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The Horns of the Writer’s Dilemma: Why AI Won’t Save Your Messaging (But Strategy Will)
Jorma Manninen
:
April 9, 2026
Table of Contents
We’ve all been there. The cursor blinks. The deadline looms. You’re caught on the Horns of the Writer’s Dilemma.
One horn is Paralysis: You have too much to say and no idea where to start, so you stare at a blank white screen for forty minutes. This is Writer's Block in its most expensive form.
The other horn is The Shortcut: You ask an AI to "write a post about X." It spits out 500 words of generic, beige "Workslop" that says nothing, moves no one, and wastes everyone's time.
Most professionals spend hundreds of hours a year trapped in this loop. But the solution isn't a better prompt. It's a better process.
Strategy First, AI Second
At Business Made Agile, we advocate for the Agile Writer’s Process. The secret is simple: AI is a brilliant assistant, but a terrible architect. If you don't start with strategy, you’re just automating inefficiency.
The 5 Roles of the Agile Writer
To escape the dilemma, you must stop trying to be everything at once. You need to rotate through five distinct roles and six steps:
- The Leader: Defines the Strategic Intent and the Desired Outcome. What do you want the reader to do?
- The Analyst: Analyzes the target audience, predicts their emotions and reactions, and defines the message design.
- The Researcher: Gathers the raw materials. Facts, quotes, and data.
- The Writer: Gets the initial ideas down without judgment as a Draft Zero.
- The Editor: Refines the message by evaluating and iterating (with or without AI) to eliminate the Workslop.
- The Leader: Personalizes the final version of the message before sending it.
AI can help you research, it can help you generate a rough Draft Zero, and it can even help you refine the message. But it cannot be your Leader.
Stop Unclear Messaging. Eliminate Workslop.
Learn the full Agile Writer’s Process in my book, Messaging Made Agile.