Bee Righteous mascot with video editing setup illustrating audio choices creators make in short-form content

The Audio Choice Most Creators Don’t Realize They’re Making

Gary Whittaker

The Audio Choice Most Creators Don’t Realize They’re Making

Most creators put real thought into what people will see.

The visuals.
The text.
The hook.

Audio usually shows up later.

And when it does, it’s often a quick decision: whatever’s already there, whatever the app suggests, whatever doesn’t slow you down.

Totally normal. Also… kind of a big deal.

Bee Righteous mascot with video editing setup illustrating audio choices creators make in short-form content

Why Audio Feels Like a “Small” Choice (But Isn’t)

For newer creators, audio can feel like background. Just something to fill space.

But sound does more than fill space.

It shapes how your content feels—and that affects how long people stay.

Even when viewers don’t consciously notice the music, they still react to it. It sets the mood without asking permission.

What Happens When Everyone Picks the Default

When creators rely on suggested or built-in audio, a pattern forms fast:

  • different videos start to feel similar
  • different creators start to blur together
  • the message still matters, but the vibe feels… recycled

Not because anyone’s doing it wrong.

It’s just the path of least resistance.

Where AI Music Helps (Especially If You’re New)

AI music isn’t about becoming more technical or turning into a full-time music producer.

For most creators, it does something much simpler:

It saves you from the endless “scroll until something kinda fits” loop.

Instead of hunting for a sound that’s close enough, you can generate music that matches:

  • the mood
  • the pace
  • the tone of what you’re making

It turns audio from a last-minute patch into something that actually supports your content.

The Part That Makes People Pause

Here’s the honest part: a lot of creators like the idea of custom audio… and then hesitate right before publishing.

Usually it’s not creative doubt.

It’s that “Wait—am I allowed to monetize this?” feeling.

And if you’ve ever found yourself opening five tabs, reading five opinions, and somehow feeling more confused than when you started… you’re not alone.


Free Download: AI Music Monetization & Rights Clarity 101 (Suno Edition)

If you want a calm, clear way to understand what actually matters before you publish or monetize anything, I put together a free guide that walks through it without the panic and without the jargon.

Grab the free download here:

https://jackrighteous.com/products/ai-music-monetization-rights-clarity-101-suno


Turning Audio Into Actual Content (Without Overthinking It)

Music doesn’t get discovered on its own.

It gets discovered through video.

And that’s where a simple editing tool makes a huge difference—especially if you’re still building your rhythm as a creator.

CapCut: Where Audio and Video Click Together

CapCut is where a lot of creators already do the work:

  • edit short-form videos
  • add music
  • test timing
  • play with pacing

What makes CapCut so useful is how easy it is to build video around sound instead of forcing sound in at the end.

That means you can:

  • sync visuals to music naturally
  • try a few variations quickly
  • turn one audio idea into multiple posts

CapCut link:

https://capcutaffiliateprogram.pxf.io/Z6eEoX

The Bigger Shift (In Plain English)

You don’t need audio expertise to make better audio choices.

You just need a little intention.

When you stop defaulting and start choosing—even in small ways—your content starts feeling more personal, more memorable, and more “you.”

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