Subtitle drafts and spoken scripts
Short Video Subtitle Extractor
Many short videos have no complete subtitles, or their subtitles cannot be copied. Videosays generates text from speech so you can start from a subtitle draft, review the script, or organize the content.
Use cases for short video subtitle extraction
Create subtitle drafts for videos without captions
Organize creator speech and sales talk structures
Turn videos into editable script material
Prepare text assets for repurposed clips
How subtitle extraction relates to script extraction
In short-video workflows, subtitles and scripts often come from the same spoken track. Videosays first converts speech into text. You can use it directly as copy or refine it into subtitle lines with timing and formatting.
Why a draft-first workflow works better
Automatic recognition quickly creates a first version, but music, accents, and sentence boundaries can affect the output. Treat the result as a draft and make light edits when accuracy matters.
Useful for repurposing and review
Text makes it easier to inspect a video structure: how the opening grabs attention, how the middle develops the point, and how the ending drives action.
FAQ
Does Videosays export SRT subtitles directly?
The current product focuses on copyable text that works well as a subtitle draft and script base.
Can it work if the original video has no subtitles?
Yes. Videosays generates text from speech and does not depend on existing captions.
Is it useful for subtitle proofreading?
Yes. Generate a text draft first, then proofread it against the video.