This Is the Build: Jack Righteous Creator System
Gary WhittakerJack Righteous · June Build Report
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Since June 1, I have been building. Not just posting. Not just launching. Not just adding more pages to a website. Building.
That is the point of this update.
AI has made it easier for people to make something. A track. A lyric. A design. A book idea. A product mockup. A page draft. But making something is not the same as building something.
I know that because I am living through the same process I teach.
Jack Righteous is not being built as a pile of AI outputs. It is being built as a system: sound, voice, brand, story, products, training, proof, and commerce all moving in the same direction.
Since June 1, I have been tightening the AI Creator Training Access system, expanding the AI music education side, building the Bee Righteous product branch, launching the first physical products in the Q3 shop buildout, and preparing for a back-to-school market that serious sellers cannot afford to meet late.
This is not a victory lap.
This is a build report from the middle of the work.
```The point
AI Makes Creation Easier. It Does Not Build the System for You.
That is the part too many creators miss. They make the thing, then stare at it like the thing should know what to do next.
A song does not know where it belongs. A graphic does not know who should wear it. A journal does not know who needs it. A product page does not know how to connect itself to a campaign. A story-world does not build its own shop menu.
That work still belongs to the creator.
That is why I am building Jack Righteous in public. I want creators to see the part that usually gets hidden: the rebuilding, the sorting, the page structure, the product decisions, the campaign timing, the internal links, the proof, the documentation, the mistakes, the corrections, and the reason behind each move.
That is why this June matters. I am not only adding content. I am connecting the parts that make the content useful.
```The foundation
The Training System Is Becoming the Center
AI Creator Training Access is becoming the learning layer for the person who already made something and now needs to build it right.
The most important question I keep building around is simple:
That question is where a lot of creators get stuck. They have a song, a product idea, a story concept, a visual, or a draft. But they do not know how to turn it into a path.
That is what the training system is being shaped to answer.
Find Your Sound
This is where the AI music work lives: Suno, song planning, prompt control, lyrics, workflow, release thinking, documentation, and deciding whether a song is worth finishing.
The purpose: stop treating AI music like a slot machine and start treating it like a creative process.
Find Your Voice
This is where message, writing, storytelling, voice tools, scripts, character development, and communication come together. ElevenLabs now belongs in this lane because voice is part of the creator system.
The purpose: help creators sound like someone people can recognize.
Find Your Brand
This is where the work becomes visible: product pages, Shopify, offers, visuals, product collections, SEO, AI SEO, shop structure, and campaign planning.
The purpose: turn attention into a path people can follow.
That is why the system matters. It is not about giving creators more random prompts. It is about helping them understand what stage they are in and what needs to be built next.
Jack Righteous is being built for the creator who is past the “look what AI made” stage.
It is for the creator asking what to name, document, improve, publish, sell, protect, and build around.
The market
AI Music Is Growing. That Does Not Mean Every Creator Is Building.
The market is moving fast, but speed alone does not create trust. More uploads do not automatically create better songs, better brands, or better businesses.
Suno announced more than $400 million in Series D funding at a $5.4 billion post-money valuation. That is a major signal. AI music is no longer a side conversation. The tools are being funded, used, judged, challenged, and watched.
But the other side of the story matters too.
Deezer reported that fully AI-generated tracks now represent about 44% of new daily uploads to its platform, nearly 75,000 tracks per day. At the same time, Deezer said those tracks account for only 1% to 3% of total streams, with a large share of those streams detected as fraudulent and demonetized.
This is why I do not teach AI music like the goal is to flood platforms with more tracks. That is not the path.
The better path is harder, but it is also more serious:
- Plan the song before you generate it.
- Know why the song should exist.
- Track the prompt, versions, edits, and decisions.
- Document the human contribution.
- Understand platform risk before release.
- Build a brand around the music instead of only chasing uploads.
That is where the June AI music content has been going. Not just “how to prompt.” Not just “how to make a song.” The stronger question is: can you make something worth finishing, documenting, releasing, defending, and building around?
AI music is growing fast, but creator success will not come from more output alone.
It will come from better judgment, better systems, better proof, and better connection between the music and the brand.
The content shift
The June Articles Were Not Random. They Were Building Blocks.
The articles published since June 1 are part of the structure. Each one supports a different stage of the creator journey.
Prompting and Sound Control
Better Suno prompts, Prompt Sound Engineering, avoiding random tags, and understanding why AI songs can sound generic.
Why it matters: creators need control, not just luck.
Song Planning and Completion
Planning before prompting, using a song workflow, and finishing one track without wasting generations.
Why it matters: unfinished output does not build momentum.
Rights and Release Safety
AI music rights, DistroKid warnings, distribution rules, platform risks, and documentation habits.
Why it matters: serious creators need to be prepared before a problem appears.
Creator Commerce
Q3 planning, product campaigns, shop structure, AI SEO, affiliate paths, and owned-platform thinking.
Why it matters: creators need a path from attention to action.
This is why I call it a build. The articles are not isolated posts. They are supports. They point back to the same question: what does the creator need next?
