Voice as an Interface

Why talking to machines finally works, and where voice beats typing for professionals who live in meetings.

The Fastest Interface You Own

You speak about three times faster than you type — and unlike typing, you can do it while walking, driving, or packing up after a meeting. For most professionals, voice is the single largest untapped input to their work.

What changed recently is the other side of the conversation. Transcription is now near-perfect, and the models on the receiving end understand messy, spoken language — half-sentences, corrections, tangents — and can turn it into structured output.

Where Voice Wins

  • Capture. The thought you have leaving a meeting is the most valuable version of that thought. Voice catches it before it evaporates.
  • Drafting. Talk through an email or proposal the way you'd explain it to a colleague; let AI shape it into prose.
  • Delegation. Describe a task out loud — "follow up with everyone from Tuesday's workshop who asked about pricing" — and hand the transcript to an agent.

Where Voice Loses

Editing, precision work, and anything you need to see. Voice is an input, not a workspace. The skill is knowing which half of your work is speech-shaped.

Your Rep This Week

Once a day, dictate instead of typing: one email, one set of meeting notes, one idea. Don't clean it up by hand — practice getting AI to clean it up for you.