How to Make ChatGPT Write Like a Human: (7-Step Prompt) to Make Your Content Come Alive!

How to Make ChatGPT Write Like a Human: (7-Step Prompt) to Make Your Content Come Alive!

I tried a total of 58 different prompts in my experiments, Out of these, 7 truly stand out.

Most of these so called “Humanizing prompts” were a complete waste of time. I spent hours on trying 58 prompts recommend by Gurus.

However, with 7 of them, I hit the jackpot, and now they are among my favorite prompts.

These revolutionary prompts can be grouped into personas, personal experience, fact insertion, perplexity, burstiness, unfluffing, flavor, and audience.

When used together, they ensure that the content produced seems almost like human, to the extent that it becomes hard to identify as AI-generated.

In this blog post, I will explain in detail how you can teach ChatGPT to mimic any person of your choice.

Whether you need the copy to sound like your own writing or replicate the style of a specific copywriter, these prompts will assist you in doing so.

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Google’s Helpful Content Guidelines and ChatGPT

Google’s helpful content guidelines stress the need to provide unique information, personal experience, and simple language — all of which ChatGPT fails at initially.

However, it becomes clear that the full potential of this tool can be realized only with the help of the right prompts.

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How I Tested These Prompts

You may be asking yourself how on earth I managed to test all these prompts.

To determine how “human” content sounds can be quite arbitrary, depending on who is doing the defining.

So, I used different AI-Detection Tools, including Copyleaks, GPT-0, Undetectable AI, and QuillBot.

And lastly, I personally score them after giving them a thorough read.

However, there is one thing that we need to do before we go through these prompts: setting up the groundwork.

To do that, I used a paid ChatGPT 4.0 account to produce a piece of content, which I will present below.

So, I started with:

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Prompt No: 1

Write a 1,000-word article called “Beginner’s Guide to SEO.” Here’s what it came up with:

In the realm of digital marketing, mastering the art of search engine optimization…

I won’t bore you with the rest because, quite frankly, it made me cringe. Phrases like “in the realm of” are a dead giveaway that the content is AI-generated.

There’s no expertise, emotion, or life in it — just a bunch of fluff.

They’re not professional, they’re not passionate, they’re not alive — just a lot of filler.

I will give it a score of 1 out of 10.

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Prompt No: 2

The second type of prompts is all about personas. Not only do you want your AI to write like a human, but a specific person — like yourself.

To train ChatGPT to write like me, I used this prompt:

“Please read this article that I have written and try to figure out my tone, the length of my sentences and paragraphs, the amount of detail that I use, whether I use humor, questions, how readable my writing is, the level of my vocabulary, and how emotional I am in my writing. Summarize what you have found out in 200 words.”

It did an excellent job, even noting that I teach SEO without using technical terms, which is something I deliberately do.

It also pointed out that I often use humor and rhetorical questions.

Next, I used this exact prompt:

“Based on the writing style analyzed from the provided article, create content titled [Article Title] at [Word Count]. Ensure that the new content strictly adheres to the author’s writing style in terms of tone, structure, and approach as identified in the analysis.”

The result?

The content started with analogies, used metaphors, and included rhetorical questions — all things I often do.

I rated this content a 5 out of 10, which is pretty solid.

You can use these same prompts to train ChatGPT to write like you, your favorite actress, or even Batman.

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Prompt No: 3

While the persona prompt teaches ChatGPT your style, it doesn’t know your stories or opinions — elements that can make your content unique.

Here’s how I added personal experience:

“ChatGPT, here’s my about page [Insert About Page]. Learn about my experience and stories that qualify me as an author for the content we’ll write. Also, here’s a personal opinion that will shape how you write your content [Personal Opinion]”

Well! The output was impressive.

It included my background as doing Entrepreneurship in GC University. I really don’t wanted to know him about that “Eww”

Still, I score it 5.8 out of 10.

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Prompt No: 4

ChatGPT’s models are trained up until October 2023, so it might not include the latest information relevant to the topic I initially chose, such as a “Beginner’s Guide to SEO”.

Plus, AI-generated content can be a lot fluffy.

To combat this, I used the following prompt:

“Fact 1: The average salary for an SEO specialist in 2024 is $62,000 per year. Fact 2: As of [Current Month], there are 8,302 SEO jobs available on LinkedIn.

Please use these facts when creating your content.”

This resulted in a compelling introduction that hooked the reader with recent data.

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