Welcome to do this, not that, the podcast for marketers.
Speaker AWe share quick tips, things you can do right now, and then we add a little bit of chaos at the end of every episode.
Speaker AWe also keep it short, like this intro.
Speaker ALet's check it out.
Speaker AWe are back for do this, not that.
Speaker AAnd we have an incredible human being here.
Speaker AWho's here?
Speaker AWe have Alex Cotone.
Speaker ANow, maybe you know Alex by her other name, the Copy Posse.
Speaker AShe is a huge deal.
Speaker AShe might be one of the most recognizable names in the world of copywriting.
Speaker AHer YouTube channel is ridiculous.
Speaker AI have like four followers.
Speaker AShe has over 400,000.
Speaker AShe has over 14 million views.
Speaker AShe was named digital Marketer of the year, and she has trained thousands and thousands of marketers.
Speaker AAnd the reason she's really here is because she's cool.
Speaker AHow do I know that she's cool?
Speaker ABecause on her website, one of the big headlines on her website says, to de douche ify the Internet one real word at a time.
Speaker AWho says, that's the greatest thing I've ever heard.
Speaker AAlex, welcome to the show.
Speaker BI'm so happy to be here.
Speaker BI thought you were going to say, I know she's cool.
Speaker BYou know why I know that?
Speaker BBecause I went to her website and she said she was cool like everyone else on the Internet that, I mean,
Speaker Ayou did know, but you actually are genuinely cool.
Speaker AAnd okay, before I rip into, I want to ask you all these questions about AI and copywriting and why ChatGPT is my new best friend, writing wise, and it's all the wrong things.
Speaker ABefore I do that, give me the 62nd, what the hell do you actually do for a living?
Speaker BOh, what do I do?
Speaker BWell, obviously I spend a lot of time writing words and making videos if I had to break it down.
Speaker BBut really, I am on a mission, as you said, to deducify the Internet.
Speaker BI really believe that the future of marketing is a combination of direct response marketing principles that we know work and empathetic storytelling.
Speaker BAnd I feel like that's more important now than ever before.
Speaker BSo, in short, I teach people how to create the lives and businesses of their dreams through the power of messaging.
Speaker AOh, I like that sounds so good.
Speaker AI need to tell people that I do stuff like that for a living when they ask me, because I just say, I don't know, I'm a loser.
Speaker ABut you're not a loser.
Speaker BI'm unemployed.
Speaker AYeah, exactly.
Speaker ASo let me jump right into it, because when people hear I feel bad saying this to you because you're the ultimate copywriter.
Speaker AOn the planet.
Speaker ABut when people hear copywriting now, they're like, oh, I don't care.
Speaker AI go to AI and I ask my friend Claude or anthropic or whatever, ChatGPT write this for me.
Speaker ASo should we not be using AI for copywriting?
Speaker AShould we be using it?
Speaker AWhat is your vibe with AI and copywriting?
Speaker BWhat is my vibe?
Speaker BSo here's what I'll say.
Speaker BI'm actually so grateful to OpenAI for releasing ChatGPT because now everybody on the planet virtually knows what copywriting was.
Speaker BI used to have to explain to people the difference between copyright law and copywriting, and now ChatGPT has, has absolutely like blown the market wide open.
Speaker BSo that I think is great.
Speaker BOne thing that I like to think about when it comes to the accessibility of AI, and I'll preface this by saying I am not anti AI.
Speaker BI use AI in so much of my business at different levels, behind the scenes operations.
Speaker BBut there are three very, very distinct ways I will personally never use AI.
Speaker BOne of those ways is through copywriting.
Speaker BNow I have a degree in business economics, I'm not an economist, but I do know that the more widely available something becomes, the less valuable it is.
Speaker BThat is pure economics.
Speaker BSo when I think about AI, it is incredible how it's lowered the barrier to entry for people who maybe can't string two words together and they need something quickly to, you know, get their point across.
Speaker BOkay, it is a tool that is widely accessible, anybody can use it, and terrible writers.
Speaker BGreat.
Speaker BIt's a great starting point and it might even write better than you.
Speaker BThe problem is when something is so widespread and the barrier to entry is now so low, everyone on the planet has access to the exact same information that you have.
Speaker BSo while it seems really exciting in your day to day operations of going, oh my gosh, I can use ChatGPT to write something for me.
Speaker BWe are completely forgetting our critical thinking skills and assuming that just because ChatGPT wrote it, it's good, that it speaks to our customers and meets them where they're at.
Speaker BThat tells relatable, believable, persuasive stories, that it inspires people to take action.
Speaker BNo, we see lightning fast word generation and confuse it with copywriting.
Speaker BAnd that I think is the biggest problem.
