I guess they do get some lessons at Inkhaven—and if any of them is reading this: describing those lessons for the rest of us would be a simple way to meet your daily quota. ;)
I am not an expert, but if I tried to give some advice, I would try this:
1) Train your inner LLM. Choose a blogger you want to emulate. Read three of their articles. Then try to write something in the same style. Don’t worry about the content, even if it is factually incorrect or whatever; it just has to look right. Compare the texts, notice the differences, try again. You could use an AI to point out the differences in style.
2) Think about different genres of writing, such as an essay, a manual, a poem, a political call; and try to write each of them. Again, an AI can generate the list for you.
3) Generally, you can ask AI to give you critique. It probably helps if it doesn’t know that the texts are yours. You do not have to follow the advice if you disagree.
I guess they do get some lessons at Inkhaven—and if any of them is reading this: describing those lessons for the rest of us would be a simple way to meet your daily quota. ;)
I am not an expert, but if I tried to give some advice, I would try this:
1) Train your inner LLM. Choose a blogger you want to emulate. Read three of their articles. Then try to write something in the same style. Don’t worry about the content, even if it is factually incorrect or whatever; it just has to look right. Compare the texts, notice the differences, try again. You could use an AI to point out the differences in style.
2) Think about different genres of writing, such as an essay, a manual, a poem, a political call; and try to write each of them. Again, an AI can generate the list for you.
3) Generally, you can ask AI to give you critique. It probably helps if it doesn’t know that the texts are yours. You do not have to follow the advice if you disagree.