Timestamped clip candidates
A shortlist of promising moments pulled from the transcript with exact time ranges.
Use the transcript to surface clip-worthy moments, exact timestamps, and reusable titles instead of scrubbing manually through a full episode or webinar.
Useful when one long recording needs many short-form outputs.
Audio, video, interviews, calls, podcasts, webinars, or internal meetings.
Generate structured outputs without losing alignment to what was actually said.
Summaries, notes, blog drafts, social posts, cleaned transcripts, clips, and translations.
The challenge with podcasts, webinars, interviews, and long videos is rarely a lack of good moments. The challenge is locating them, naming them, and turning them into a repeatable short-form workflow before the team moves on.
A shortlist of promising moments pulled from the transcript with exact time ranges.
Working titles that make review and publishing faster.
Context on why a segment is likely to work as a standalone clip.
Spend time reviewing a shortlist instead of searching the full recording from scratch.
Turn a single source into many clip opportunities for distribution.
The best version of this page shows that the output helps editors decide faster, not just generates generic timestamps.
Start with a podcast, webinar, interview, meeting, or video file.
Use the transcript as the map for the rest of the workflow.
Surface the segments most likely to work as clips, along with timestamps and title ideas.
Use the suggested moments to speed up clipping, editing, and distribution.
The transcript gives this workflow more structure than clip hunting from playback alone.
Use the spoken content as searchable source material for finding moments faster.
A list of time ranges is more useful when it also explains why a moment matters.
The workflow helps teams turn one recording into many assets instead of clipping opportunistically.
See the full recording-to-output workflow and choose the best next step before opening the tool.
Best for podcasters, producers, and interview shows that need clean notes, timestamps, and promotion-ready copy.
Best for team leads, project managers, and client-facing teams that need decisions and action items from recorded calls.
Best for marketers, founders, and editorial teams turning webinars, interviews, and podcasts into publishable articles.
Best for managers, researchers, and client teams that need fast recaps, detailed summaries, and key takeaways from long recordings.
Best for editors, podcasters, researchers, and support teams that need a cleaner transcript before sharing or repurposing it.
Best for marketers, founders, and creator teams repurposing recordings into LinkedIn posts, X threads, captions, and title/description copy.
Best for multilingual teams, agencies, educators, and creators that need transcript translation and subtitle-ready outputs.
Start with transcription, then use the transcript to surface the moments most worth editing and distributing.
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