WordPressâs new AI guidelines show how to avoid âAI slop.â Use these rules to produce credible, SEO-friendly content that generates leads.

WordPress AI Guidelines: Stop AI Slop in Small Biz
WordPress just put something into writing that a lot of small businesses have been learning the hard way: AI doesnât lower the bar for qualityâif anything, it raises the stakes. When your website, blog, documentation, or even images are produced âfaster,â itâs easy to publish more than you can realistically verify. Thatâs how AI slop happens.
This matters for U.S. small businesses because WordPress isnât a niche platformâitâs the default website engine for a huge chunk of the internet, including local service businesses, ecommerce shops, and SaaS marketing sites. When WordPress publishes AI guidelines aimed at contribution quality, itâs also a signal to everyone using AI marketing tools: speed is not a strategy; credibility is.
WordPressâs new guidance is for contributors building plugins, themes, docs, and media assets. But the principles translate almost perfectly to marketing teams and owners using AI for content creation, SEO, and customer communicationsâespecially as AI-powered search (think Google AI Overviews and ChatGPT-style answers) increasingly rewards sources that look careful, consistent, and real.
What WordPressâs AI guidelines really say (in plain English)
Answer first: WordPress is telling contributors, âUse AI if you want, but you own the output, you must disclose meaningful AI help, you must respect GPL licensing, and you donât get to flood the project with untested junk.â
WordPress laid out five principles that are worth treating as a checklist for any AI-assisted work:
- Youâre responsible for the contribution (AI can help, but it doesnât take accountability).
- Disclose meaningful AI assistance in the PR or ticket.
- License compatibility matters (WordPress requires GPLv2-or-later compatibility, even for AI-assisted output).
- Non-code assets count too (docs, images, screenshots, educational materials).
- Quality over volume (avoid low-signal, unverified âAI slopââmaintainers can reject it).
If youâre a small business owner, you might not care about Trac tickets or PR descriptions. You should care about the underlying expectation: publish less, verify more.
Hereâs the key line that applies directly to marketing: WordPress explicitly discourages low-effort, unverified output and empowers reviewers to close or reject it.
Thatâs basically what customers do, tooâexcept they donât leave a comment explaining why they bounced.
âAI slopâ isnât just embarrassing. Itâs expensive.
Answer first: AI slop wastes time, weakens SEO, and can create legal and reputational riskâespecially when AI outputs hallucinate facts, cite fake sources, or produce generic content that doesnât match lived experience.
WordPress calls out AI slop in ways that should feel familiar to anyone whoâs ever tried to scale content quickly:
- Hallucinated references (links, APIs, studies, policies, or âfeaturesâ that donât exist)
- Overcomplicated code (or in marketing terms: overcomplicated explanations and fluffy sections)
- Generic PRs that donât reflect real testing or experience
Translate that to small business marketing and you get:
- Blog posts that cite statistics you canât verify
- Location pages that repeat the same template with swapped city names
- Service pages that sound plausible but donât reflect how your business actually works
- AI-written âcase studiesâ with fake details
- Support docs that promise features your product doesnât have
The cost shows up in three places:
1) Trust loss (the compounding cost)
If a prospect catches one obvious errorâwrong pricing, wrong policy, fake testimonial vibesâthey donât just doubt that page. They doubt your business.
2) Search performance (including AI-powered search)
Googleâs ranking systems and AI summaries increasingly prioritize helpful, experience-based content. Thin, repetitive pages tend to underperform. And if AI systems canât extract clear, verifiable answers from your site, theyâll cite someone else.
3) Operational drag
Slop creates internal cleanup work: rewrites, customer clarification emails, refund requests, support tickets, and team debates over âwho approved this?â
Iâm opinionated about this: If you canât afford to verify it, you canât afford to publish it.
A small business playbook based on WordPressâs 5 principles
Answer first: You can adopt WordPressâs approach by adding four guardrails to your AI marketing workflow: accountability, disclosure, licensing hygiene, and verification.
Below is how Iâd apply WordPressâs five principles to common small business marketing tasks.
1) Accountability: assign a human owner to every AI output
AI should never be the âauthorâ in practice, even if it drafts.
Do this: For every assetâblog post, landing page, email sequence, ad copyâassign one person responsible for:
- Fact-checking claims and numbers
- Ensuring it matches your actual offer and process
- Reviewing tone, risk, and brand fit
- Approving the final version
Simple rule: If your name is on the website, your judgment needs to be on the page.
2) Disclosure: be transparent when AI meaningfully shaped the work
WordPress wants disclosure in PRs; marketing doesnât have a PR description field, but transparency still helpsâespecially for sensitive content.
Where disclosure makes sense for small businesses:
- AI-generated images used in ads or hero sections (avoid misleading âreal personâ vibes)
- Heavily AI-assisted medical, legal, or financial content (get professional review)
- AI chat or AI scheduling assistants (make it clear users arenât talking to a human)
Disclosure doesnât need to be a banner. It can be a line in a footer, a help-center note, or an internal record. The point is to avoid âgotchaâ moments.