```The story-world
Bee Righteous Is Not Just a Mascot
Bee Righteous is becoming one of the clearest examples of how story, faith, product, and creator commerce can connect.
I do not want Bee Righteous to be treated like a random graphic slapped on a product.
That would be easy. It would also be weak.
Bee Righteous is being built as part of a larger world: Christian storytelling, family-friendly products, children’s book development, faithwear, youth identity, courage, truth, liberty, discipline, and righteousness.
That matters because a product is stronger when it belongs to something. A shirt can carry a message. A hoodie can carry identity. A journal can support a creative habit. A children’s book can open a story-world. A shop collection can become a path into the larger brand.
That is the direction of Bee Righteous. Not random merch. Not throwaway graphics. A growing branch of the Jack Righteous universe that can speak to families, creators, believers, students, and people who want more meaning in what they wear, use, and support.
```The first product set
The First Five Products Are the Beginning of the Shop Buildout
These are the first five physical products in the current Q3 product buildout. They are not the final catalog. They are the first pieces of the structure.
Songwriting Journal
For lyrics, hooks, prompts, song ideas, and the creator who needs to capture the idea before it disappears.
Kids ‘Bee Righteous’ Liberty Graphic Tee
For families who want children wearing something with meaning, courage, faith, and character.
Bee Righteous Gold Bee Hoodie
For the Bee Righteous identity becoming wearable, especially as fall, school, church, and youth events return.
Walk in Truth Christian Bee Tee
For adults who want faithwear rooted in integrity, truth, and public identity.
Holy Spirit Flame T-Shirt
For a bolder Christian message: no fear, all fire, and a public declaration of faith.
I started with these because they create the first shape of the store. A journal for creators. A kids tee for families. A hoodie for the Bee Righteous identity. Two faithwear tees for adult believers and Christian creators.
That gives the shop a structure to build from.
More products are coming. Desk and workspace products are part of the next layer. More Bee Righteous items are coming. More faithwear is coming. The shop menu will also be updated so people can browse by purpose, not just by product type.
This is not about throwing products into a store.
It is about building a product system that makes sense for the brand, the audience, the season, and the campaign.
The business lesson
Physical Products Belong in the Creator System
A creator brand should not stay trapped on a screen. Some messages are meant to be worn, used, gifted, written in, and seen.
That is why physical products matter in this build.
Jack Righteous started with AI music, training, writing, and creator systems. But a brand becomes more real when people can interact with it in daily life.
A songwriting journal can sit on the desk while the next track is being planned. A hoodie can be worn to church, a youth event, a studio session, or a late-night creative block. A Bee Righteous tee can let a child wear something that points toward courage and truth. A faithwear shirt can say what someone believes without needing a long explanation.
The business market supports this direction too. Print-on-demand is growing because creators, writers, artists, and entrepreneurs can test products without carrying large inventory. Grand View Research projects the global print-on-demand market to reach $57.49 billion by 2033, with demand supported by personalized products and custom apparel.
But the lesson is not “make everything.”
That is the standard I want my readers to understand. A creator does not need a hundred random products. A creator needs the right first products, the right product pages, the right collection structure, and the right campaign timing.
```The Q3 setup
Q3 Starts Before the Buyer Arrives
This is where the product work connects to the next campaign. Back-to-school does not begin when school starts. By then, many buyers are already moving.
One reason I am setting this up now is timing.
The National Retail Federation reported that 67% of back-to-school shoppers had already started purchasing by early July 2025. Deloitte’s 2025 back-to-school research showed parents were planning around July promotions, with clothing and accessories expected to rise and many parents open to a first-day-of-school outfit splurge. In Canada, Retail Council of Canada found that many shoppers plan purchases two to four weeks before school starts, with clothing among the top categories.
That matters for e-commerce sellers.
If you wait until August to decide what you sell, write your product pages, organize your shop menu, build your collection pages, set your internal links, and plan your email campaign, you are already behind.
That is why these first products matter now. The journal, kids tee, hoodie, and faithwear pieces connect naturally to the season:
- Students entering a new school year.
- Parents looking for meaningful clothing.
- Christian families looking for positive products.
- Young creators setting up a desk or routine.
- Homeschool families preparing for a new year.
- Youth groups and church communities returning to fall activity.
- AI music creators needing a place to plan lyrics, hooks, prompts, and songs.
This article is the build report. The next article will go deeper into the Q3 campaign strategy and why creators and e-commerce sellers should plan before the market fully engages.
The point is not panic.
The point is preparation. Serious sellers do not wait for the rush to begin before they build the road buyers are supposed to follow.
SEO and AI SEO
A Confused Store Does Not Become Easier to Find Just Because AI Exists
This is why product clarity matters before the campaign. Search engines, AI tools, and buyers all need the store to make sense.
AI SEO is not magic.
It starts with clear product information. What is the product? Who is it for? When would someone use it? Why does it belong in this collection? Is it a gift? Is it for back-to-school? Is it for creators? Is it for faithwear? Is it for youth groups? Is it for a desk setup?
