Okay, not totally written by a robot, just partially. I kept getting ads on Facebook for Articoolo, and I finally gave in and clicked. (See, that Facebook marketing really works!) They claim they can create unique content in a matter of minutes. As a writer, the last thing I need is a robot stealing my job, but I thought I’d give it a try. I signed up, and put in my keywords (“managing employees”) and got 250 words back. (It will do up to 500.) Here’s the first paragraph:
Hiring employees is really a begin to creating a strong workforce. High employee turnover costs company owners in time and productivity. Offer a competitive rewards package that suits your personnel requires. Like flextime and the choice of telecommuting, get quite a distance to show employees you’re willing to adapt their exterior lives. Use competitions and bonuses to help keep employees determined and feeling recognized. These kinds of applications may maintain workers focused and excited about their jobs. Additionally to executing exit interviews to understand why employees are leaving, study requesting longer tenured workers why they continue. Employees can be disappointed and might stop attempting if they see no obvious future for themselves at your business.
To keep reading, click here: This Post Was Written by a Robot
English is not the robot’s first language.
You beat me to it!
I’ve actually read some business articles that were not much better written.
Please, please, please write the article, “Why Smart People Are Stupid,” soon.
I am totally planning it. I have lots and lots of examples!
Plagiarism!
I think I wrote that 1st article in my 9th grade civics class. Can I sue a Robot?
Is this supposed to be something that starts the article but the writer is supposed to go in and edit/fix it? If so, I suppose it’s not a bad start but if it’s supposed to be a complete, legible article on it’s own it’s failing 🙂