The effort heuristic is a well-documented cognitive bias where people assign more value to things they believe required more work. It shows up in everything from handmade goods to professional services, and we're seeing it in AI content creation, too.
The gist: Two articles can contain identical ideas, similar insights, and comparable quality. But if one took ten hours to produce and the other took ten seconds with AI, audiences instinctively perceive the first as more valuable. That instinct doesn't disappear just because the output is objectively the same.
Practical implications matter more than the psychology. Generic language, repetitive structure, and formulaic patterns reinforce the perception of low effort, regardless of whether AI was involved. We're learning that audiences are developing a sensitivity to content that feels too easy, and that threshold is dropping.
We analyzed how this bias affects trust, credibility, emotional connection, and willingness to pay. Takeaway: Brands combining AI efficiency with strong editing and human perspective will outperform those treating AI as a replacement for the entire process.
Full analysis with audience sentiment data in the link
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