RPB Marketing | Content Marketing & Growth Marketing

Simply put, “content generation” is automatically generated by artificial intelligence. In contrast, “content creation” involves not just copywriting or images but a whole ecosystem of processes (both in marketing and in other areas).
On the surface, they appear to produce the same thing. But they don’t. Here, we present key differences and highlight their value.
What is content generation?
Content generation involves the production or staging of content generated through artificial intelligence. It is not content per se and does not involve reasoning or research behind it. It relies on data processing from commands through a language processing program.
Artificial intelligence software processes a prompt. Following the user’s command and quoting certain keywords, such software can give certain answers.
The main qualities of content management are:
- That content, in appearance, responds to the needs of a user.
- Consistent, structured, schematized content.
- You will probably receive content with SEO optimizations.
- You will have measurable results that evaluate the efficiency of the content.
- It is a type of content that saves time and money in processes.
But there are (negative) implications of this type of content. Among them, we have:
- Many AIs have been trained to handle serious copyright violation problems.
- The generated content may be false, have misinformation, or be irrelevant.
- It depends on constant algorithm updates, which can create errors.
What is content creation?
Here, we have a much broader spectrum of the word “content.” Specifically, in a digital marketing context, content creation is understood as everything related to creative production.
And what is creative production? It includes copywriting, graphic design, video production, scripting, and sometimes even editing and SEO optimizations.
Content creation, unlike content generation, depends entirely on the human hand. Criteria, protocols, and human-made processes make creating a marketing campaign possible.
These creative production processes involve:
- Market research and analysis to understand the type of content needed.
- Production hours, in any of its types, to obtain the creative pieces.
- Proofread and edit content to adapt it to your respective campaigns.
- Follow-up, updates, and improvements of the created content.
- Publication and promotion of the created content.
Simply put, content creation involves the production, manual or digital, of creative pieces. A message, an email, an article, a video, an image—these are all products in the overall scheme of a marketing campaign. They are the results of content creation, indispensable for the survival of digital marketing.
Can content generation and content creation work together?
Yes, they can. Today, we find content generation in almost any marketing campaign. But we recommend it only as a complement to marketing processes. It cannot be the overall manager of a campaign.
Many people today reject using artificial intelligence as the main engine for content creation. That is because of ethical implications, lack of trust, and poor results. There are even some prohibited AI practices in many countries.
In addition, this type of generated content can severely affect search results in some search engines or algorithms.
Although not indispensable, content generation and content creation are now largely integrated. However, one thing is clear: content generation and creation are different.
Content creation does not only imply producing an image or a text. It is the different stages that these products go through to ensure the effectiveness and execution of a campaign.
Content generation should complement content creation. It has even been implemented very well in several companies to automate internal processes or conduct simple research.