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Demand for human writers growing despite the rise of generative AI: report

A new report from Freelancer.com found that postings for writing jobs were up 20% or more in the last quarter despite the broader availability of generative AI tools.

The recent rise of content creation tools harnessing the power of generative artificial intelligence (AI) has raised questions about the future of writing, but demand for human writers remains strong for now according to new data from Freelancer.com.

Freelancer.com’s quarterly report on jobs posted in its marketplace found that the jobs related to writing, content creation and marketing "were the fastest growing freelance jobs by percentage growth" in the third quarter of 2023. From Q2 to Q3 of this year, copy typing jobs rose by 28.7%, Microsoft Word projects by 24.7%, search engine marketing by 24.1%, copywriting by 23.8% and ghostwriting by 23.1%, according to Freelancer.com’s data.

"As AI continues to advance, the need for human creativity remains strong," the Freelancer.com report found. "Employers are once again seeking freelancers to support with Creative Writing and Content Writing projects, which are up 22.4% and 19.4% respectively. A surge in demand for writing skills across the platform means there were more than 10,000 additional writing projects available in Q3 2023, which were already a trending skill evident in the previous quarter."

Matt Barrie, the CEO of Freelancer.com, told FOX Business that freelancers have been quick to utilize AI tools to boost their productivity and that small businesses have seen the potential of AI for a variety of applications and turned to freelancers to help achieve those tasks. "The adoption of the tooling was almost immediate, and you can see that everywhere. I just think the productivity gains have been huge," he said.

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"The reason we’re seeing a big jump in jobs is because maybe the small business owner goes out there, sees what can be done, understands what can be done, but then realizes I actually don’t have the time to do it myself, I’ll get someone to go do it for me," Barrie said. 

"You think about the average small business owner, they come along, they learn about ChatGPT, they sit down and play with it, they go ‘wow, this pretty cool.’ But then the average small business owner is time-poor, they don’t have a lot of time do this themselves," Barrie explained. 

"They’re pretty amazed by it. They probably have a few breakthroughs in their mind in terms of, ‘oh wow, I could get this to rewrite my technical manuals or I could get this to rewrite my marketing copy’ and they sit down and then they realize, well, they don’t want to give themselves a job doing this but they’re pretty excited about what they can do, so who are they going to turn to? You turn to an online freelancer."

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Barrie said the proliferation of AI tools has been a boon for freelancers who can use them to become "superskilled" by leveraging those tools to boost their capabilities for tasks that they were less capable at completing previously.

"AI is actually phenomenal for freelancers because now if you’re a marginal copywriter, you can use the tools and become superskilled," Barrie said. "If you’re an average designer… you can jump into Midjourney now and boost your skills to an elite level."

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As AI tools become more capable of accomplishing basic tasks, workers in a variety of professions will need to harness those tools to broaden their base of skills to move up the stack of the value chain.

"I think we’re going to see things go up the stack quite dramatically. I think designers are going to become more directors, copywriters will become more editors, programmers will become more product managers and I think all jobs will go up the stack," Barrie said. 

"People need people to drive the tools, at the end of the day. And also the tooling is not perfect. It does some pretty amazing things, it’s a pretty amazing leap to productivity but someone needs to then look at the output, make sure there’s no hallucinations, do the editorial – maybe package it up in a certain way, put it somehwere on the website, log in and put it into the CRM system – there’s other work that’s involved that at this point in time ChatGPT is not able to do, for example."

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"I think there’s a lot of parallels seeing the emergence of AI and what happened with the initial emergence of freelancing a couple of decades ago. When freelancing first came out, you had access to a very, very wide range of low-cost talent that you only pay for on demand. Freelancers can do anything for you, any skill area." 

"The same thing is happening with AI, you’ve got another step up here where you’ve got AI that can do a whole range of skills and do it for low cost, even cheaper than that," Barrie said. "Ultimately, there are quite a number of gaps in the tooling and will be for some time to come, so it’s not so much, ‘AI will steal your job,’ it’s ‘the guy using the AI will is going to steal your job.’"

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