Find Your Flame Module 3: Build Your First Proof
Gary WhittakerModule 3 of 3
Build Your First Proof
Move from idea to one proof-ready result you can evaluate, improve, and build from.
Welcome to Module 3 of the free Find Your Fame Training Path.
In Module 1, you found the flame. In Module 2, you shaped the signal. Now you are going to build one proof piece and make one clear decision.
Proof does not mean perfection. Proof means something real enough to evaluate: a song draft, lyric section, article outline, landing page section, product concept, game scene, brand statement, short video idea, or another first creative result that shows the direction you are building.
What This Module Is For
Module 3 turns direction into one decision you can act on.
Module 1 answered, “Why does this matter?” Module 2 answered, “What should people recognize?” Module 3 answers, “Does this proof show the direction clearly enough to continue?”
Flame
The deeper reason behind the work. This keeps the proof connected to purpose.
Signal
The clear idea another person should understand, feel, remember, or recognize.
Proof
One real output that shows whether the flame and signal can become something useful.
Before You Start
Bring one signal, not a folder full of versions.
Module 3 works best when you bring one real direction from Module 2 and one proof piece to evaluate.
Bring your Flame Statement
Use your Module 1 answer so the proof stays connected to the deeper reason behind the work.
Bring your Signal Statement
Use your Module 2 answer so you can judge whether the proof carries the right direction.
Bring one proof piece
Choose one track, hook, lyric, outline, page section, story scene, product idea, brand statement, or result.
Choose Your Starting Point
This module works for more than music.
Your first proof is one result that shows whether your direction can become real.
Music-first
You may be testing a Suno prompt, hook, chorus, full track, lyrical direction, cover concept, BandLab polish pass, or release-ready draft.
This proof is meant to show whether my song direction can __________.Project-first
You may be building a book, game, brand, training path, faith project, article series, product, or campaign.
This proof is meant to show whether my project direction can __________.Content-first
You may be testing an article outline, post, video idea, email, teaching section, or public message.
This proof is meant to show whether my content can help people __________.Brand-first
You may be testing a brand statement, page section, product promise, lead magnet idea, or offer explanation.
This proof is meant to show whether people can recognize __________ from my brand direction.Still exploring
You may still be testing what the idea wants to become through one rough output.
This proof is meant to show whether this idea deserves __________.Proof test
If this proof existed by itself, what would it show? If you cannot answer that, you may not be ready to judge it yet.
Core Lesson
Proof is not the same as perfection.
Many creators get stuck because they are waiting for the perfect version before they make a decision.
AI tools make it easy to keep generating. You can make another version, another variation, another prompt, another mix, another hook, another idea, and another direction.
But more output does not always mean more progress. Progress begins when you can judge what you made.
Music Proof
A generated song, chorus, hook, lyric section, stem, remix idea, cover direction, or BandLab draft.
Content Proof
An article outline, email, social post, video script, story scene, public lesson, or message draft.
Brand Proof
A homepage section, mission statement, product page concept, lead magnet idea, or offer statement.
Project Proof
A game scene, book chapter outline, character theme, worldbuilding page, trailer concept, or soundtrack direction.
Decision Training
The four proof decisions.
By the end of this module, your job is to make one of four decisions.
Keep
Keep the result if it clearly matches the flame, signal, audience, and proof goal.
Keeping does not mean it is perfect. It means the direction is strong enough to continue.
Refine
Refine the result if the core idea is strong but one part needs improvement.
This may mean improving the hook, title, structure, tone, opening, emotional payoff, call to action, or proof clarity.
Rework
Rework the result if the direction matters but the current execution does not carry the signal.
Reworking means you keep the lesson but rebuild the output with better input and cleaner constraints.
Discard
Discard the result if it does not match the direction and does not show enough value to keep improving.
Discarding is not failure. It is how you protect your time, credits, energy, and focus.
Free Kits
Use these kits only when they help you judge or improve one proof.
These links should help you make a cleaner decision, not distract you into endless generation.
Main Exercise
Build your first proof decision.
Use one idea from Module 2. Do not test five directions at once.
Step 1: Name the proof piece.
Decide what you are evaluating. It may be a track, hook, lyric, article outline, project concept, homepage section, product idea, or short creative result.
My first proof piece is __________________.Step 2: Name what it is supposed to prove.
Do not judge the piece only by whether you like it. Judge it by what it is supposed to show.
It is supposed to prove that I can create __________________.Step 3: Choose the strongest version.
If you created more than one version, choose the strongest one based on the signal, not mood alone.
The strongest version is __________________ because __________________.Step 4: Identify one improvement target.
