, 30-second Instagram Reel script.
Task Details: The script must start with a rhetorical question that speaks to a parent’s deepest fear. It must include a story about my own child benefiting from the product. The tone must be warm, slightly exhausted, and 100% authentic. Use contractions liberally.”
2. The “This Is How We Do It” Prompt (Operations)
I use this to document my internal processes—this builds Trustworthiness for my team and my clients.
“Act as a battle-tested operations lead for a tiny virtual service company. My job is to document [The complex 7-step process for client onboarding].
Action: Simplify the seven steps into a single, straightforward training email.
Task Details: Address the new team member directly (“You”). Emphasize that it’s okay to mess up the first time. The most crucial step (Step 4) must be highlighted in bold and explained in a conversational aside, like a footnote written by a human. Present the output as a short, informal email body.”
3. The “Strategic Sounding Board” Prompt (Strategy)
I don’t have a board of directors, but I have my AI. This prompt makes it critique my ideas—like a real, experienced partner would.
“Act as a skeptical, yet brilliant financial advisor with a deep background in retail. I am thinking of launching [My new high-priced subscription box] for my local clientele.
Action: Critique my plan. Don’t just list pros and cons; I can do that. I need you to debate the financial viability.
Task Details: What is the single greatest weakness of this idea? What is the one unexpected expense I haven’t considered? Use a direct, challenging, no-nonsense tone.”
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q1: I’m still seeing high AI scores. What’s the final fix?
A: You need to become the editor, not just the prompter. When the AI is done, you need to go in and add a sentence like: “Y’know, when I first thought about this, I was totally wrong.” Or, “Let’s be real, this is harder than it looks.” Insert those deliberate, conversational “flaws” and personal admissions. This is the 10% step.
Q2: Why is the “Role” so important for beating AI detection?
A: Because generic roles (like “writer”) lead to generic, data-driven language that all AI detectors know. When you assign a unique, specific role—”Skeptical Financial Advisor” or “Tired Baker”—the AI is forced to use a more unique, less predictable vocabulary and sentence structure. It breaks the pattern.
Q3: How do I ensure my article is informative and human?
A: Prioritize the “why” over the “what.” Instead of just listing facts (what), explain why those facts matter to your reader and how you personally applied them (why). The informative data comes from the AI; the human angle comes from your editorial framing of that data.
Q4: Should I use contractions (like it’s or you’re)? Doesn’t that look less professional?
A: Absolutely use them! On the internet, contractions are a signal of conversational, human language. AI often defaults to writing out “it is” or “you are.” Using contractions increases readability, lowers the AI score, and makes you sound friendly and accessible, which builds Trustworthiness.
Q5: Will Google penalize me if my content is “too casual”?
A: No, Google rewards helpful and engaging content. “Too formal” content is often perceived as less helpful. Remember, Google’s ultimate goal is to give users content that makes them feel like they found the best, most experienced person to answer their question. Be that person!
This aligns perfectly with Google’s EEAT (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness) guidelines.”
Final Thoughts: Be the Boss of the Bot
My experience taught me this: AI doesn’t think; it just processes.
Stop asking the AI for content. Start directing it to structure your unique expertise. Use the R.A.F.T. Formula to be demanding, specific, and personal.
Now, go be the boss of the bot!
































