Plain-English voice direction

Tell the AI voice what you want in normal language.

ScriptTone lets creators guide AI narration with plain-English instructions like warm, reflective, calmer, more curious, or slower for the reveal. No tag syntax required to shape voiceover performance.

Accessible control
No tag language

Creators can describe the read the way they would brief a narrator.

Faster iteration
Change the note

Adjust tone and pacing through creative direction instead of rebuilding markup.

Better fit
Script-aware reads

Direction can match the purpose of a section: hook, lesson, reveal, recap, or CTA.

Feature demo

Product claims need an audio receipt.

Each feature page has a planned demo slot so we can replace claims with proof as audio assets are generated.

Natural language prompting

Plain-English Direction Demo

Voice: To be selected · 60-90 sec prompt demo slot

Demo planned
Needed file

/audio-demos/features/plain-english-voice-direction-demo.mp3

Direction brief

"Create three quick takes from the same sentence using plain-English notes: calm documentary, patient instructor, and polished product explainer."

Placeholder for a demo showing how simple voice direction changes the read.

Why it matters

Most creators do not think in SSML. They think in creative notes.

A creator knows when a line should feel warmer, calmer, sharper, or more reflective. ScriptTone is designed to accept that kind of instruction directly.

SSML and tag systems can slow creative iteration.

Sliders often miss the actual performance note.

Different script sections need different direction.

Plain language makes voiceover control accessible to more creators.

Workflow

How creators use it.

01

Write the note

Describe the desired tone, pace, emotion, and context in ordinary language.

02

Preview

Generate a short take to test whether the voice understood the note.

03

Refine

Ask for more warmth, less drama, slower pacing, clearer emphasis, or a different mood.

04

Reuse

Carry the successful direction into longer scripts or repeatable workflows.

Examples

The feature becomes useful when the examples are specific.

Prompt

"Sound more reflective here, like the narrator is realizing something important."

Good for story and documentary turns.

Prompt

"Make this explanation slower and clearer for beginners."

Fits courses, tutorials, and training.

Prompt

"Give the intro more curiosity, but do not make it sound clickbaity."

Useful for faceless YouTube hooks.

Prompt

"Make the product read polished and premium, but still human."

Works for agency and SaaS demos.

Outcomes

What this changes in the creator workflow.

Less syntax

Use creative language instead of production markup.

More natural revisions

Change the read the same way you would direct a person.

Better previews

Test the performance before rendering long audio.

Reusable style

Turn good direction into repeatable creator workflows.

FAQ

Feature questions.

Can I direct AI voiceover without SSML?+

Yes. ScriptTone is built for plain-English voice direction, so you can describe tone, pacing, emotion, and scene context in normal language.

What are AI voiceover prompts?+

AI voiceover prompts are instructions that describe how the voice should perform the script, such as calm, confident, intimate, slower, or more documentary-like.

Is plain-English direction easier than tags?+

For many creators, yes. Plain-English direction lets you describe the performance instead of learning platform-specific syntax.

Can I reuse a voice direction?+

Yes. Once you find a direction that fits a workflow, you can reuse it for similar scripts and projects.

Ready?

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