Every communications team sits on the same untapped asset: hours of recorded conversation. Founder interviews, expert Q&As, webinar sessions, podcast appearances, panel recordings. Each one is dense with quotable material, and most of it never leaves the audio file, because turning a recording into usable text has always meant either paying a transcriber or losing an afternoon to the rewind button.
That bottleneck is where good content quietly dies. A single strong interview can seed a week of output. The reason it usually seeds one rushed blog post is friction, not lack of material.
The math on a single recording
Take a routine 40-minute interview with a company founder or a subject-matter expert. Inside it you have the raw material for a feature article, a newsletter section, three or four pull quotes for social, a couple of short video clips built around the best answers, and often a media pitch angle you did not go in looking for.
Getting to all of that used to require someone to sit through the full 40 minutes, probably twice, marking timestamps and typing quotes by hand. On a busy team, that work does not happen. The interview becomes one deliverable, and the other five stay locked in the file. Multiply that by every recording your team makes in a year and the waste is substantial.
Text is the unlock
The whole problem collapses once the recording exists as accurate, searchable text. Reading is roughly six times faster than listening, and text is something you can scan, search, copy, and hand to a colleague. Once the interview is text, pulling five deliverables out of it is an hour of editing rather than a day of transcription.
Modern transcription tools do this in a few minutes and add the parts that used to take the most time. They label who said what, so quotes are already attributed. They generate a summary and a list of key points, which is effectively your content outline written for you. And the better ones let you interrogate the recording directly, so instead of scrubbing through audio to find the good line about market strategy, you ask for it and get the quote with its timestamp.
A platform like Vomo.ai fits this workflow because it handles all three input types a comms team actually uses: live recording for in-person interviews, file upload for anything already captured, and a pasted link for a webinar or a published video. The output is not just a transcript but a structured note you can turn into a copy the same afternoon. For a team that lives on turnaround, cutting the interview-to-draft gap from a day to an hour is the difference between publishing the story and missing the moment.
What to do with the time you get back
The obvious win is volume: more posts, more clips, more newsletter material from the same number of interviews. The subtler win is quality. When quotes are easy to find and correctly attributed, you stop paraphrasing from memory and start using the exact words your source gave you, which reads better and holds up when someone checks it against the recording.
There is also an archive effect. A year of interviews stored as searchable text becomes a resource in its own right. When a journalist asks whether your executive ever commented on a topic, the answer is a thirty-second search instead of a vague “I think so, somewhere.” The recordings were always valuable. They just needed to become readable before anyone could use them twice.