Do not try to fix everything. Choose one specific target that would make the piece stronger.
The one thing I need to improve is __________________.Step 5: Make the proof decision.
Decide whether this should be kept, refined, reworked, or discarded.
My next decision is to keep, refine, rework, or discard this because __________________.Build the Statement
Your Proof Decision Statement.
Now combine your answers into one clear decision statement.
Weak decision
I like this version, so I might keep it.
This is too vague. It does not explain what worked, what needs improvement, or why the version matters.
Stronger decision
My first proof piece is a gospel-soul song draft for tired creators who need encouragement. It proves that my flame can become a warm, faith-driven song direction. The strongest version is Version 2 because the hook feels clearer and the vocal tone fits the message. The one thing I need to improve is the second verse. My next decision is to refine this track because the core signal is strong enough to keep building.
Prompt Support
Use ChatGPT to turn rough results into cleaner next inputs.
ChatGPT can help evaluate your proof piece, identify the strongest part, name one improvement target, and prepare a cleaner instruction for the next tool.
Before you copy anything, know what this prompt is for.
A Module 3 prompt is not the final proof. It is a set of instructions that helps ChatGPT evaluate one proof piece and help you make a cleaner next decision.
After ChatGPT responds, do not copy everything. Bring back the useful pieces: proof decision statement, strongest part, improvement target, next-tool input, and next best action.
Module 3 Core Prompt
Use this if you already have a proof piece and want ChatGPT to help evaluate it.
Act as a creator consultant in the style of Jack Righteous for this Module 3 exercise. In this context, “Jack Righteous” means the creator-consultant lens: clarity, direction, audience fit, proof, next step, and practical creative strategy. Your role is to help me evaluate my own proof piece, improve the way I describe the next action, and create cleaner input for the next tool. Do not make this about Jack Righteous, promotion, selling, or branding. Do not invent a direction for me. Focus on my material, my creative direction, my proof decision, and my next usable result. Definitions for this exercise: - Flame = the deeper reason, message, burden, hope, problem, sound, story, or purpose behind the work. - Signal = the clear idea another person should understand, feel, remember, or recognize from the work. - Proof = one real output, draft, asset, or decision that can be evaluated. - Proof decision = whether I should keep, refine, rework, or discard this result. - Next-tool input = a cleaner instruction I can use in ChatGPT, Suno, BandLab, Shopify, DistroKid, Canva, or another tool. I am completing Module 3: Build Your First Proof. My starting point is: [music-first / project-first / content-first / brand-first / still exploring] My flame from Module 1 is: [paste flame statement] My signal from Module 2 is: [paste signal blueprint] My proof piece is: [paste song prompt, lyrics, track notes, article outline, product idea, project description, page section, or result] The proof is supposed to show: [paste what this result is supposed to prove] The tool I want to use next is: [ChatGPT / Suno / BandLab / Shopify / DistroKid / Canva / other / not sure] Evaluate this proof using: 1. Does it match the Flame? 2. Does it carry the Signal? 3. Who is it clearly for? 4. What is the strongest part? 5. What is the weakest part? 6. Should I keep, refine, rework, or discard it? 7. What is the next best action? Then give me: 1. A proof decision statement 2. A simple next input for the next tool 3. A shorter version of that input 4. A stronger advanced version of that input 5. A checklist for judging the next result 6. One honest warning about what I should not do next Keep the recommendation practical, beginner-friendly, and focused on helping me develop my own result.What to do after copying this prompt
- Open ChatGPT in a new tab.
- Paste this prompt into the chat box.
- Replace the bracketed sections with your flame, signal, proof piece, proof goal, and next tool.
- Read the response carefully. Do not keep every suggestion.
- Bring the proof decision, strongest part, improvement target, and next-tool input back into this page.
Copy, Paste, and Bring Back
Know what you are copying and what to do with it.
Module 3 is the decision module. Do not paste everything into every tool. Use the right output for the right next step.
| What you have | Where it goes | What it is for | What to bring back |
|---|---|---|---|
| Module 1 Flame Statement | Proof Builder / Required Input | Keeps the proof connected to purpose | A clearer reason for judging the proof |
| Module 2 Signal Statement | Proof Builder / Required Input | Shows what the proof is supposed to carry | A proof decision based on signal fit |
| Proof piece | Required Input box or ChatGPT prompt | The thing being judged | Strongest part, weakest part, and next action |
| Generated proof prompt | ChatGPT | Helps evaluate the proof and make a decision | Proof decision statement and next-tool input |
| Next-tool input | ChatGPT, Suno, BandLab, Shopify, Canva, DistroKid, or another tool | Improves one specific next result | A cleaner proof or clearer next decision |
| Module 3 Summary | PDF Snapshot | Saved proof-decision record | Use it on the completion page |
Build My Proof Input
Turn your proof into usable next-step prompts.
