> Find one YC startup whose public job postings mention Jira + Claude/Cursor. They already have the exact stack. DM the CTO directly on X with a one-liner: "built something that automates your easy Jira tickets into PRs automatically — want to try it?" That's your shortest path to a real user.
Typical LLM-isms:
- "find this. do that." phrasing
- "the exact X"
- send a one liner
- "that's your shortest X to a Y"
---
Here's what Claude had to say about it:
Yes, it does have some telltale signs. Here's why:
*Structural giveaways:*
- The "here's the insight → here's the action → here's the payoff" format is very common in LLM outputs — it's almost algorithmically tidy.
- The em dash used as a dramatic pause ("automates your easy Jira tickets into PRs automatically — want to try it?") is a pattern LLMs lean on heavily.
- "That's your shortest path to a real user" feels like a summarizing closer that an LLM adds to signal it's wrapping up with a punchline.
*Word/phrase patterns:*
- "exact stack" — this phrasing is very popular in AI-generated startup/GTM advice
- The overall register (confident, tactical, slightly bro-ish but polished) is a very common output of prompts like "give me a GTM strategy"
*What makes it not obviously AI:*
- It's specific enough (Jira + Claude/Cursor, YC, CTO on X) that it doesn't feel like generic filler
- The one-liner pitch itself is actually pretty natural
*The bottom line:* It reads like someone prompted an LLM for "what's the fastest way to find my first user" and lightly edited the output — or didn't edit it at all. The advice isn't bad, but the packaging has that characteristic "polished tactical bullet" energy that's hard to fake as organic thinking.
If you wrote it yourself, the main culprit is probably the closing sentence — humans tend to just stop rather than narrate their own conclusion.
Typical LLM-isms:
- "find this. do that." phrasing
- "the exact X"
- send a one liner
- "that's your shortest X to a Y"
---
Here's what Claude had to say about it:
Yes, it does have some telltale signs. Here's why:
*Structural giveaways:*
- The "here's the insight → here's the action → here's the payoff" format is very common in LLM outputs — it's almost algorithmically tidy.
- The em dash used as a dramatic pause ("automates your easy Jira tickets into PRs automatically — want to try it?") is a pattern LLMs lean on heavily.
- "That's your shortest path to a real user" feels like a summarizing closer that an LLM adds to signal it's wrapping up with a punchline.
*Word/phrase patterns:*
- "exact stack" — this phrasing is very popular in AI-generated startup/GTM advice
- The overall register (confident, tactical, slightly bro-ish but polished) is a very common output of prompts like "give me a GTM strategy"
*What makes it not obviously AI:*
- It's specific enough (Jira + Claude/Cursor, YC, CTO on X) that it doesn't feel like generic filler
- The one-liner pitch itself is actually pretty natural
*The bottom line:* It reads like someone prompted an LLM for "what's the fastest way to find my first user" and lightly edited the output — or didn't edit it at all. The advice isn't bad, but the packaging has that characteristic "polished tactical bullet" energy that's hard to fake as organic thinking.
If you wrote it yourself, the main culprit is probably the closing sentence — humans tend to just stop rather than narrate their own conclusion.