You don't have to type. Send a voice note —just like a WhatsApp audio to a friend— and your Agent understands it, transcribes it, and acts as if you'd typed it out. For a lot of people it's the most comfortable way to work with it: while you're walking, driving, or cooking, or simply because you talk much faster than you write.
1. Why voice changes everything
- It's faster: you speak up to three times faster than you write.
- Hands-free: while walking, driving, between one task and the next.
- You capture ideas on the fly before you forget them.
- It's more natural: you tell it things, you don't "compose a prompt".
2. How it works
You send the audio over Telegram or WhatsApp. It transcribes it, understands what you're asking for, and replies (usually by text, so there's a record). You can mix and match without any trouble: you ask by voice and it answers in writing.
3. What to ask by voice (real scripts)
Speak naturally. These are audios exactly as you'd blurt them out:
🎙️ Capture on the fly: "Hey, jot down that tomorrow I have to call the accountant about the 303 form, and remind me at ten."
🎙️ Brain dump → order: "I'll just throw the meeting at you all over the place and you sort it out for me: we talked about raising prices, Maria is handling the budget, we need to call the supplier before Friday, and we still have to decide about the website. Write me a short set of minutes with tasks and who's responsible."
🎙️ Dictate it raw: "Write Pedro an email telling him we received his proposal, that it works for us, but that we need to lock down the schedule before signing. I'll dictate it to you rough and you make it look nice, in a friendly tone."
🎙️ Hands-free: "I'm driving: what do I have on my calendar this afternoon, and is there any email that can't wait?"
4. The nuance: talk to it naturally
- Don't enunciate like a robot — talk the way you always talk.
- You can correct yourself in the same audio: "…no, better make it Thursday."
- End by saying what you want it to do: "…and with that, write me a summary" / "…jot it down" / "…write it up".
Variant for sensitive topics: "…and before you do anything, repeat back what you understood so I can confirm." That way you avoid misunderstandings on important things.
5. Combining voice + action
🎙️ "…with all this, draft the email for the client and, before sending it, show it to me." → it drafts it, shows it to you, and only sends it once you give the OK.
6. Pro-level tricks
- A long voice note = mental brain dump: let it all out, messy and unsorted, and ask it to "pull out the tasks and what's still pending a decision".
- In your own language: talk however it comes out; it understands and translates if needed.
- Ask for a short reply if you're going to read it at a glance on your phone.
- If there's noise and something isn't clear, it'll ask you — just confirm it.
7. Common mistakes (and how to avoid them)
| Mistake | What happens | Fix it like this |
|---|---|---|
| An endless audio without asking for anything | It doesn't know what you want it to do | End with the action: "…and with this, do X for me" |
| Lots of background noise | The transcription fails | Record somewhere quieter or check what it understood |
| Assuming it already acted | It may have only noted it down | Confirm the important actions |
Try it now
🎙️ Send it an audio: "I'll tell you all over the place what I have to do today and you turn it into a to-do list sorted by priority: [let it all out]."