Speaker BAnd if you are trying to get ahead of by using the same information that everyone else has access to, you don't have to be a rocket scientist to realize that that's a race to the bottom.
Speaker ASo does that mean if I, if I digest all that, does that mean that in a lot of ways we have to unai our copywriting and our emails and our landing pages and our websites.
Speaker ADo we have to be like, all right, AI said to write this, so we're going to write it this way instead.
Speaker AAre you purposely trying to sound different than what AI gives back Now?
Speaker BI think if you are using AI to create some resemblance of a first draft, my invitation to everyone is let's use our critical thinking skills, people like.
Speaker BI think my biggest issue is when people outsource their creativity and decision making to AI.
Speaker BThat's where the real problem lies.
Speaker BIf you're going to AI and you know exactly what you want to create and you are prompting it and in such a way that it gives you something that is close to what you want, that is awesome.
Speaker BIt saves you time.
Speaker BIt's like plugging coordinates into a gps.
Speaker BYou don't get into a car and turn on the GPS and say, I don't know, take me somewhere.
Speaker BYou say, I am going specifically to this location.
Speaker BTell me the fastest way to get there.
Speaker BIn that way, you're still the one driving the car.
Speaker BYou're still the one making the decisions.
Speaker BWhere the problem becomes is when people who don't know anything about copywriting who or selling through persuasive messaging go to ChatGPT and they go, I don't know.
Speaker BSomeone told me I need to write an email, so I'm going to write an email.
Speaker BIt spits something out and we go, oh, I don't know, must be good.
Speaker BAnd then we use it.
Speaker BAnd so I think first and foremost, one, allow yourself time and space to sit in the creative messy process.
Speaker BI think the biggest travesty of AI is that it is completely robbed us humans of the creative messy process.
Speaker BLike, think about everything you've created in your life that you're really proud of.
Speaker BIt takes time, right?
Speaker BIt takes time.
Speaker BIt takes effort.
Speaker BYou are battling, you know, demons, imposter syndrome.
Speaker BIs that right?
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BIs that what I'm trying to say?
Speaker BWhat's the word that I'm trying to communicate?
Speaker BLike, we sit there in this discomfort and then we figure it out and we're like, hell yeah, I freaking did it.
Speaker BVersus now.
Speaker BPeople are telling us that if you don't have a first draft in 30 seconds, you're being unproductive and you're slowing yourself down.
Speaker BI have had so many people tell me that they have, they have over relied on AI and despite quote unquote, saving so much time, they're actually no farther ahead than they were before.
Speaker BAnd so, to answer your original question, absolutely everything AI spits out.
Speaker BIt's your job as the human with critical thinking skills, to sit down, look at it, and ask yourself, is this what I'm trying to say?
Speaker BAnd does it communicate it in the clearest, most direct way possible?
Speaker BBecause I don't know if you've noticed, but AI has this incredible ability of just filling up space, space with repetitive ideas and words.
Speaker BAnd to me, that's the opposite of copywriting.
Speaker BCopywriting is saying what you want to say as quickly as you can.
Speaker ASo I'm just curious, like, with all the different businesses that you're exposed to and the copywriters that you know you're working with, is it like, now people have used AI the results have been, like, gotten weaker because they're just pumping out more and more garbage.
Speaker AAnd now they're saying, hey, Alex, we've gone too far.
Speaker AThe pendulum swung too far.
Speaker AHow do we reign it back in and get it back to our old school roots?
Speaker AOr they come to you and say, we want to incorporate AI how do we.
Speaker AHow do we.
Speaker AHow do we do that without going too far?
Speaker BI think that's exactly right.
Speaker BI think, like, any.
Speaker BAny time something comes on the scene and it's brand new, classic marketers, you know, we freaking ruin everything.
Speaker BWe go overboard.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BWe try to shortcut and hack our way to the same result.
Speaker BThen we realize, oh, maybe I threw the baby out with the bathwater there, and maybe I need to rein it in a little.
Speaker BAnd, um, I've seen both happen.
Speaker BI've had people come back to me saying, oh, my God, I regret firing my copywriter.
Speaker BI've hired them back.
Speaker BI've had my own students tell me this, that they lost clients and when they thought AI could do their job for them, and then they hired them back.
Speaker BBut what I think is really important for copywriters today is to not keep your head in the sand and be so much of a purist that you're like, no, it is my art, and I am never going to learn how to use these new tools, which is why I teach in all of my programs.
Speaker BListen, I'm going to teach you how to think like a marketer.
Speaker BI'm going to teach you how to sell with storytelling.
Speaker BI'm going to think you how to be.
Speaker BBe more.
Speaker BI'm going to teach you how to be more persuasive.
Speaker BAnd I will show you ways that you can use AI to shortcut the process.
