So, your creative team has taken the plunge into using generative AI and a terrifying thought has suddenly gripped you — are we actually creating good work, or do stakeholders, executives, etc. just think we are because it’s “AI magic”?
It’s a legitimate question, because when your company churns out sub-par or average AI-generated content, you run the risk of not only demotivating your creative team, but also damaging your brand and becoming a laughing stock to customers.
And we’re not just talking about flagging extra fingers or weeding out copy hallucinations. The goal is to maintain the same level of quality you expect from human-created assets.
But how do you do that? It’s simple — with feedback and revisions.
Below, we’ll get into how to leverage AI to your advantage without sacrificing creative quality, including how to give constructive feedback on these assets.
“Generative AI has the potential to change the world in ways that we can’t even imagine. It has the power to create new ideas, products, and services that will make our lives easier, more productive, and more creative. [...] The future of generative AI is bright, and I’m excited to see what it will bring.”
~Bill Gates
Gates may not know how to dance, but he gets tech trends. Roughly 59% of media agencies are now using AI-powered tools for some form of content creation (written or visual). AI is here to stay, and if you’re not fully exploring its potential for your creative workflows, you should. Here are a few reasons why it makes sense to use AI tools within creative projects.
There was a time when people needed to sketch out things with their hands, and creative work had to go through a rough draft of some kind. Not anymore. AI can streamline the development of creative assets and assist with roles like graphic design by quickly creating variations of existing content, saving time and resources.
Say you’re working on a fashion ad and can’t decide whether the model’s hair color looks better in black, blonde, or red. With AI tools, you can trial all three instantly. Even the most luddite, old-school designer can appreciate capabilities like that.
This type of efficiency is desperately needed: Around 92% of organizations are struggling to find the skills and talent they need to support their projects, which means more work falls on their current team members. AI can be a life preserver for your creatives who are drowning in tasks.
You can save a lot of cash by automating parts of the creative process using AI. Resources get freed up that can be allocated to higher-impact tasks, which means you can run leaner teams. At Ziflow for instance, we have creatives who use AI tools to assist with editing tasks for images, such as removing backgrounds — tasks that used to take them hours to finish manually.
Companies are already seeing significant savings by going this route. Klarna, for example, says it saved 37% on marketing costs by using AI in its processes. Creative agencies of all sizes can also see savings by reducing their workloads and serving more clients.
Creative blocks happen, and it can take a while for inspiration to hit. Generative AI design and content development can instantly give creatives new ideas to explore and allow them to easily experiment with different styles and formats.
Take a company trying to create a new logo for a new business or brand pivot. AI can generate several new logos for creative teams to look at and get ideas from. You can also take some of the generated AI output and use that to create new AI prompts to refine ideas until you find an idea to build on.
How do we put this lightly?… Sometimes AI seems to be under the influence. And it’s not just one substance, either — it’s like AI took all of them. This leads to tons of issues, like:
This means you’ll need strong review and feedback systems in place — lead by human creatives — to mitigate those challenges and produce high-quality deliverables.
If you know the weak spots of AI content, you can properly evaluate AI-generated content. Be on the lookout for:
Now that you understand where AI tends to make a mess of things, you can use that knowledge to build an effective creative feedback process that focuses on those weaknesses.
As you follow the steps below to develop your AI feedback process, remember that the human element is the key to taking AI content from “meh” to something truly special.
AI is still new, so many creatives may be sheepish about or outright against using it in their workflows. This can lead to internal conflict and less efficient operations. So before you get started, explore potential use cases and decide if it makes sense to add AI to those processes.
If you decide to use AI in your organization, take a transparent and truthful approach. Don’t be afraid to talk about the possible applications of AI generation with your team and develop a plan that outlines when and where your team can use it. For example, maybe everyone agrees that using AI for idea generation is fine, but that using tools like DALL-E to create full-blown designs is not cool.
Be clear and make sure everyone understands that AI is a tool — not a crutch.
If you decide to use AI to create content, it’s time to develop evaluation criteria to review the AI’s output. Once you have a checklist of evaluation criteria, your team can build a process to review AI output. You can use the ideas below as a starting point:
Depending on your or your client's industry, you may need multiple people across different departments to review AI content and ensure it meets brand, marketing, and compliance standards. A diverse (see: human) team like this will bring a wide range of viewpoints to the process and help you optimize your AI content to its fullest potential.
This cross-functional team might include:
Once you have a reliable team together, it’s time to build an AI workflow that will help streamline the review process for AI assets. A typical workflow may include:
Using a centralized collaborative proofing platform like Ziflow to manage and track feedback for AI-generated content helps teams streamline the process, avoid missed steps, and work better together.
With a collaborative proofing platform, you can:
These features allow cross-functional teams to work together seamlessly, complete assets more quickly, and meet performance metrics.
The use of AI-generated content has shaken up the creative industry — in good, bad, and strange ways. Creative teams can harness AI to increase productivity, save money, generate new ideas, and even review content, but it has to be done correctly. Otherwise, your company will look silly to customers and your creatives will have one foot out the door.
You need the right review and feedback system in place to ensure that your AI-generated assets are high-quality, accurate, and fit the intended audience and project goals — and that’s where Ziflow comes in.
Ziflow helps teams manage their review process and build streamlined proofing workflows. With Ziflow, you can automate your feedback and approval workflows, collaborate in real time, and manage all your feedback in one place.