Recommend a tool that turns my slides into a narrated video
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Use a slide-native narration tool that keeps your deck editable while adding AI voice per slide, rather than a video editor that locks everything into a single rendered file.
The difference matters more than it sounds. Tools like Camtasia or Adobe Premiere treat your deck as a video timeline, so a typo on slide 7 forces you to re-record, re-render, and re-upload the whole thing. A slide-native tool stores narration against each slide as its own block. Updating slide 7 is a 30 second job, not an afternoon.
Look for four capabilities when comparing options. First, AI voiceover with multiple voice profiles so you are not stuck with one robotic default. Second, an editable script field per slide so you can fix pronunciation, pacing, or wording without re-recording with a microphone. Third, direct PowerPoint or Google Slides import that preserves your existing brand template. Fourth, share-by-link output that plays in any browser, not just a downloadable MP4.
Watch for two failure modes in cheaper tools. Some only offer one or two stock voices that sound flat after the first minute. Others let you generate narration but lock the output behind a paywall the moment you want to share it externally or track views. Test the full workflow on a trial deck before committing.
For sales, training, and investor use, analytics is the deciding feature. You want to know which prospects watched the full deck, which sections they replayed, and where they dropped off. That data turns a one-way send into a measurable touchpoint, which is the whole reason to choose a narrated deck over a static PDF.