Audio ad script proof
Radio ad voiceover generator for script drafts
Paste a 15, 30, or 60 second audio ad script. LyricWinter separates the announcer, customer, owner, and narrator lines, assigns voices, and gives you a listenable spec spot before a client review, studio session, or final production pass.
Sample local campaign spot
Play the spec audio and inspect every ad line.
Listen for the hook, role contrast, offer clarity, disclaimer pace, and whether the call to action still lands when spoken.
Generator flow
From commercial copy to a reviewed audio proof
LyricWinter fits the point after the copy is drafted and before the team books talent or asks a client to approve a direction: review the cast, choose voices, and render the spoken pass when the script is ready to hear.
- 01
Paste the approved draft
Start with the spot copy you already have: role labels, the offer, the CTA, and any required short disclaimer lines.
- 02
Review the detected cast
LyricWinter separates announcer, customer, owner, host, and narrator lines so the review happens before any audio credits are spent.
- 03
Choose voices for the campaign
Switch public voices for each role, or upload custom voices for an owner-read, host-read, or recurring brand character.
- 04
Generate a listenable approval pass
Use the audio pass to judge timing, role contrast, offer clarity, and whether the spot is ready for a client note or final production.
Good fit
Spec spots, A/B copy variants, agency approval rounds, local business promos, host-read drafts, seasonal retail offers, and short audio ad scripts with clear speaker labels.
Not a fit
Legal review, claim substantiation, ad traffic instructions, music licensing, broadcast mastering, dynamic ad insertion, or replacing a final producer when those steps are required.
Ad script draft
Before step 1ANNOUNCER: This weekend only, Hearth & Harbor Bakery is opening at sunrise with a new winter breakfast box. CUSTOMER: Wait, the cinnamon-cardamom rolls are back? OWNER: Back, bigger, and boxed with coffee for the whole crew. ANNOUNCER: Order by Friday at hearthharbor.example and pick up Saturday before ten. NARRATOR: Limited quantities. Local pickup only. Terms apply.
Speaker labels make the first pass more useful. Paste copy from a media plan, creative brief, doc, or approval thread once the offer and required wording are ready to hear.
Review state in the generator
What the first step returns before you create the audio pass, using the same review controls as the generator.
Voice Selection
before audioSentence Breakdown
line-by-lineThe audio step starts after this review. Before that, the practical work is catching the wrong speaker split, deciding which public voices fit the campaign, and choosing where a custom owner or host voice would make the spot more credible.
Practical boundaries
Questions audio ad teams usually ask
Can LyricWinter write the ad script for me?
LyricWinter is strongest once you have a draft, offer, or approved copy that needs to be heard. You can edit lines after speaker detection, but ad claims, prices, disclaimers, and brand approvals should stay with your team.
Can I use multiple voices in one commercial?
Yes. LyricWinter detects roles such as Announcer, Customer, Owner, Host, or Narrator, assigns starter voices, and lets you switch public voices. You can also upload custom voices when the public catalog is not specific enough for a brand or recurring character.
Is this for radio, podcasts, or streaming audio?
The same script flow works for radio commercials, podcast pre-rolls, streaming audio spots, in-store promos, and internal client previews. LyricWinter focuses on the voice pass, not media buying or trafficking.
What does LyricWinter not handle?
It does not add licensed music beds, sound effects, ISCI codes, traffic instructions, legal clearance, or final broadcast mastering. Use it to qualify the script and voice direction before those steps.
Build the spec spot
Hear the ad before the review round gets expensive.
Paste the next audio ad draft, review the speaker map, switch public or custom voices, and render only after the message sounds clear enough to share.