How to Create a Video Script by Dictating (No Typing Required)
You open a blank doc. The cursor blinks. You type two sentences, delete them, rewrite, delete again. Fifteen minutes later, the page is still empty and the idea that was crystal clear in your head has turned into fog.
The problem isn’t a lack of material. It’s the bottleneck between thinking and typing. You think way faster than you write — and in that gap, good ideas escape before they become text.
The most natural solution is speaking. When you explain a topic to someone, the reasoning flows. Structure emerges on its own. Transitions come effortlessly. That’s exactly what Sintesy does: you speak and it turns your words into an organized script.
Why dictating beats typing
Think about the last time you explained something to a friend. You probably:
- Started with a natural hook
- Organized your points in the right order
- Ended with a clear conclusion
All of that happened without planning. Your voice already carries rhythm, emphasis, and progression — the exact elements a good script needs. When you dictate, you’re using the same engine you’d use to record the final video. The script already sounds conversational.
On the other hand, typed text tends to sound formal, stiff, full of sentences no one would say out loud. Then you still have to rewrite half of it to sound natural on camera. Double the work.
How Sintesy turns speech into a script
The workflow is straightforward:
1. Record your audio
Open Sintesy and start talking about your video topic. You don’t need a prior script. Just say everything you want to cover — intro, key points, examples, closing. Speak as if you were explaining it to a real person.
2. Let AI analyze it
When you finish recording, click generate. Sintesy processes the audio and identifies the natural structure of your speech: where each topic begins, where you introduce an example, where you transition to the next point.
3. Get your script
The result is a document organized by topics, in chronological order. Each script section corresponds to a block of your speech — already separated, already titled, ready to read on camera or tweak with quick edits.
You don’t have to edit raw transcripts. You don’t have to copy and paste chunks. Sintesy delivers the structure ready, with the logical progression you dictated.
What the generated script includes
After analysis, you get:
- Numbered topics — each video block becomes a clear section
- Chronological order — exactly in the sequence you spoke
- Highlighted sections — intro, body, examples, and closing are visually distinct
- Camera-ready text — no filler words, no repetitions, no irrelevant tangents
It’s a script you can open and follow when you hit record. If you want to tweak a section, edit the text directly — but the foundation is already complete.
What types of videos this works for
Sintesy works for any format where you know the content and need structure:
| Video type | How to use it |
|---|---|
| Tutorial | Dictate the full step-by-step. Sintesy organizes each step as a topic. |
| Vlog / opinion | Speak your main arguments. The script comes out with a clear beginning, middle, and end. |
| Educational video | Explain the lesson content. Each concept becomes a section. |
| Review | Describe the pros and cons. Sintesy separates strengths, weaknesses, and verdict. |
| Storytime | Tell the story in natural order. The script preserves the chronology. |
| Sales video | Present the problem, solution, and benefits. The pitch structure emerges on its own. |
In every case, the heavy lifting — organizing speech chaos into something that makes sense to a viewer — is handled by Sintesy.
How to get started now
- Go to Sintesy on your browser or download the app
- Pick a video topic you already know well
- Record 3 to 10 minutes of audio talking about it — don’t worry about order
- Click generate and watch the structured script appear
- Tweak what you want and record your video
The time from opening the app to having a ready script is around 5 minutes — including the audio recording. That’s faster than writing an intro by hand.
Writing a script doesn’t have to be the slowest part of video production. The more natural the process of getting ideas out of your head, the better the final result. Sintesy removes the bottleneck between thinking and publishing.


