Feel ready before you hit record
Know what to say, who's speaking, how names are pronounced, and which notes matter — before you hit record.
A common prep risk for unfamiliar names and terms.
Keep pronunciations available before you record
Build your pronunciation guide as you read. Each entry follows you through the entire book, so tricky names and terms are easier to check before a section.
Highlight to add
Spot an unfamiliar name while reading? Add it to your guide without breaking your flow or opening a separate notes file.
Audio references
Record or upload a pronunciation reference so you hear the author-approved pronunciation before you hit the line — not after you flub it.
Inline markers
Pronunciation notes appear right where you need them in the script, keeping the guide close to the section you are preparing.
Shared across the book
Add a pronunciation once and it carries through every chapter, keeping repeated names and terms consistent across prep.
A place where many narrators want clearer references.
Keep character voice choices easy to revisit
Build a voice profile for each character and check it before a scene, so your voice choices stay visible while you prepare.
Voice profiles
Save a clear reference for each character before a scene, including notes and clips you can revisit during prep.
Quick reference playback
Replay the voice you chose before a character returns chapters later — in one click, without digging through unrelated notes.
Voice comparison
As you add references, compare character choices side by side so distinctions are easier to track.
Organized by book
Each project keeps its own character voices, helping separate the choices for one title from another.
One structured pass keeps prep from scattering across files.
Prep in one place, use it through the whole book
Mark speakers, add delivery cues, and capture notes as you read. Everything stays with the script for later review.
Narration Scripts
See your script with speaker marks, cues, and notes inline, keeping your prep connected to the text.
Speaker Attribution
Speaker labels stay with dialogue lines, helping you prepare for whose voice comes next.
Section Notes & Delivery Cues
Drop performance reminders right next to the lines they apply to — so you don't lose a great idea between prep and the mic.
Context Ranges
Flag flashbacks, time jumps, or tonal shifts before recording, so scene context stays visible in the script.
Production stays organized when every chapter has a clear status.
Track your progress chapter by chapter
See where every chapter stands — from first read to final review. Mark status, manage pickups, and keep your production organized.
Chapter status tracking
See which chapters are prepped, recorded, or still ready for review at a glance.
Pickup management
Flag pickups on the sections that need them and check them off as you go.
Production overview
See your whole book's progress in one view so session planning has clearer context.
Bring in collaborators when you're ready
Most narrators work solo — and that's exactly how this is built. But when a rights holder asks to hear progress or an editor needs access, you won't have to figure out how to share. It's already set up.
Seat-based permissions
No scrambling when someone asks for access — invite a rights holder or editor with the right permissions already in place, so they see only what they need.
Shared section notes
No separate email thread to track feedback — notes live on the sections they apply to, so nothing gets lost between conversations.
Project organization
Each audiobook keeps its own characters, pronunciations, scripts, and production workflow in one private project. Your scripts and manuscripts stay inside your workspace and are not used beyond it.
Start prepping your first book
Upload a manuscript and start prepping with the first-audiobook offer. No complicated setup, no studio hardware required.
Start with guided project setup