The dawn of AI slop is upon us — how will PR survive?
It can’t be missed: AI slop is everywhere now.
AI slop (or simply slop) = digital content made with generative AI that is perceived as lacking in effort, quality, or meaning, and produced in high volume as clickbait to gain advantage in the attention economy, or earn money. 1Wikipedia. (2024, September 28). AI slop. Wikipedia.org; Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AI_slop
The question is: how do we, as PR professionals and communicators, survive a world where the cost of media production falls to zero, and consumers are drowned in content?
Here we go:
The Flood of AI Slop
Well, here we are.
As was expected, AI has made content generation effectively free. 2Silfwer, J. (2023, March 20). The AI Content Explosion. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://doctorspin.net/ai-content-explosion/
We, the PR professionals of the world, can now churn out blog posts, press releases, and pitches at an astounding rate. I’m not sure that the remaining journalists are corking up the champagne to celebrate more corporate AI slop coming their way, but as already stated, here we are.
Together with doomed white-collar workers everywhere, we await our AI replacements amid a homogeneous cacophony of AI slop; we feverishly bang our personal brand-drums in emoji-laden LinkedIn updates.
Between the lines, every AI-written LinkedIn update screams, “Save me, I have value.”
And as the marginal cost of content races to zero, the marginal value of the whole content infrastructure collapses.
Corporate AI Slop Goes Exponential
Obviously, AI didn’t invent corporate cringe. But it will industrialise it.
You know the posts.
“I’m humbled to announce…”
“Three lessons my toddler taught me about leadership…”
“This changed my perspective…”
“I wasn’t going to share this, but…”
“Here’s what nobody talks about…”
They used to be written by humans. Carefully. Laboriously. With a faint hope that the algorithm gods would smile upon them. 3Silfwer, J. (2020, May 23). Corporate Cringe. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://doctorspin.net/corporate-cringe/
Now, that abnoxious brand of LinkedIn slop is generated at scale.
We recognise the structure. Short paragraphs. Dramatic spacing. Vulnerability. Redemption. A numbered list. A moral. A handshake emoji. A rocket. A call to engage.
Call me a PR snob, but:
Yuck.
The fascinating part is that AI slop doesn’t necessarily make these posts worse. It makes them ubiquitous. And ubiquity is what turns mildly annoying into aggressively cringy.
The tone. The cadence. The fake humility. The templated vulnerability. The safe lessons. The algorithm-friendly formatting. It was all structured for engagement long before AI entered the chat.
Once you’ve seen one “I got rejected 47 times before success” post, you’ll find it inspiring.
After the hundredth, it’s a parody.
After the thousandth, it’s background noise.
AI didn’t invent corporate cringe; it scales it. AI simply removed the last bottleneck — human effort.
Now the feed fills with perfectly acceptable, professionally structured, emotionally calibrated posts that all feel… identical. Nobody is saying anything wrong. And nobody truly listens.
Which is how we arrive at a new category of content:
Corporate AI slop.
Not offensive. Not stupid. Not even badly written.
Just aggressively average.
The Signal-to-Noise Collapse
AI evangelists are eager to point out that the sloppiness of today’s AI-generated content will never get any worse.
But the problem isn’t content quality; it’s information overload.
AI slop isn’t the same as bad content; it’s excessive content.
AI slop doesn’t lower quality — it buries it.
As AI slop is becoming the new standard of mentally drowning ourselves, the only tangible solution is to throw AI generators at the algorithms themselves, allowing them to synthesise excessive AI slop into… more condensed forms of AI slop, I guess.
Clay Shirky famously stated, “There’s no information overload, only filter failure.”
Today, we’re a few decades deep into the social media revolution, and we still haven’t solved the issue of our limited mental bandwidth. If the signal-to-noise ratio was strained before, AI generators are now entering the chat with fucking bulldozers.
If anything, as a result of user-generated content and social media feeds, we have so far placed the keys to our precious attention spans in the hands of a few centralised algorithms.
And we aren’t allowed to peek inside these algorithms, either.