Speaker BJust make sure you're the one sitting in that editor's seat so that you can make sure you're.
Speaker BYou're producing results that you're really proud to put your name on.
Speaker BAnd I'm not the only one that's seeing this pendulum swing.
Speaker BThere was a study done by Forrester that showed 55% of companies who laid off workers thinking that they could use AI instead have now said they regret that decision.
Speaker AAll right, I want to ask you a very loaded question we didn't talk about, and I'm just curious.
Speaker ACurious because you have the perspective on earth.
Speaker ASo if I'm out there and I'm like, I maybe I'm thinking about getting a degree in copywriting or I call myself a copywriter, is this.
Speaker AIn this world that we're in, is this a good career or am I in deep crap?
Speaker BYeah, great question.
Speaker BIf you look at the demand for copywriting services, it is actually on the rise.
Speaker BThere is so much data to show that, that the demand for copywriting is, is now on the rise, even post AI.
Speaker BAnd so I think it's really easy for someone who's just getting started to immediately see words being spit out on a page as going, oh, my God, oh my God.
Speaker BThat's what I do.
Speaker BI'm now obsolete.
Speaker BWhen the reality is now that everybody has the ability to pump out words, what they desperately, desperately need are creative storytellers and critical thinkers who can look at that and go, this is good, that's not good.
Speaker BThat's not good.
Speaker BThat's not good.
Speaker BThat's an idea that actually might take me in another direction.
Speaker BAnd so what has happened is the definition of copywriting has always been more than writing words on a page.
Speaker BI mean, I always say copywriting is actually being an expert marketer and then also having the ability to write.
Speaker BBut, you know, outside, in the outside world, to those who don't know what copywriting is, I get the fear.
Speaker BBut you look at the data, the market is, is at 25 billion in 2025.
Speaker BIt's projected to grow to 40 billion by 2030.
Speaker BYou the top three fastest growing freelance services in the world.
Speaker BNumber three is writing.
Speaker BIt is on the rise.
Speaker BIT surged by 25% last year.
Speaker BAcross the board, the demand for copywriting is going up.
Speaker BIn fact, there was a huge piece in the Wall Street Journal at the end of last year showing that the demand for storytellers is through the roof.
Speaker BEven companies like OpenAI Anthropic, all these huge tech AI companies, are investing multi six figures into creative positions at their company.
Speaker BWhich only tells you one thing.
Speaker BEven the companies that invented, you know, the technology behind this word pump, you know, pumping out, are now looking for creative minds to come and lead the charge on that.
Speaker BSo the definition is shifting.
Speaker BJust like many things do in the marketing world.
Speaker BYou've been around long enough, you know, that, that nothing ever dies.
Speaker BIt just shifts form and the demand is, is, is far and above on the rise than it ever has been.
Speaker AListen, I am going to make a clip of what you just said, and I want the world to.
Speaker AIf there's one industry, one sector, one specialization that I think people would think is going to get gobbled up, that AI is going to take my job.
Speaker AIt would be copywriting.
Speaker AAnd for you to share that perspective is so, I think empowering to marketers out there, because I think it's such total trash where everyone's like, AI is going to take our jobs.
Speaker AWe're all going to be clipping robot toenails for a living or whatever.
Speaker AIt's going to be, on my opinion, AI adjacent is going to be what all of our jobs are.
Speaker AIt's not coming for a job.
Speaker AAnd if it's not coming for copywriting, it's not coming for anybody else's job either.
Speaker BYeah, well, and here's the thing, you know, yes, it's my perspective, but it's also the data.
Speaker BI mean, I have gone deep down the rabbit hole because for a while there I wanted to make sure I wasn't just talking out of my ass.
Speaker BYou know, I was like, I was like, am I the delusional one that thinks that this is a really high level skill that people are going to need more of?
Speaker BAnd that I think is the most important thing is if you want to future proof your income, future proof your life, your business, learning to think critically as a marketer and then being able to communicate that clearly and persuasively, whether it is sitting across a boardroom in a meeting, whether it's giving a presentation on stage, whether it's talking to your, for your future employer in an interview, whether it's writing an email or a proposal, like, when is that never going to be a skill that we need to possess as humans?
Speaker BI, I am honestly very fearful for the people who think that I can just do that job because they're the ones who are going to be left behind.
Speaker AI love this.
Speaker AI love everything about this.
Speaker AAll right, before we run out of time, I got to dig into this idea of de douche ifying, but I want to go forget about the marketing side of deduchi buying and the copywriting side of deducifying.
Speaker ALike if you and your husband go out for dinner with another couple, that's a new couple, whatever, and this guy, one of the guys starts spouting off about how great he is in your head, you're like, that guy's a douche.
