Feature · Built-in teleprompter

Built-in Teleprompter

Record from bullet points or a script so you stay on message - then tighten the clip by editing the words.

The built-in teleprompter helps you stay on message while you record. Use bullet points when you want natural delivery, or a script when you need precise wording.

Then do what SpeechCut does best: tighten the clip by editing the words in the transcript.

  • Record from bullet points or a full script
  • Keep going through small stumbles (no more endless retakes)
  • Edit by transcript after recording to remove mistakes and tangents

A repeatable recording workflow

The best “teleprompter” is the one that gets you to publish. Keep it simple: outline → record → edit by words.

1

Write bullet points

Start with 3–5 bullets: hook, point, example, close.

2

Record in one take

Talk naturally. Don’t stop for small stumbles.

3

Tighten by transcript

Cut mistakes, tangents, and filler by editing the words.

4

Add simple finishing

Optional captions, music, and quick polish.

Teleprompter screenshot

Tip: a short outline beats perfectionism. You can refine after you record.

Proof (what to expect)

A teleprompter workflow helps you record faster and stay on message.

More clarity

You hit the point earlier and cleaner.

Fewer retakes

You can keep going through stumbles.

More output

A repeatable workflow you can do every week.

Realistic caveat: reading word-for-word can sound stiff. For most short clips, bullet points are the sweet spot.

FAQ

Should I use bullet points or a script?

Bullet points are great for natural delivery. Scripts are best when accuracy matters (names, numbers, exact wording).

What if I mess up while recording?

Keep going. SpeechCut is designed for transcript-based cleanup after you record.

What platforms does SpeechCut support?

Android is available now. iOS is planned (waitlist).

Related features

Teleprompter is the start. Editing and finishing come next.

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Record with more confidence

Stay on message while you record, then tighten the clip by editing the words.