Use AI for structure before style
AI writing assistants are most useful when they help organize messy information. Start with a clear purpose, audience, and list of facts. Ask for an outline first, then review whether the structure matches the goal.
This keeps the workflow grounded. If the structure is wrong, polished sentences will not fix the article.
Separate drafting from verification
An AI-generated draft should not be treated as a final source of truth. Use it as a working version that still needs checking. Names, dates, product details, legal statements, and technical claims should be verified before publication.
The same rule applies to summaries. A summary can help you move faster, but important details still need a source.
Give the assistant constraints
Good prompts include constraints that match the job. Examples include desired audience, reading level, topics to avoid, required sections, and claims that must be supported.
Constraints reduce generic output. They also make it easier to compare two drafts because both are trying to satisfy the same requirements.
Keep a human editing pass
The final pass should check clarity, accuracy, tone, and usefulness. Remove vague claims, repeated ideas, and text that sounds confident without evidence.
AI can accelerate writing, but reader trust depends on human review.