Speaker ALike, like, is this the douche ifying like all pervasive throughout your entire life or is it just related to copywriting?
Speaker BI have a very, yeah, I have a very strict non douche filter in my life.
Speaker BAnd you know, the thing I always say is like douche.
Speaker BDouchebags come in all shapes and forms.
Speaker BWomen are douchebags too.
Speaker BJust like some women are quote unquote bro marketers.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BYou're not a bro marketer just because of your gen. And I, I am very obviously opinionated and loud about that.
Speaker BBut to me, deduchifying the Internet, like there's, there's just new layers of douche all the time.
Speaker BI mean, I initially started my YouTube channel because I had worked behind the scenes.
Speaker BWhat many people don't know is because they see I started my YouTube channel in 2019 for 10 freaking years before that.
Speaker BI was working in the trenches behind the scenes in many large personal development brands and businesses.
Speaker BAnd I got sort of, you know, very, very excited by marketing and personal development and you know, bright eyed and bushy tailed when I got into the industry.
Speaker BAnd then you realize like, wow, douchebags exist everywhere, even in personal development, especially in marketing.
Speaker BAnd I was kind of jaded by it all.
Speaker BYou know, as someone who is writing, you know, words for brands and businesses, but had really no say as to the direction of the company or the types of products that were being sold, I sort of felt like, oh my gosh, why is no nobody talking about the ethics of marketing?
Speaker BAnd so I started my YouTube channel really as a, a platform for sharing what I believe to be good marketing and, and empathetic marketing that truly helps people.
Speaker BBecause I saw this huge gap between these business owners who had products and services that could genuinely help people.
Speaker BThey were subject matter experts and they cared about their, their customers and, and they just had no freaking idea how to sell.
Speaker BAnd then you had all these bro marketers who didn't give a shit about their products or services or offers, but they were so good at selling.
Speaker BAnd I have been in rooms with, with marketers that have admitted that they keep doing scammier and scammier stuff to try to get ahead.
Speaker BAnd I just remember Sitting there thinking, like, there has got to be a better way.
Speaker BSo when I started my channel, initially, it was really to put the promotional power of direct response marketing and brand storytelling into the hands of the business owners that I really felt were doing good work in the world.
Speaker BAnd then very unstrategically and sort of by accident, all of a sudden, I started attracting copywriters who wanted to do this for a business.
Speaker BAnd so it's been a.
Speaker BIt's been a great journey.
Speaker BAnd creating my posse army of empathetic marketers has been fun.
Speaker AWell, I'll tell you something that everyone should learn from you.
Speaker AAnd everyone needs to go and follow Copy Posse on Instagram and Alex Katonia on Instagram and also her YouTube channel, because Alex just celebrated seven years on YouTube.
Speaker AAnd what I learned from Alex, besides for all the marketing tips and copywriting, is consistency.
Speaker ATo be seven years on YouTube, to post consistently the way that you do on Instagram, to.
Speaker ATo have this like, relentless.
Speaker AAnd the quality is there.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut for a lot of.
Speaker AA lot of people out there, they'll start something after three months, they stop because they're not seeing the traction or whatever.
Speaker AIt doesn't happen overnight.
Speaker AAnd I think that you are, you know, someone to emulate and look at in terms of just keep on pushing because it takes a while.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIt took me six months of posting a video on YouTube every single week before I hit a thousand subscribers.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker BAnd I would have given up if I didn't really care what I was.
Speaker BWhat I was talking about.
Speaker BAnd so I think that's the lesson is, you know, I often talk about the difference between, you know, what you.
Speaker BWhat you do, what you say and what you believe.
Speaker BThe marketing piece is just the buttons you push.
Speaker BYou know, what you.
Speaker BWhat you say and how you help people is.
Speaker BIs how you solve problems.
Speaker BThat's a great business strategy.
Speaker BBut what you believe, that's what keeps you going when shit gets hard.
Speaker BBecause it will.
Speaker AI love this.
Speaker AAll right, I want blow it up.
Speaker ATell everybody what do they follow you, your websites, everything we, everybody needs to get involved in your world.
Speaker BYou can find me on copy posse.com I have all the information you need up there.
Speaker BAnd you can also shoot me a message over on Alex Katoni on Instagram.
Speaker BAnd I'm also Alex Katoni on YouTube.
Speaker AAmazing.
Speaker AWe're put all in the show notes.
Speaker AYou are awesome.
Speaker ALet's deduceify the world.
Speaker AAnd thanks for being here.
Speaker AAppreciate you.
Speaker BLet's do it.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker AWait.
Speaker AThe party is not over.
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Speaker AGet access to all of my free resources@jschweddelson.com and I got a book coming out this April.
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