Fill in the required fields first. Then generate copy-ready prompts built from your own flame, signal, proof piece, proof goal, decision, and next-tool target.
Build My Proof actions
My Module 3 Input Summary
This summary is included in your saved PDF. It shows what you gave the tool before asking it to help.
Your Module 3 input summary will appear here after you generate your custom prompts.
Generated Prompt 1: Evaluate My Proof
Use this when you need ChatGPT to evaluate one proof piece against your flame and signal.
What to bring back
- Proof decision statement
- Strongest part
- One improvement target
- Next-tool input
Generated Prompt 2: Refine or Rework
Use this only when the proof is close but needs one controlled improvement.
What to do with the response
- Choose one improvement target only.
- Do not let the response turn into a new project unless rework is the correct decision.
- Save the improvement instruction before using another tool.
Generated Prompt 3: Finish Path Handoff
Use this when you are ready to finish the free path and choose your next route from evidence, not pressure.
What to do with the response
- Summarize your three-module result.
- Choose the next route based on your proof decision.
- Do not jump into a bigger system unless the saved evidence points there.
Generated Prompt 4: Music Proof Improvement
Use this only if your proof is a song, lyric, sound direction, or AI music result.
What to do with the response
- Create one controlled improvement instruction.
- Adapt the instruction for Suno, BandLab, or your music workflow.
- Save the decision before creating more versions.
Workbook
Module 3 Starter Pad
Use this space to collect your flame, signal, proof piece, proof decision, next-tool input, and finish-path summary.
TXT and MD files can load directly into the Proof Input box. For PDFs, open the file, copy the needed text, and paste it manually.
Main actions
Optional copy, save, and download tools
PDF note: fill in the workbook, generate your saved Module 3 Summary, then use browser print to save the page as a personal proof-decision worksheet.
PDF-Ready Snapshot
Create a personal Module 3 proof-decision summary worth saving.
Save this snapshot because it is your first clear record of what you built, what worked, what needs improvement, and what you decided to do next.
Save this PDF as your Module 3 record. It gives you a copy of your Flame Statement, Signal Statement, proof piece, proof decision, next-tool input, generated prompts, and finish-path decision.
Do not treat this PDF as a finished brand document. Treat it as your proof-decision record. You can compare it later against what you build after the free path.
Clean printable preview
This preview is designed to print cleaner than a form field. Generate the summary before saving as PDF.
Your clean printable snapshot will appear here after you click “Generate My Saved Module 3 Summary.”
Snapshot actions
Validation
Before you keep it, test it.
Use this simple validation check before deciding what to do next.
If it does not connect to the deeper reason behind the work, it may be a distraction.
If the audience cannot feel or understand the direction, the signal may need more focus.
If there is no hook, message, feeling, sound, structure, page idea, or proof point worth saving, it may be time to rework or discard.
If you cannot name the next action, pause before generating more versions.
Comment Prompt
Use the comments like a training room.
If comments are enabled and you want feedback, share only the parts you are comfortable making public.
Completion Check
You are ready to finish the free path when you have these six pieces.
Do not finish this path without making a clear decision.
1. One proof piece
A song draft, track version, lyric direction, prompt result, short clip, page section, project concept, or creative asset you can evaluate.
2. One strongest part
A selected strength with a clear reason why it is worth noticing.
3. One improvement target
A specific part of the proof piece that should be improved next.
4. One proof decision
A keep, refine, rework, or discard decision based on direction, not mood.
5. One next action
A clear next step that tells you what to do after finishing the free path.
6. One stronger process
Less random output. More control. Better judgment. Cleaner decisions.
After Module 3
Choose the right next door.
Module 3 gives you the proof decision. These next pages help you close the free path, choose tools, or continue into the deeper music system.
Trust Note
This module gives proof clarity, not false promises.
This module does not promise instant fame, sales, streams, followers, viral reach, placements, sponsorships, or guaranteed results.
It helps you evaluate your own proof piece so your next move is based on direction instead of guessing.
Stay Connected
Want more examples and practical creator guidance?
Join The Righteous Beat if you want ongoing updates, examples, tools, and practical next-step guidance while you continue developing your own ideas.
Free Path Complete
Save your proof decision, then finish the path.
You found the flame, shaped the signal, and made a proof decision.
You did not just collect ideas. You created a working direction and used one proof piece to decide what deserves more time.
The cleanest next step is the completion page. It closes the free path and helps you carry your three outputs forward without drifting back into random generation.