Why a Transcript Should Come Before the Summary
If you want to summarize audio recording content well, the summary needs something reliable to work from.
A raw recording is hard to skim. You cannot quickly scan a one-hour meeting, lecture, interview, or podcast the way you can scan text. A transcript turns the recording into something reviewable: you can search it, correct it, highlight important parts, and return to specific moments when something looks unclear.
That matters because an AI audio summary is only useful if you can verify it. A summary may sound clean, but the real question is whether it reflects the recording. Starting with a transcript gives you a checkable middle layer between the source audio and the final recap. This is part of the broader AI transcript review, notes, and export workflow: the transcript becomes working material, not just generated text.
Review the Transcript Before You Summarize It
A transcript summarizer is more useful when the transcript has been reviewed.
Names, technical terms, overlapping speech, accents, and unclear audio can all affect the transcript. If you summarize the raw transcript immediately, those rough spots can carry into the summary.
Jotr is built around review. After you import and transcribe a recording, you can play the original file alongside the transcript using timestamp-linked playback. That means you can click into a section, hear what was actually said, and clean up the transcript before using Summary Beta. If the review layer is the part you want to understand more deeply, read the AI transcript editor workflow for Mac.
The goal is not to create perfect court-record text. The goal is to make the transcript good enough to support a useful summary, recap, outline, or notes draft.
How to Summarize an Audio Recording in Jotr
1. Import Your Recording
Start with an existing recording on your Mac.
Jotr supports current audio imports including MP3, M4A, WAV, AAC, AIFF, CAF, and FLAC. It also supports current video imports including MP4, MOV, MKV, and AVI.
This is an after-recording workflow. Jotr is for files you already have, not a live meeting bot or real-time note taker. If you still need the broader first step before the summary workflow, start with the guide on how to transcribe an audio file to text on Mac for free.
2. Transcribe the File
Once the file is imported, Jotr turns the audio or video into a local transcript.
Jotr projects are created, stored, and processed on the Mac. Jotr has no account system, no cloud workspace, and no app backend for user work.
Mac users can start with free transcription in Jotr, with no account or credit card required.
3. Review with Timestamp-Linked Playback
Next, review the transcript against the source recording.
This is where the workflow becomes more dependable. Instead of accepting the transcript as final, you can move through the recording, check unclear parts, and make edits where the text needs cleanup.
Timestamp-linked playback is especially useful when you are working with a long meeting recap, lecture notes from a recorded class, an interview summary, a podcast outline, a voice memo with scattered ideas, or a research call. If source-linked timing is the main thing you need, see the guide to creating a transcript with timestamps on Mac. You can also highlight important sections or add notes before summarizing. If notes are the main output you need, the related guide on how to turn audio recordings into notes on Mac goes deeper on that layer.
4. Use Summary Beta
After the transcript has been reviewed, use Summary Beta to create a first-pass summary.
Summary Beta is based on the reviewed transcript, not the raw transcript. That distinction matters. The summary is generated from the version you have checked, edited, highlighted, and prepared.
You can use it as a quick overview, meeting recap draft, lecture notes, interview summary, podcast outline, or structured notes draft. You should still review the output. Summary Beta is a starting point, not guaranteed final minutes or a replacement for judgment.
5. Export the Summary
Once the summary is useful, you can export it.
Jotr summary output can be exported as TXT, Markdown, and DOCX, so you can move it into your writing app, notes system, document workflow, or sharing format.
Practical Examples
Meeting Recap
If you recorded a meeting, Jotr can help you move from recording to transcript to reviewed notes. After checking the transcript, Summary Beta can create a meeting recap draft that captures the main discussion points. You can then edit it before sharing or saving it.
Lecture Notes
For a recorded lecture, the transcript gives you a way to revisit specific explanations. You can highlight important sections, add your own notes, and use Summary Beta to create lecture notes or an outline for study.
Interview Summary
For interviews, review matters. A name, quote, or technical detail may need checking before it appears in a summary. Jotr lets you work from the recording and transcript together, then create an interview summary from the reviewed transcript.
Podcast Outline
If you have a podcast episode file, you can use Jotr to create a transcript, review the structure, and generate a podcast outline. This can help with show notes, editing decisions, or repurposing the episode into written material.
What Jotr Is Not
Jotr is not a live meeting bot, live note taker, real-time recorder, YouTube URL summarizer, generic chatbot, or ChatGPT replacement.
It is a Mac desktop app and local transcription review workspace for existing audio and video files. The core workflow is recording, transcript, reviewed transcript, Summary Beta, editable recap, and export.
That workflow is slower than clicking “summarize” on a raw file, but it is more practical when you need a summary you can check against the source.