Blog posts and content marketing pieces have a different problem from essays: voice. AI drafts are technically correct but tonally generic — they don't sound like *you* or your brand. The humanizer rewrites at the structural level so each post has its own rhythm, while preserving your topic, hook, and CTA.
Content platforms are running AI detection at scale
Medium, Substack, and major publisher CMSes have started flagging AI-shaped content automatically. Humanizing each post before publication is now part of the standard editorial workflow — not an optional extra.
Voice survives structural rewriting
Word-level paraphrasers strip out the personal phrasings that make a brand recognisable. Structural humanization preserves your word choices and personality while varying the underlying rhythm.
The humanizer pairs naturally with the generator
Use the [content generator](/generator) to draft from a topic, then pipe the output through the humanizer. The two tools share state, so there's no copy-paste between sessions.
Looking for the general humanizer? See the full Humanizer page for all features and modes.
Blog Posts FAQs
Common questions about using the humanizer for blog posts.
- Can I humanize a 2,000-word blog post in one pass?
- Pro plans support 2,000 words per request. Free is capped at 100 words per request, so longer posts go through in chunks.
- Does humanizing change my SEO targeting?
- No. The humanizer rewrites prose structure but preserves keywords, headings, and meaning. Your target keywords stay where you placed them.
- Will the humanized post sound like my brand voice?
- The humanizer removes the generic AI rhythm but preserves the underlying word choices in your draft. For a strong brand-voice match, draft in your own voice (or use a brand-tuned prompt in the generator), then humanize. The structural rewrite reinforces voice rather than overriding it.
- Can I batch-humanize multiple blog posts?
- Pro accounts include document history and the ability to process posts back-to-back. The free tier handles one document at a time.