TechJournalists.com is one that seems to be working
Changing Editorial Landscape Calls for New Ideas
As the media world continues its shift from print to digital, the publishing community struggles to find out how to make it all work. Lower ad revenues have forced magazines in particular to make some difficult decisions. The most difficult may be the reduction of editorial staff considering these media outlets still needs to produce the same (or even more) content to generate the ad revenue back. It leaves these media outlets in a conundrum: How do we produce quality content without the resources we need? Many outlets are leaning on the public sector, accepting content from “industry experts”. Others are relying on junior staffers or keeping a few talented (yet overworked) editors. The sad reality is that content is needed more today than ever before, yet jobs for writers are scarce. The journalists of yesterday need to network and market themselves like never before. Good content is no longer enough. Good content at a good price is now publishing’s Holy Grail.
Back in the spring of 2010, I sat at a table in the press room of a then popular tech conference in New York. I have run MRB Public Relations, a tech-focused PR firm since the early 90s and have become friendly with many of the writers I had worked with over the years. They still call me a blood sucking leach, but they do so lovingly. Among this table of “friends” included writers and editors from former publishing giants, Ziff Davis and CMP Media. The conversation went something like this:
Contributing writer (to his editor): You need to give me more work. I have a family to feed (said much more colorfully).
Editor: I wish I could. My freelance budget is next to nothing.
Staff writer: Which is why he throws all of your old work to me. I can’t keep up this pace. I’m burning out.
The collective nods and smirks cued everyone in on the problem and we began to put our heads together.
The conversation got me thinking about how to keep the freelancer/contributors writing. Creating a sort of clearing house to offer these talented writers out for marketing related projects (case studies, white papers, collateral, web content, blogs, etc.) was a no brainer. We created TechJournalists.com to do just that - adding on items like speaking engagements (for user conferences), internal reviews (to improve products), and talent (for company videos).
As the editorial world continues to change, writers and media outlets need to think differently about how to continue to deliver high quality content. Writers need to write, and we all need to find ways to keep the best ones doing so.
Why "Human-First" is the best option today
While AI tools are everywhere, the market is actually swinging back toward the human element. We're seeing a massive wave of "AI fatigue" among audiences, and search engines have pivoted to prioritize actual lived experience over synthesized data. If you want to stay relevant, here is why you need to be the one using real journalists.
1. The Performance Gap: SEO and Growth
The data from the past year is clear: search engines are getting much better at sniffing out "AI slop" and burying it.
- Real Traffic Gains: A recent 2026 study found that human-authored content pulled in 5.4 times more organic traffic than pure AI output over a six-month span.
- Sustainability: AI content often sees a quick “spike” in indexing, only to flatline or fall off a cliff. Human-led pieces, however, tend to build authority over time, showing a steady upward climb.
The Bottom Line: At the end of the day, humans convert better. We’re seeing conversion rates around 3.2% for human content, compared to 0.8% for automated text.
2. Authenticity is a Competitive Edge
In a digital world flooded with generic, perfect AI text, your unique perspective is your most valuable asset.
- Lived Experience: You can’t automate a personal anecdote or a vulnerable “lesson learned.” Since 72% of readers still explicitly prefer knowing a human wrote what they’re reading, that emotional nuance is a massive trust signal.
- Escaping the “same” Tone: AI has a habit of smoothing everything out into a homogenized, boring voice. By drafting your own work, you ensure a brand voice that your competitors (who are likely using the same prompts as everyone else) simply can’t copy.
3. Avoiding Hallucinations
Writing your own content isn't just about style; it's about self-preservation and ethics.
- The Accuracy Problem: AI is still notorious for hallucinating facts, fabricating statistics, or completely misreading legal nuances. When you write it yourself, you own the fact-checking process.
- Legal & Ethical Safety: With the EU AI Act now in full swing, the rules around transparency are tighter than ever. Drafting your own content keeps you clear of plagiarism risks and ensures you aren’t accidentally echoing the biases baked into large language models.
