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.
Write bullet points
Start with 3–5 bullets: hook, point, example, close.
Record in one take
Talk naturally. Don’t stop for small stumbles.
Tighten by transcript
Cut mistakes, tangents, and filler by editing the words.
Add simple finishing
Optional captions, music, and quick polish.
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.
Record with more confidence
Stay on message while you record, then tighten the clip by editing the words.