There is a specific type of person who discovers ListenBrief and immediately understands what it is: someone who has subscribed to good newsletters for years, follows sharp thinkers on YouTube, has bookmarked dozens of "must-read" articles — and who actually reads almost none of it. Not because they don't want to. Because reading requires dedicated attention, and dedicated attention is the resource that never has a surplus.
Audio is different in a structural way. You don't have to allocate dedicated attention to listen — you have to allocate ears and about 10% of your focus. That remaining 90% is already occupied by driving, cooking, running, or getting ready. Audio fits in the gap that text cannot.
What an AI audio briefing actually is
An AI audio briefing is not a text-to-speech reader that reads you articles word for word. That would be terrible — most articles aren't written for audio, contain visual elements, and assume a reader who can skim and re-read.
What ListenBrief generates is a synthesized briefing: the AI reads your sources, identifies the most significant developments, and writes a script that presents those developments in a coherent audio-native format. The script is structured the way a radio segment or podcast episode is structured — with an opening orientation, transitions between topics, and a clear close. It's written to be heard, not read back.
The output is an MP3 that arrives in your email every morning. It plays on any device without an app. It's a standard file — you can send it to your car's Bluetooth, import it into any podcast player, or just press play in your email client.
Travel Briefing →
A sample AI audio briefing generated from travel news and industry sources.
Voice quality and language support
The difference between a useful audio briefing and an annoying one often comes down to voice quality. Early text-to-speech systems sounded mechanical in a way that made extended listening genuinely unpleasant. That era is effectively over.
ListenBrief Pro and Power plans use AI voices powered by ElevenLabs, which produces speech that is indistinguishable from a human broadcaster in casual listening. The cadence, intonation, and pacing are natural. You can preview available voices during onboarding and select the one you prefer. Options include different genders, accents, and speaking styles — from a measured broadcast voice to a more conversational tone.
Starter plan uses a standard high-clarity AI voice. It's not ElevenLabs quality, but it's fully intelligible and comfortable to listen to at standard or increased speed.
Language support covers English, Spanish, French, German, and Portuguese. You set your language during onboarding. Your sources can be in any language — the AI reads them in the original and generates your briefing in your chosen language. You can change your language setting at any time in Settings.
Speed control is available because the output is a standard MP3. Every audio app — from your phone's built-in player to Overcast to Pocket Casts — has a speed control. Most ListenBrief users settle at 1.25x or 1.5x, which effectively compresses a 10-minute briefing into 6-8 minutes without sacrificing comprehension.
Sources that work best for audio briefings
Not all sources produce equally useful audio briefings. Here's what works well and why:
- Industry news sites and blogs: These publish consistently, have clear news-style writing, and produce concrete developments worth covering. Great as primary sources.
- Analyst newsletters and Substack publications: High-signal writing with developed arguments. These produce the best synthesis material because there's actual analysis to extract, not just event reporting.
- YouTube channels with structured content: Explainer channels, interview channels, and channels that publish research-backed content translate well. Entertainment and reaction content translates poorly.
- RSS feeds from regulatory bodies or standards organizations: If you need to track official announcements, feeds from government agencies, professional associations, or standards bodies are reliable and important.
The sources that produce weak briefing material: social media aggregators, heavily visual content, sources that primarily repost content from other sources without adding context, and sites that gate content behind paywalls in their RSS feed.
See also: AI daily briefing for a look at morning routine integration, personalized AI podcast for details on episode generation, and RSS to podcast for how feeds are processed.
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