We. Hate. The. Algorithms.
I can’t help drawing parallels with social media. All that democratisation of content publishing (“Here comes everybody”), yet we still hate those algorithms.
We. Hate. The. Algorithms.
Yes, “hate” is a strong word. But after being a digital PR specialist since 2005, I must call a spade a spade at this point. The algorithms draw us in. We’re at their mercy. We know it, and we hate it. But we cannot stay away.
Earning trust over time gets the algorithmic backseat, while sensational pieces of content get the royal treatment.
Do we hate algorithms because they aren’t good enough?
Or do we hate them for being too good?
Our mental bandwidth is biologically limited, which is why algorithms are so powerful to begin with, and so we can’t really outsource all of our media consumption to machines of our own. Sure, I could ask an AI agent to read The New York Times, watch Breaking Bad, or play Red Dead Redemption 2 on my behalf, but what would be the point?
We must consider the possibility that we’ll continue to hate algorithms — despite them being powered by AI.
Enter: Artificial Spin Doctors
If the Margaux Blanchard incident was an indication, we’re standing on the precipice of autonomous PR bots pitching the media en masse. 4Silfwer, J. (2026, April 2). The Margaux Blanchard Incident from a PR Perspective. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://doctorspin.net/margaux-blanchard-incident/
Enter: The age of artificial spin doctors.
I can absolutely see how this will work.
And — I can also see how it won’t.
(I’m actually in the process of pouring my decades of experience into building an experimental and fully autonomous PR agent for industry research, media lists, and publicity outreach as we speak.)
While I’m not too sure about a positive outcome, I do know that we will try these artificial spin doctors out. Even if you and I decide not to go down that route, others will, and eventually we must follow suit. That’s just how technological adoption works.
Journalism will have no other choice but to respond in kind.
To think that artificial journalists will interact with artificial spin doctors is kind of wild.
Autonomous AI agents on both sides will be trained on essentially the same datasets. Industrial-scale story generation and pitching to be pushed through editorial sorting machines, catering to personalised newsfeed algorithms through instantaneous media cycles.
Wild, indeed.
The Enshittification of AI
Digital technologies hold so much promise, yet somehow digitalisation doesn’t always make everything better. Sometimes, things become more shit, not less.
Enshittification = the deliberate, step-by-step degradation of digital platforms, where quality declines as owners prioritise profits over users. Platforms first lock in users, then favour business customers, and finally extract maximum value, resulting in a “shitty” experience for all. 5Wikipedia. (2023, February 4). Enshittification. Wikipedia.org; Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enshittification
The term enshittification was popularised by Cory Doctorow to describe how digital platforms tend to degrade over time in three stages:
Platforms begin as value creators and end as value extractors. “If you’re not paying, you’re the product being sold.”
The concept of enshittification is a parallel function of corporate AI slop. Together, they form a sinister feedback loop.
Because:
It’s a self-reinforcing enshittification spiral. It’s a form of monetised drowning.
How Industrialisation Solved for Slop
We’ve seen mass-production at play before:
The Industrial Revolution didn’t just mass-produce goods. It mass-produced mediocrity. Perfectly functional chairs. Perfectly acceptable clothes. Perfectly adequate watches. Nothing wrong with any of it — just an avalanche of sameness.
When furniture factories started churning out identical tables, craftsmanship didn’t disappear. Handmade furniture became a signal.
The same thing happened to watches. Quartz movements nearly wiped out mechanical watchmaking in the 1970s. Cheap, accurate, mass-produced timepieces flooded the market. Mechanical watches survived not because they were better at telling time — they weren’t! — but because they became expressions of taste, engineering, and human effort.
Vinyl records weren’t killed by streaming. Tailoring wasn’t killed by fast fashion. Craft beer didn’t disappear when industrial lager conquered the world. In each case, industrialisation created abundance. Abundance destroyed perceived value. Craftsmanship became scarce.
Scarcity created… signal.
AI slop is the mass production phase. Functional blog posts. Functional LinkedIn updates. Functional press releases. All technically fine. But also somewhat interchangeable. Mediocre, even.
