Claude excels at creative writing, producing engaging and natural-sounding content with less clichés.
Claude offers free multimodal features, while ChatGPT requires upgrading for similar capabilities.
Claude boasts a larger context window and potentially more messages per hour than ChatGPT.
In the AI chatbot space, ChatGPT has been the undisputed leader since its launch in November 2022. However, with the release of Claude 3, it is increasingly looking like ChatGPT might be losing that title. Here are four reasons you should consider switching from ChatGPT to Claude.
1 Claude Is Better at Creative Writing
Besides occasional science homework, programming tasks, and fun games, one of the most popular use cases of AI chatbots is creative writing. Most users useAI chatbots to help draft an email , cover letter, resume, article, or song lyrics—basically one creative write-up or another. While ChatGPT has clearly been the favored option owing mostly to its brand name and publicity, Claude has consistently delivered top-notch results even in earlier iterations of the AI chatbots. But it’s not just about providing top-notch results. Claude, especially backed by the latestClaude 3 model , outperforms ChatGPT in a wide range of creative writing tasks.
As someone who has consistently used both chatbots since their launch, Claude, although not necessarily the overall better model, is significantly better at creating write-ups that better mimic human “creativity and imperfections.” Putting both chatbots to the test, ChatGPT’s write-ups, although grammatically correct, were full of tell-tale signs of an AI-written piece. Claude’s write-ups read more naturally and sound human. Although not perfect, they are likely to be more engaging and creative.
Too frequently, ChatGPT falls victim to the use of so many clichés and predictable word choices. Ask ChatGPT to write about some business topics, and there’s a good chance you will see words like “In today’s business environment,” “In recent history,” and “In the fast-paced digital landscape” in the starting paragraphs.
Putting our theory to the test, it was just as predicted. ChatGPT (GPT-3.5 and GPT-4) used cliché intros in five out of five trials. Here are the first three samples:
Sample 1
Sample 2
Sample 3
Claude, on the other hand, produced varying results four times out of five trials, avoiding the cliche on the first trial:
Besides cliché, ChatGPT, more than Claude, tends to fall victim to the sporadic use of joining words like “in conclusion,” “as a result,” and a tendency for unnecessary emphasis where emphatic words like “undisputed, critical, unquestionable, must” etc., are used.
But besides these flaws, how do write-ups from each chatbot sound from a holistic point of view?
To top off the comparison, I asked both chatbots to produce rhyming rap lyrics on the theme “coconut to wealth.” Claude seems the better option, but I’ll let you be the judge.
Here’s ChatGPT’s take:
And here’s Claude’s take:
Title: Discovering the Premier Mega Language Models on the Market