Three Questions to Ask Before You Share Something You Made With AI | Jack Righteous

Gary Whittaker

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AI Direction Check

Three Questions to Ask Before You Share Something You Made With AI

Before you post the song, image, video, story, page, or idea, slow down long enough to make sure people will understand what they are seeing and what they can do next.

This article is written for all levels. You do not need to know technical terms, run a business, or already have a large audience. The goal is to help you choose a clear next step.

In plain English

Reader

people who made something with AI and are wondering whether it is ready to share

Plain promise

answer three plain questions before you send your work into the world

Best use

Publish as a standalone public article. It should help even if the reader never clicks an affiliate link.

Why this matters

Before you post the song, image, video, story, page, or idea, slow down long enough to make sure people will understand what they are seeing and what they can do next.

The common mistake is moving too fast after the first exciting result. A better path is to slow down, name what you made, decide who it helps, and give people one clear next step.

Question 1: What did I actually make?

Name the thing clearly. Is it a song, a story, a message, a test, a memory, a guide, a first version, or a finished project? If you cannot explain it in one sentence, the audience will probably feel lost too.

Write the answer down before you post. If the answer feels unclear, the work may need one more pass before it goes public.

Question 2: Who is this for?

A work can be personal and still have an audience. Decide if it is for family, friends, listeners, readers, customers, students, supporters, or just yourself for now.

Write the answer down before you post. If the answer feels unclear, the work may need one more pass before it goes public.

Question 3: What should someone do after seeing it?

The next step may be simple: listen, read, comment, sign up, save it, share it, or follow the next update. Without a next step, attention disappears quickly.

Write the answer down before you post. If the answer feels unclear, the work may need one more pass before it goes public.

Simple checklist before you publish this kind of work

  • Can someone understand what this is in one sentence?
  • Does the page, post, song, image, or offer have one clear purpose?
  • Is the next step easy to find?
  • If an affiliate link is used, is it clearly disclosed?
  • Have you avoided promises you cannot guarantee?
Jack Righteous rule: help first, sell second. The article should still be useful if the reader ignores every link.

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Helpful next reads on JackRighteous.com

Use these only where they fit the reader’s next step. Do not overload the article with too many choices.

Best next step

If this article helped you see the next move more clearly, start small. Choose one idea, one page, one song, one release, or one learning step. Do not try to fix everything today.

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