You can tell, reading a paragraph, whether a human or a large language model wrote the first draft. It’s not the grammar or the facts. It’s the verbs. Models default to slightly pompous verbs — leverage, utilise, curate — because those words reassure everyone. Humans who write regularly default to use, pick, try. The Creator track is the six weeks it takes to make that difference automatic when you write with AI.
The core insight
AI is a terrible blank-page solution and a brilliant rewrite partner. You’ll produce something that sounds like you if you bring the voice yourself and let the model compress, cut, and structure. You’ll produce something that sounds like corporate LinkedIn if you ask the model to start from nothing.
The daily loop
Each morning’s Creator quest is a 10-minute drill on one piece of writing:
- Write 3 bad sentences by hand. Don’t edit. Don’t try.
- Paste them into Voto with the brief: “Rewrite each in the voice of the three sentences I wrote yesterday. Keep my cadence, not the model’s.”
- Compare the output. Pick the rewrite that feels more like you, explain to Voto why the others don’t.
- Save that explanation. After 10 days you’ll have a one-page voice profile.
Three examples
The hard LinkedIn post. You have a real opinion but you’re worried it’ll sound arrogant. Draft it badly, paste it, ask for three versions at different confidence levels. Pick the one that sounds like a better-rested version of you.
The cold email that actually gets a reply. Generic AI email: “I hope this finds you well.” Yours: one specific detail only you would know about the person, one one-sentence ask, no closing. Voto helps you hold that line without getting preachy.
The long-form post you’ve been putting off. Outline first (by hand, five bullets). Then ask Voto to expand one bullet at a time. Reject any paragraph that sounds like it came off a blog template.
What to watch for
- Voice drift over weeks. AI rewrites accumulate. After a month of using the same prompts, your whole newsletter can slowly become Model-English. The daily drill exists to prevent this; don’t skip it.
- The “clarity” trap. Models will clarify your writing until it has no edges. Some of your best sentences are slightly unclear on purpose. Keep them.
- Copy-paste tells. If a paragraph has three em-dashes, three “moreovers,” and a bulleted list, it’s the model writing and you signing. Delete.
Where to start
Open the Creator track Quest 1. It’s a “rewrite these three sentences” drill using an AI that’s been told, upfront, to match your voice and nothing else.