Can you identify AI-generated content?

Large language models can now produce text that reads like it was written by a person. But can you actually tell the difference?

This short quiz presents you with real passages — some written by humans, some generated by AI — drawn from the kinds of operational and commercial content we work with every day. Your job is simple: read each passage and decide whether it was written by a person or a machine.

Most people score around 50%, which is no better than guessing. That's the point. The gap between AI-generated and human-written content has narrowed dramatically, with significant implications for business communication, marketing and everyday work.

Take the quiz below to see how you compare. It takes about two minutes.

Common questions about the quiz

Common questions about the quiz

What is this quiz testing?

Whether you can tell the difference between content written by a person and content generated by AI. The passages are drawn from the kind of operational and commercial content most businesses deal with every day.

How long does it take?

About two minutes. There is no sign-up and no commercial follow-up.

Why does this matter for our business?

If AI-written content is hard to spot, it is also worth thinking about where it might already be appearing in your supplier data, product descriptions, customer messages and reporting, and where human review is still important.

What should I do with the result?

Use it as a prompt to think about where AI is already in your workflows, where you want human review and where AI could safely help with repetitive content tasks.

How does this relate to AI readiness?

The quiz is a quick prompt, not a serious assessment. If you want a structured view of where AI could realistically help across your workflows, systems and teams, the AI readiness assessment is the better starting point.

Is my data stored?

We only keep what is needed to give you a result. The quiz is not a sales funnel and there is no commercial follow-up unless you ask for one.