The more AI generates safe, polished, average content, the more we start noticing the nothingness. When everything sounds professional, professionalism stops signalling anything.
This is why AI slop will struggle to eradicate craftsmanship. Handmade content doesn’t have to be better to be more valuable. When everyone can mass-produce high-quality content, taste becomes the differentiator. Judgement becomes a skill. Voice becomes the moat.
Imperfection becomes signal.
PR After AI: We Are the Message
I began studying PR at the university in 2000. And I’ve been doing PR for 100+ brands since 2005. I’ve specialised in corporate communication at the heart of the digital transformation.
Here’s how I see our future:
PR before AI was about creating significant messaging and ensuring earned, shared, and owned distribution.
PR after AI is about creating signals that can survive algorithmic biases and attention fragmentation on platforms at varying levels of decay.
In slop-filled, enshittified feeds, being unmistakably human becomes a competitive advantage. PR is fast becoming signal engineering.
So, what’s a signal?
When Brian Solis and Deirdre Breakenridge published Putting the Public Back in Public Relations: How Social Media Is Reinventing the Aging Business of PR in 2009, it proposed how PR should embrace the digital-first media landscape and elevate our profession to new heights. 6Solis, B. & D. Breakenridge (2009, February 1). Putting the Public Back in Public Relations: How Social Media Is Reinventing the Aging Business of PR. Amazon.com: Books. … Continue reading
If the social media revolution urged us to put the public back, the AI revolution will push us to put relations back into public relations.
In McLuhan-style phrasing: We are the message.
How PR Will Survive AI Slop
We will survive the coming onslaught of AI slop and AI enshittification.
Not by competing on volume. Machines will always produce more.
Not by competing on polish. Machines will always be cleaner.
Not by competing on speed. Machines will always be faster.
Those battles are already lost.
Instead, the competition shifts to perspective. Judgement. Originality. Courage. Personality. Art. The things that don’t emerge from prediction engines trained on averages. The things that require taste.
This is where the future differentiators start to become obvious.
Real relationships.
Real expertise.
Real taste.
Real voice.
Real risk-taking.
Real imperfection.
Sure, these qualities don’t scale particularly well. They don’t lend themselves to templates. They don’t emerge from prompting. And that’s precisely why they will matter more.
The more AI slop and platform enshittification we get bombarded with, the more we value human connection. The more polished everything becomes, the more we appreciate those rough edges. The more average everything sounds, the more we listen for a voice — flaws and all.
That’s the opportunity.
Not to fight AI. Not to reject automation. Not to pretend the slop isn’t coming. But to lean into the things that AI struggles to instil in other human beings — connection, personality, taste, and the courage to sound like yourself.
Those are the building blocks of human relationships.
And lo and behold, this is not too far off from what PR is supposed to be about anyway. Right?
Thanks for reading. Need a PR specialist?
Please contact Jerry for a consultation.
Annotations
| 1 | Wikipedia. (2024, September 28). AI slop. Wikipedia.org; Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AI_slop |
|---|---|
| 2 | Silfwer, J. (2023, March 20). The AI Content Explosion. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://doctorspin.net/ai-content-explosion/ |
| 3 | Silfwer, J. (2020, May 23). Corporate Cringe. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://doctorspin.net/corporate-cringe/ |
| 4 | Silfwer, J. (2026, April 2). The Margaux Blanchard Incident from a PR Perspective. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://doctorspin.net/margaux-blanchard-incident/ |
| 5 | Wikipedia. (2023, February 4). Enshittification. Wikipedia.org; Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enshittification |
| 6 | Solis, B. & D. Breakenridge (2009, February 1). Putting the Public Back in Public Relations: How Social Media Is Reinventing the Aging Business of PR. Amazon.com: Books. https://www.amazon.com/dp/0137150695?tag=pr200f-20&camp=14573&creative=327641&linkCode=as1&creativeASIN=0137150695&adid=02J76YW6R9GXVRCCJJM0& |