I haven’t really estimated how long it would take to have a transcript with speech-to-text + minor corrections,—that’s definitely on the roadmap.
FWIW: you can pay $1.25 per recorded minute to get rev.com to produce a somewhat inaccurate transcript in 2 days. It then takes me about 2x the length of the recorded audio to fix errors in that transcription. It’s kind of a pain in the ass, but worth it if a big chunk of your audience doesn’t listen to audio.
Note that the amount of manual fixing depends on the accent of the speaker. The 2x estimate comes from me interviewing someone with a foreign accent, I think for native speakers with standard accents it gets closer to 1x.
FWIW: you can pay $1.25 per recorded minute to get rev.com to produce a somewhat inaccurate transcript in 2 days. It then takes me about 2x the length of the recorded audio to fix errors in that transcription. It’s kind of a pain in the ass, but worth it if a big chunk of your audience doesn’t listen to audio.
[EDIT: changed the thing I was responding to]
Note that the amount of manual fixing depends on the accent of the speaker. The 2x estimate comes from me interviewing someone with a foreign accent, I think for native speakers with standard accents it gets closer to 1x.
Thanks for all of those tips. I’ll definitely try rev!
CastingWords at least used to be accurate (the one time I used them, I don’t recall the transcript having had any flaws).
Ace I’ll try that too, thanks!