How to Dictate Your Book: A Writer's Guide to AI Speech-to-Text (2026)

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How to Dictate Your Book: A Writer's Guide to AI Speech-to-Text (2026)QuillHub

TL;DR: Dictating your book with AI speech-to-text can triple your writing speed (150+ words per...

TL;DR: Dictating your book with AI speech-to-text can triple your writing speed (150+ words per minute vs 40 by typing). This guide covers the setup, workflow, and tools you need to go from speaking to published pages — including how services like QuillAI make the process painless.

  • 150+ — Words per minute speaking vs 40 typing
  • 3x — Faster first drafts with dictation
  • $12.5B — Speech-to-text market by 2030
  • 95+ — Languages supported by AI transcription

Here's something most aspiring authors don't know: the bottleneck in writing a book is rarely creativity. It's speed. Your brain thinks faster than your fingers can type — about 400 words per minute of internal narration, compared to 40 words per minute on a keyboard. That gap is where books go unfinished.

Dictation changes this. Instead of typing, you speak. Your words appear on screen, transcribed by AI in real time or processed after recording. It's the same technique used by George R.R. Martin (who dictated entire chapters of A Dance with Dragons), Michael Crichton, and dozens of prolific genre authors.

But the tech has changed. In 2026, AI transcription is good enough — 99% accuracy on clear audio — that you don't need special Dragon NaturallySpeaking training sessions or expensive microphones. You can use your phone, a laptop mic, or an external recorder, and get clean text in minutes.

Why Dictation Works (The Numbers)

The math is simple. Average typing speed for a competent writer is around 40 WPM. Average conversational speaking speed is 150 WPM. Even accounting for pauses, corrections, and thinking time, dictation lets you produce a first draft 2-3x faster than typing.

But speed isn't the only advantage. Dictation changes how you write. When you speak, you tend to use more natural language, better pacing, and dialogue that sounds authentic. Your internal editor — the voice that makes you delete and rewrite every sentence — quiets down because you can't backspace while speaking.

According to Joanna Penn of The Creative Penn, dictation helped her publish over 20 books while running a full-time business. "The biggest shift was learning to draft messy and edit later," she's said in interviews. "Dictation forces you to keep moving forward."

If you write 500 words per hour typing, expect 1,500 words per hour dictating — after a week of practice. The first few sessions will be slower as you learn to speak your thoughts coherently. That's normal. Push through it.

Setting Up Your Dictation Workflow

Getting started with dictation in 2026 is simpler than you'd think. Here's the setup that works for most authors:

1. Choose Your Microphone

You don't need a professional studio mic. A decent USB microphone like the Blue Yeti ($130) or Audio-Technica ATR2100x ($100) will beat any headset. For mobile dictation, the Voice Memos app on iPhone or a simple voice recorder app on Android works fine. The key is consistent volume — avoid background noise, speak at the same distance from the mic, and use a pop filter if possible.

2. Pick Your Transcription Method

You have two paths:

Real-time dictation — You speak and the text appears as you talk. This works well for short sessions and gives you visual feedback. Operating systems now include built-in dictation (Windows Speech Recognition, macOS Enhanced Dictation).

Record-and-transcribe — You record audio first, then send it to an AI transcription service. This is better for long sessions, outdoor recording, or when you want to speak without interruption. Services like QuillAI handle the transcription automatically, supporting 95+ languages and producing clean text with timestamps and speaker labels.

3. Format Your Output

Good transcription tools let you add structure while recording. Say "new paragraph" or "new chapter" to break things up. You can also use verbal punctuation: "comma," "period," "new line." Most modern AI transcription handles this automatically — it detects natural pauses and sentence boundaries. QuillAI's platform, for example, adds formatting, timestamps, and even extracts key points from your recording.

The Dictation Workflow: Step by Step

Common Dictation Challenges (And How to Fix Them)

Dictation isn't magic. You'll hit real problems — here's what to expect and how to work around them.

When you pause to think while dictating, you produce... nothing. Silence. This feels unnatural if you're used to staring at a blinking cursor while typing. Solution: vocalize your pauses. Say "thinking..." or "let me rephrase that" or "I need a better word for X." Fill the silence with placeholder language.

Your first dictation sessions will feel stiff and formal — like you're giving a presentation, not having a conversation. Record yourself chatting with a friend first, then try dictating. The goal is conversational, not performant.

Resist the urge to correct every mistake in real time. If you say a wrong word or an awkward sentence, just say "strike that" and continue. Fix everything in the editing pass. The whole point of dictation is speed — don't lose it by micro-editing.

Tools for Book Dictation in 2026

Here's a quick comparison of the main approaches authors use:

Editing Dictated Text: What Changes

Dictated text reads differently from typed text. Here's what to watch for in your editing pass:

Run-on sentences — When you speak, you connect clauses naturally. Break these into shorter written sentences.

Filler words — "Basically," "actually," "you know," "like" will appear more often in dictation. Search for and remove them.

Redundancy — Spoken language circles around ideas. Dictation produces 10-20% more words than typed writing on the same topic. Tightening is an essential editing skill.

Paragraph structure — Your spoken paragraphs are likely too short. Speaking tends to create new paragraphs every few sentences. In writing, paragraphs can be longer and carry more depth.

Dialogue — This is where dictation shines. Spoken dialogue feels real because you're speaking it. Dictated dialogue often needs less editing than typed dialogue.

Real Results: Author Case Studies

The numbers tell the story better than any theory. Here's what real authors experience when they switch to dictation:

Fiction: One novelist reported going from 1,000 words per day typing to 3,500 per day dictating — in week two. Within a month, she was averaging 5,000 words per session. Her first draft of a 90,000-word novel went from six months to under eight weeks.

Non-fiction: A business book author wrote his entire 45,000-word manuscript in 23 days using dictation while walking his dog. Two 30-minute walks per day produced enough transcribed text for a chapter each day.

Academic: PhD students using dictation for thesis writing report 2x productivity in literature review drafting. The ability to speak citations and complex arguments bypasses the research-writing toggle that slows so many academics.

These aren't outliers. The common thread is that dictation removes the physical barrier between thought and text. Once you get past the initial awkward period (1-2 weeks), the speed gain is reliable and repeatable.

Frequently Asked Questions

Start Your Dictation Practice Today

Here's a one-week plan to get started:

Day 1: Record yourself telling a story for 5 minutes. Transcribe it. See what happens.
Day 2-3: Dictate a single page (about 250 words). Edit it. Compare the experience to typing.
Day 4-5: Dictate for 10 minutes without stopping. Edit later. Focus on flow, not perfection.
Day 6-7: Dictate a full chapter outline, then the chapter. Transcribe through a service like QuillAI. Edit in two passes.

By the end of the week, you'll know whether dictation works for your writing process. For most authors, the answer is a clear yes — and the only regret is not starting sooner.

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Looking for more? Check out our guides on how to transcribe podcast episodes into blog posts and transcription for content creators.