At The Links Guy, we have a particular use case for Originality.ai — as an AI checker for our guest post strategy process.
Guest posting is just one of the many tactics we use, but it's important and effective. It has many moving parts. The most crucial and challenging part for us is writing articles that are of a high enough quality to be accepted by the editors of those websites.
So, in 2023, we made a strict company policy not to use AI at all within our content writing process. We also implemented strict editorial and AI-checking at the recruitment stage. All content writers who worked with us had to apply via an AI-proctored exam before they were selected for an interview and hired.
A particular concern for link building is that when you try to publish articles on high-quality sites, they will not accept poor-quality articles, including articles that they deem to be AI-generated.
While the goal is to secure a backlink as credit, we still need to provide valuable content that serves the website audience’s interest.
So there are two reasons we could not allow AI to infiltrate our guest post-writing process:
Many of the publications and blogs we wrote for needed something with sufficient depth that was injected with human expertise or experience.
We don’t know if AI detection is being used as part of Google’s process of checking content quality. However, the internet has a content quality issue that Google needs to solve to address the quality of search results.
After these updates, there were industry reports about websites churning out large amounts of content (often using complete or heavy AI automation) that were devalued and took a large traffic hit.
Now, as per Originality.ai’s study about the prevalence of AI within Google’s search results, there has been a rise in AI content, even in the top 20 ranking results (11.3% as of Apr 22, 2024).
Even after ChatGPT was released to the public, there was not as large of a spike in AI content in search results. This likely indicates an active effort from Google to dampen the amount of AI content infiltrating the results.
As part of our guest article process at TLG, we write content that will be published on third-party websites. By choosing not to use AI, we aren’t adding to that issue.
We contribute to a site’s ability to perform better in organic search results by providing valuable content for users. As a result, the article can attract more traffic and engagement.
Since 2023, we have also found an increasing number of editors specifically state in their editorial guidelines that AI-generated articles are not allowed. It’s clear this topic is top of mind for many content managers and editors.
This shows the percentage of all guest post articles that were either “Rejected” or “Unused.”
Caveat: It’s important to note that editors may reject an article for other reasons (not necessarily because they think it's AI-generated). It’s possible they found it didn’t match their publication’s style or audience. Editors who stopped responding may have been very hard to get hold of. However, when an editor didn’t respond after repeated follow-ups, we can often assume that they probably just did not like the article enough to dedicate further time to it.
Overall, we did see a reduction in both the rejected article percentage as well as the combined rejected and unused percentage.
The success story here with using Originality.ai is only at an early stage. However, we have already seen an improvement.
Most importantly, we know we can preserve the integrity of our process and implement our company policy against the use of AI for guest post articles. In the long run, this will improve the results we can secure for clients.
Content creators, editors and writers are entering uncharted territory with regard to AI. In the past, it was easy to identify AI-generated content at-a-glance. However, with new developments in machine learning and natural language processing, the waters become even more murky.