3) License compatibility: donât ignore the fine print of your AI tools
WordPressâs guideline is blunt: donât use tools whose terms forbid GPL-compatible output, and donât try to launder incompatible licenses.
Small businesses have a similar problem, just in different clothing.
Practical examples:
- Using AI-generated images trained on questionable sources for commercial ads
- Copying competitor text into an AI model and publishing the rewrite
- Letting an AI tool ingest customer lists or private proposals without clear terms
Action: Maintain a short list of approved AI marketing tools and what theyâre allowed to be used for (e.g., âDraft blog outlines: yes. Generate product screenshots: no. Ingest customer data: only with vendor-approved DPA.â).
4) Non-code assets: treat visuals and docs like first-class marketing content
WordPress explicitly says non-code assets count: docs, screenshots, images, educational materials.
Marketing equivalents include:
- Sales decks and one-pagers
- Onboarding emails
- Knowledge base articles
- Social media âhow-toâ carousels
- Product comparison pages
These are often where AI slop sneaks in because theyâre ânot SEO pages.â But prospects read them when theyâre close to buying.
5) Quality over volume: ship fewer pieces, but make each one usable
WordPress recommends small, well-defined commits, real tests, and verified links.
Hereâs the marketing version:
- One page = one job. Define the conversion goal before writing.
- Prefer specific proof over broad claims. Include pricing ranges, timelines, constraints, and real examples.
- Cite only what you can verify internally. If you canât validate a stat, donât publish it.
- Update instead of multiplying. Refresh your top 10 pages monthly rather than launching 40 new ones quarterly.
Snippet-worthy rule: If AI helps you publish twice as much, you should spend twice as much effort on editing and verification.
The âanti-slopâ checklist for AI content (SEO + credibility)
Answer first: Before publishing AI-assisted marketing content, check for factual accuracy, audience match, uniqueness, and proof.
Use this checklist for blog posts, landing pages, and even newsletters:
- Fact check every number, claim, and âaccording toâ line.
- Remove fake specificity (named tools, studies, or policies that werenât verified).
- Add real-world constraints (who itâs for, who itâs not for, timelines, prerequisites).
- Replace generic examples with your actual process (steps you take, tools you use, what you measure).
- Confirm internal consistency (pricing, guarantees, service areas, feature names).
- Trim fluff: if a paragraph doesnât change someoneâs decision, cut it.
- Add one original asset: a short template, checklist, mini-case study, or FAQ.
- Run a âcould a competitor publish this?â test. If yes, itâs too generic.
This approach aligns with how AI-powered search engines extract answers. They prefer clear, testable statementsâexact steps, defined terms, and explicit limits.
What this means for AI marketing tools in the U.S. (and how to choose them)
Answer first: The right AI marketing tools help you create better work with stronger controlsâversioning, citations, approvals, and brand constraintsânot just more output.
This post is part of our series on How AI Is Powering Technology and Digital Services in the United States, and the big trend Iâm watching in 2026 is that AI tools are splitting into two camps:
- Volume tools: fast drafts, lots of pages, minimal governance
- Quality tools: structured workflows, approvals, data controls, and reusable brand context
If youâre a small business trying to generate leads, the âvolumeâ camp is tempting. Itâs also where youâll get burned.
A practical tool-selection rubric
When you evaluate AI tools for small business marketing, look for:
- Source handling: Can it cite sources or at least keep track of inputs?
- Governance: Can you require approvals before publishing?
- Brand controls: Style guides, reusable product facts, tone constraints, forbidden claims.
- Security & privacy: Clear terms on data usage and retention.
- Content operations: Version history, collaboration, and audit trails.
If a tool canât support your quality process, itâs not a marketing tool. Itâs a text generator.
People Also Ask (and the honest answers)
Is AI content bad for SEO? AI content isnât inherently bad. Unverified, generic AI content is bad because it fails usefulness tests and damages trust.
How do I avoid AI hallucinations in my blog posts? Use AI for structure and drafts, then verify every factual statement, and replace âinternet factsâ with your own data (pricing, timelines, results, customer questions).
Do I need to disclose AI use on my website? Not always. But disclosure is smart when AI materially affects user expectationsâimages that look real, chat assistants, or high-stakes advice.
A better way to use AI: publish like WordPress reviews your site
WordPressâs new AI guidelines are framed for open-source contributors, but the message for small businesses is more useful: credibility is the product. Your blog, pages, and emails either build trustâor quietly drain it.
If you take only one idea from WordPressâs stance, make it this: AI can draft, but humans must verify. That single habit prevents most slop problems, and it makes your content stronger for both traditional SEO and AI-powered search results.
Next step: pick one high-intent page on your site (a âmoneyâ service page or a lead-gen landing page) and run the anti-slop checklist above. Tighten claims, add real proof, and cut the filler. Then ask yourself a forward-looking question that matters in 2026: when AI search engines summarize your category, will they quote your businessâor your competitor?