AI email comparison
Grok (xAI) vs DeepSeek for Email Drafting
You already use AI to draft emails. The question is which tool sounds most like you, and whether there's a better option than either.
Grok (xAI)
Elon Musk's xAI model. Strong technical capabilities and current events access via X integration. Still maturing for professional email use cases.
Strengths for email
- Real-time information access via X (Twitter) integration
- Strong at casual, direct prose
- Available bundled with X Premium
- Grok 3 shows significant capability improvements
Weaknesses for email
- Limited professional email track record vs. OpenAI/Anthropic
- No Gmail or Outlook integration
- Community prompt resources thin compared to ChatGPT ecosystem
- Casual default tone requires heavy instruction for formal email
Pricing: Bundled with X Premium (~$8-16/mo)
Best for: X/Twitter power users who already pay for Premium and want a bundled AI
DeepSeek
The Chinese open-source model that shocked the AI world with GPT-4 level performance at a fraction of the cost. Popular with BYOK users.
Strengths for email
- Dramatically cheaper API pricing than OpenAI
- Competitive quality on instruction-following tasks
- Open-source versions available for self-hosting
- Excellent choice for BYOK users watching API costs
Weaknesses for email
- Data residency concerns for enterprise/regulated users
- Smaller English-language email corpus than US-based models
- Less community support for email-specific prompting
- No native email client integration
Pricing: API pricing ~10-20x cheaper than GPT-4o
Best for: Cost-conscious BYOK users who want GPT-4 quality at a fraction of the price
Head-to-head for email
The problem neither solves
Both Grok (xAI) and DeepSeek share the same fundamental limitation for email: they start cold every time. They have no memory of how you actually write: your sentence length, your opener patterns, your sign-off habits, the inside-jokes you use with specific clients. You compensate with elaborate system prompts that you re-paste on every session.
The outputs are good, but they're generically good. Recipients increasingly recognize the cadence of AI-drafted email: the em-dash overuse, the "I hope this finds you well," the verbose sign-off. These tells erode trust in relationship-driven communication.
The alternative is a tool that actually learns your sent email history, not from a one-time prompt, but from the real pattern of how you write. FinalDraft does this inside Gmail and Outlook directly. You don't tab-switch; you draft in your inbox, and the AI knows your voice because it has read your email history.
Stop patching your prompt. Learn your voice once.
Build a first-person persona prompt that captures how you actually write. Free, in under 5 minutes.