Creator Tools for Scripts and Recording

These free creator tools help you prepare a script before the camera is involved. Use them to count words, time a script, measure your real speaking speed, simplify hard lines, rehearse scrolling text, and turn a rough draft into something easier to deliver.

The tools are useful for video creators, teachers, founders, coaches, presenters, and teams who want a cleaner path from written text to confident speech.

Script and timing tools

Word Counter
Count words, characters, sentences, paragraphs, estimate speaking time, and spot repeated words before rehearsing.

Script Timer
Choose a target length, estimate the script duration, and rehearse against a live timer.

Speaking Speed Calculator
Time yourself reading aloud to find your real words-per-minute pace and reader speed.

Script Readability Analyzer
Find long sentences, review readability, and simplify lines that may be hard to say on camera.

Speech Time Calculator
Choose a speaking pace and compare the script with a target video, lesson, webinar, or presentation length.

Online Teleprompter
Paste a script, adjust scroll speed and text size, and rehearse in the browser before continuing in Teleprompter Automatic.

AI Video Script Generator
Turn a rough idea into a spoken draft, then refine the timing and delivery.

How to use the tools together

Start with the words. If the script already exists, use the word counter first to check length and sentence density. If the idea is still rough, create a first version with the AI video script generator and then bring the draft back into the timing tools.

Next, estimate the duration and measure the actual read. A script that feels short on the page can become too long once pauses, emphasis, and camera timing are included. The script timer and speaking speed calculator make that timing problem visible before a recording session.

Finally, simplify and rehearse the text in the teleprompter. Reading out loud is the fastest way to find lines that sound too written, transitions that need a pause, and openings that should be shorter.

What makes a script ready to record

  • Short paragraphs make eye movement easier to control.
  • One idea per paragraph keeps the delivery clear.
  • Repeated setup can usually be cut before recording.
  • Timing should be checked at a realistic speaking pace.
  • The first 20 seconds should feel natural when read aloud.

Continue with product guides

When the draft is ready, continue with create and import scripts, scrolling and reader controls, or using Teleprompter Automatic on the web. These guides explain how the prepared text becomes a saved script, a reader setup, and eventually a recording workflow.