7 Great Copywriting Examples and AI Writing Tips That Work
In this guide, we're sharing seven examples of copywriting inspired by real-world formats that actually get results.
Browse through all the posts from the most recent to the oldest and enjoy all the content.
In this guide, we're sharing seven examples of copywriting inspired by real-world formats that actually get results.
In this guide, we'll show you how to make AI writing sound more human and transform stiff, mechanical text into content that flows naturally. You'll learn why tone, phrasing, and structure matter in detection, and how our AI humanizer can help you write with confidence.
In this guide, you’ll learn how to create a content writing strategy with AI as your sidekick throughout the entire process.
In this article, we’ll look at how to rewrite a sentence and how humanizer tools can help you smooth things out without losing your voice.
We put JustDone AI's detector to the test in 2026. Here's exactly what we found and why it matters before you pay.
When you’re assigned an informative essay for school (or even for work as a blog), your goal is to teach readers about a specific topic without persuading or arguing one side or the other.
"Should I edit this or just proofread it?" This question crosses the mind of nearly every writer staring at a draft before submission. Whether you're finishing an essay, preparing a blog post, or polishing a resume, knowing which process your work needs can make all the difference.
You spent three hours staring at your screen yesterday, trying to start a blog post about marketing automation. The words wouldn't come. Meanwhile, your to-do list kept growing, client emails piled up, and your coffee went cold. Sound familiar?
AI tools have completely changed how we approach writing. You know the drill — cranking out that research paper due tomorrow, brainstorming when you're stuck, or throwing together a quick blog post.
Picture this: It's 2AM. You've finally finished your essay due tomorrow. You check the word count and... you're still 200 words short of the requirement. Your professor won't accept it as is, but you've already said everything you wanted to say.