Can't type fast enough during lectures? Record voice memos of key points and get organized study notes, essay outlines, and revision summaries — right in WhatsApp.
Try Free on WhatsAppBetween lectures, group work, and assignments, capturing everything in writing feels impossible.
Can't type fast enough during lectures — key concepts slip by before you can write them down.
Best ideas come while walking to class or at 2am — but typing them out interrupts your flow.
Re-watching recorded lectures to find that one important point wastes precious study time.
Record voice memos right after class with the main takeaways. VoiceAI structures them into organized study notes with key concepts and definitions.
Voice out your essay ideas and arguments. Get structured outlines with introduction points, body paragraphs, and thesis statements ready to refine.
Record key points from study group discussions. Turn collaborative insights into shared notes everyone can review before exams.
Speak your assignment thoughts out loud. Get a text draft to polish and submit — faster than staring at a blank page.
"So today's lecture was about supply and demand elasticity... basically how price changes affect quantity demanded. Inelastic goods are necessities like medicine where people buy them regardless of price. Elastic goods are luxuries where demand drops a lot when prices go up. Professor mentioned the example of concert tickets being elastic and insulin being inelastic. Oh and there's that formula for calculating elasticity that'll definitely be on the exam..."
Key Concepts:
Professors cover material fast, and typing detailed notes while trying to actually understand the content is nearly impossible. VoiceAI lets you record quick voice summaries right after class while the lecture is still fresh in your mind. In under a minute, you can capture the key concepts, formulas, and examples that matter — and VoiceAI turns them into organized study notes you can review anytime.
Study groups are productive, but nobody wants to be the designated note-taker. VoiceAI solves this by letting any group member record the key discussion points and explanations as they happen. After the session, share the transcript in the group chat so everyone has the same reference material. It is especially useful when group members explain concepts to each other — those peer explanations are often easier to understand than textbook definitions.
If your coursework involves interviews — for dissertations, ethnographic research, journalism assignments, or case studies — VoiceAI is invaluable. Record your summary notes after each interview and get a structured transcript with key quotes, themes, and observations. This saves hours of transcription work and lets you focus on analysis and writing rather than tedious data entry from recordings.
Not every student learns best by typing or reading. VoiceAI bridges the gap for students who think and process information better through speaking. Students with dyslexia, motor difficulties, or visual impairments can use voice notes to create study materials, draft essays, and capture ideas without relying on keyboard-intensive workflows. It turns the way you naturally think into organized written content.
Yes, VoiceAI offers a free tier that requires no credit card and no sign-up beyond sending your first voice note. The free plan includes daily transcription allowances that are sufficient for capturing lecture summaries, study notes, and essay brainstorming. For students who need longer recordings or more daily usage, the Pro plan is available at an affordable monthly rate.
VoiceAI performs well with academic vocabulary across disciplines including science, economics, law, medicine, engineering, and humanities. It recognizes terms like "mitochondrial DNA," "Keynesian economics," "jurisprudence," and "epistemology" accurately. For highly specialized terms unique to a narrow subfield, speaking clearly helps, and occasional corrections may be needed, but overall accuracy is significantly better than standard phone dictation.
Since transcripts are delivered as text messages in WhatsApp or Telegram, you can use each app's built-in search function to find specific terms, concepts, or topics across all your past transcripts. This makes exam revision much easier — search for "elasticity" and find every lecture note where you discussed it. Many students also copy transcripts into note-taking apps like Notion or Google Docs for better long-term organization.
VoiceAI currently works through direct messages, not group chats. However, the workflow is simple — any group member can send a voice note to VoiceAI in their private chat, receive the transcript, and then forward it to the study group. This actually works well because it lets each person capture their own perspective and share the most useful summaries with the group for collaborative revision.
Join students who ace their classes by turning voice notes into organized study materials. Free to start, no app download needed.