Before You Create It: Why the ABCs Matter in the AI Era
Gary WhittakerBefore You Create It • The ABCs Series
AI made it easier to create music, books, products, content, and brands. But before you ask AI to build something, you still need to understand what you are trying to create, who it is for, and what makes it worth building.
AI made it easier to create.
That part is real.
You can open a tool today and generate a song idea, a book outline, a product concept, a blog post, a sales page, a logo, a video script, a course plan, or a full content calendar faster than most people could have imagined a few years ago.
That is powerful.
But it also creates a new problem.
A lot of people are now creating before they understand what they are creating.
That Is Where Many AI Creators Get Stuck
Not because they are lazy.
Not because they lack ideas.
Not because the tools failed them.
They get stuck because AI can help produce the thing, but it cannot fully replace the human responsibility to understand the thing.
AI made it possible. The ABCs help make it useful.
Why This Series Exists
This series is built around a simple idea:
Before you create it with AI, learn the ABCs of what you are trying to create.
That does not mean you need to become an expert before you begin.
It does not mean you need a degree, a studio, a publishing team, a design agency, or a large budget.
It means you need enough understanding to make better decisions.
Enough to know what you are asking for.
Enough to know whether the output is working.
Enough to improve the result instead of starting over every time.
That is the gap this series is meant to fill.
A lot of AI education starts with the tool.
This series starts with the creator.
Because the tool matters, but the creator still has to aim it.
The Big Mistake: Starting With Output
The most common mistake in the AI era is starting with output.
Someone wants a song, so they ask AI for a song.
Someone wants a book, so they ask AI for a book.
Someone wants a brand, so they ask AI for a logo and a slogan.
Someone wants a product, so they ask AI for a PDF or a template.
That can produce something.
But something is not the same as something useful.
Creation is not only about making an asset. Creation is about making something that has purpose, direction, and a reason to exist.
AI can help you move faster, but speed can also make weak foundations easier to ignore.
That is why creators need a basic check before they build.
The Universal ABC Framework
For this series, the starting framework is simple:
Aim
Define what you are trying to make, who it is for, and what it should do.
Build
Choose the structure, parts, format, and path that support the aim.
Check
Review the work against the original purpose before you call it finished.
These three words can apply to almost anything you create with AI. They are not complicated. That is the point. They are meant to slow you down just enough to stop wasting time.
A = Aim
Before you create, define the aim.
What are you trying to make?
Who is it for?
What should it help them understand, feel, do, believe, try, buy, share, or remember?
Without aim, AI output can become random. It may look polished. It may sound impressive. It may feel productive. But it may not actually serve the thing you need.
Aim gives the work direction.
The aim might be to help listeners feel courage after a hard season.
The aim might be to help beginners understand how AI changes the way serious people build.
The aim might be to help a creator solve one specific problem faster.
The aim might be to make your message easier to recognize, trust, and return to.
Aim is not decoration. Aim is the reason the work exists.
Before you ask AI to create anything, ask: What is this supposed to do?
B = Build
Once the aim is clear, you can build with more focus.
Build means choosing the structure, parts, format, and path that support the aim.
This is where many creators confuse activity with progress.
They keep adding more.
But more is not always better. Better is better.
Build asks: What does this need in order to work?
A song may need a strong chorus, a clear emotional arc, and a better vocal direction.
A book may need a tighter argument, chapter flow, and examples that support the reader.
A product may need a clearer promise, better instructions, and a delivery format that is easy to use.
A brand may need a home base, a repeatable message, and proof that the creator is serious.
The build stage is where AI can be very helpful.
But AI works better when it is building toward something specific.
If the aim is unclear, the build gets messy.
If the aim is clear, the build becomes more useful.
C = Check
After you create something, you need to check it.
This is where serious creators separate themselves from casual output generators.
The first version is rarely the final version.
That does not mean the first version is bad. It means creation is a process.
Check means reviewing the work against the aim.
This matters because AI can produce confident work that still misses the point.
It can sound polished while being unclear.
It can produce a lot of words without saying enough.
It can generate a song that sounds good but does not fit the intended message.
It can create a product that looks complete but does not solve a real buyer problem.
Checking is not negativity. Checking is stewardship.
It is how you take responsibility for the thing you are putting into the world.
Why the ABCs Matter More Now
Before AI, many people were blocked by access.
They did not have the budget.
They did not have the tools.
They did not have the team.
They did not know where to start.
Now, many of those barriers are lower.
That is a good thing.
But lower barriers create a new challenge.
When everyone can create faster, the real difference becomes clarity.
This is why the ABCs matter.
They are not meant to slow you down forever.
They are meant to stop you from rushing in the wrong direction.
AI makes output easier. The ABCs help make creation more intentional.
A Practical Example
Imagine someone wants to create an AI music track.
“Make me a gospel reggae song.”
That might generate something interesting. But it does not give enough direction.
A better ABC approach would begin like this:
I want to create a gospel-reggae song for listeners who feel tired but still want to keep their faith and energy alive.
The song should have a warm reggae groove, a memorable chorus, hopeful lyrics, and a structure that builds from personal struggle into public praise.
After generating the song, I will review whether the chorus is clear, whether the vocal delivery fits the message, whether the lyrics feel believable, and whether the track feels strong enough to share or needs revision.
That is already a better creative brief.
Not because it is complicated.
Because it gives the AI something real to work with.
The Same Pattern Works for a Book
“Write me a book about AI.”
I want to write a beginner-friendly book explaining that AI does not replace the work; it changes what serious people can build.
The book should include a clear argument, practical examples, warnings against hype, and a structure that helps readers move from confusion to action.
I will review whether each chapter supports the main argument, whether the language is clear, and whether the book gives readers a useful next step.
That is the difference. AI can still help. But now the creator is leading.
The Creator Still Matters
There is a dangerous myth in the AI era.
The myth says that because AI can generate content, the creator matters less.
I believe the opposite is true.
The creator matters more.
AI can give you drafts, options, concepts, outlines, versions, and starting points. But you still have to decide what is worth building.
That is why this series is not just about tools.
It is about readiness.
That is the real question.
Where Core Squared Fits
The ABCs help you understand what you are creating.
Core Squared helps you execute.
The basic idea is simple:
One Hour
Start with a focused work block you can actually repeat.
Four Days
Use four weekly sessions to create, review, improve, and move forward.
Repeat
Turn scattered output into a pattern of progress.
That matters because many creators do not fail from lack of ideas. They fail because they keep restarting.
They create one thing, get excited, lose focus, start another thing, then wonder why nothing is building into anything.
The ABCs are the preparation. Core Squared is the practice.
Then you enter the work cycle.
That is how a random idea starts becoming an asset.
What Comes Next in This Series
This first article introduces the foundation.
The next articles will apply the ABCs to specific creator goals.
Each article will stay practical.
Not theory for the sake of theory.
Not hype.
Not empty motivation.
The goal is to help you understand what you are building before you ask AI to build it with you.
A Starter Prompt You Can Use
Use this prompt before starting your next AI-assisted project:
I want to create [describe what you want to create]. Before helping me generate it, help me clarify the ABCs first. Ask me questions about my Aim, Build, and Check process. Then turn my answers into a simple creative brief I can use before generating the first version.
You can use that for a song, book, article, product, brand concept, video, course, or sales page.
The point is not to make the process complicated.
The point is to stop creating blindly.
Final Thought
AI made it possible for more people to create.
That is a major shift.
But possibility is not the same as readiness.
And output is not the same as ownership.
If you want to create something that matters, start with the ABCs.
That is how you begin turning AI-assisted creation into something useful, clear, and worth building around.