Google’s own product guidance points in the same direction. Rich product pages should give accurate and complete information so shoppers can identify the right product, feel confident, and trust the purchase. Product structured data can also help eligible product pages appear in richer search experiences with details like price, availability, shipping, returns, and reviews.
That is why I am not only adding products. I am preparing the structure around them.
What the Product Page Needs
- Clear product title.
- Strong first paragraph.
- Buyer use cases.
- Seasonal relevance.
- Size and variant clarity.
- Shipping and return clarity.
What the Store Needs
- Collection links.
- Updated shop menu.
- Related products.
- Image alt text.
- Campaign articles.
- Internal links between products and content.
That is why the shop menu will be updated as more products are added. The store needs to become easier for humans, search engines, and AI tools to understand.
A good product deserves a good page. A good page deserves a clear collection. A clear collection deserves a campaign. A campaign deserves timing.
That is the work.
```The June build map
What Has Been Taking Shape Since June 1
Instead of treating this as a diary, the better way to understand the month is by what each part is building toward.
AI Creator Training Access became clearer.
The system is being shaped around Sound, Voice, and Brand so creators have a path after they make something with AI.
The AI music content became more serious.
The focus moved beyond prompting into planning, finishing, rights, documentation, distribution, and release discipline.
Voice tools became part of the larger creator path.
ElevenLabs and voice development fit the Find Your Voice lane because creators need more than sound. They need message, narration, story, and communication.
The first five physical products launched in the Q3 shop buildout.
The product set gives the store a starting structure: journal, kids tee, Bee Righteous hoodie, Walk in Truth tee, and Holy Spirit Flame tee.
The story-world started becoming visible through products.
Bee Righteous is being developed as more than a mascot. It is a faith, family, story, and product branch inside the larger Jack Righteous direction.
The back-to-school campaign setup began before the rush.
This is the e-commerce lesson: product pages, shop menus, SEO, AI SEO, and campaign links need to exist before shoppers are already deciding.
The creator lesson
This Is Why I Am Showing the Work
I am not showing this because every part is finished. I am showing it because the unfinished middle is where creators learn the most.
Too many people only show the polished launch.
They do not show the messy middle. They do not show the rebuilt page. They do not show the product that made them rethink the menu. They do not show the article that had the facts but no soul. They do not show the part where the idea had to become a system.
But that is the part creators need to see.
Because if you are building with AI, you are going to face the same problem. You will be able to make more than you know how to organize. You will have ideas before you have structure. You will have outputs before you have a campaign. You will have products before you have a shop path. You will have content before you have a conversion plan.
That does not mean you failed.
It means you are at the part where the real build starts.
Weak Creator Question
- What can I make today?
- What can I post today?
- What product can I throw up next?
- What prompt gives me a quick result?
Better Creator Question
- What system am I building?
- What proof do I need?
- What product fits my audience?
- What season is coming?
- What path should a visitor follow?
That is the mindset behind Jack Righteous now.
Make the thing. Name the thing. Document the thing. Build the page. Create the product. Link the offer. Plan the campaign. Improve the system.
Then keep going.
```Where to go next
Start Where You Are in the Build
Not every creator needs the same next step. The right path depends on where you are stuck.
If You Are New
Start with the free and beginner-friendly content. Get the basics before trying to build the full system.
Explore Free ResourcesIf You Need Structure
Use AI Creator Training Access if you have made something with AI and need a clearer path for what comes next.
Start AI Creator Training AccessIf You Need One Specific Fix
Use the $5 starter guides when you need focused help on one part of the creator system.
View $5 Starter GuidesIf You Want the Product Side
Visit the shop and follow the first Q3 product drops as the product system and menu expand.
Visit the ShopThe close
This Is the Build
```Since June 1, the work has been about building the next version of Jack Righteous.
The pieces are becoming clearer: AI music, voice, brand, story, Bee Righteous, physical products, shop structure, SEO, AI SEO, and Q3 campaign planning.
More products are coming. The shop menu will be updated. The training paths will keep improving. Bee Righteous will keep growing. The Q3 campaign will move from setup into action.
I am not doing this because everything is already finished.
I am doing this because this is what real building looks like before the finished version appears.
This is not just a June update. This is the start of the next build.
```Research Notes
```This article uses public market signals from Suno, Deezer, Grand View Research, NRF, Deloitte, Retail Council of Canada, and Google product documentation to support the points about AI music growth, AI upload volume, print-on-demand growth, back-to-school timing, and product-page clarity.
- Suno: The Next Chapter for Suno
- Deezer: AI-generated tracks now represent 44% of all new uploaded music
- Grand View Research: Print On Demand Market To Reach $57.49 Billion By 2033
- NRF: Back-to-School Season Begins Early for Majority of Shoppers
- Deloitte: 2025 Back-to-School Survey
- Retail Council of Canada: Back-to-School 2024 Shopping in Canada
- Google Merchant Center: Create rich product description pages
- Google Search Central: Merchant listing structured data