Thirty videos a month becomes a scheduling problem when every script, generation, revision, and export is handled as a separate job. The work fragments across the calendar, and small delays compound.
Here is a Vois workflow for batching the audio side of 30 faceless YouTube videos into a planned production block. It keeps scripts, voice choices, review passes, timeline work, and exports in one production space.
Why Batching Beats Daily Grinding
Most creators work linearly. Monday: write, generate, edit, publish. By Wednesday they're behind because Tuesday's edit ran long. Sound familiar?
Batch production separates the phases. One session for scripts. One day for audio. One stretch for video editing. Each phase gets full attention instead of fragmented scraps. And the audio phase is where batching pays off most, because generation and mastering are mechanical processes. The 30th video takes the same effort as the 3rd.
Step 1: Batch Your Scripts
Before you open Vois, write all your scripts. All 30.
A typical 10-minute video runs about 1,500 words -- less than a medium blog post. At 3,000 words per focused hour, that's two scripts per hour. Fifteen hours for a month of content, spread across three or four writing sessions.
In Vois, create a project for your channel. Each video becomes a separate script within the project. When you come back next month, you've got a clean archive of every episode.
Use speaker tags even for single-narrator videos. Insert a "Narrator" pill (type / → Speaker → "Narrator") to make it easy to assign or reassign voices later. If you ever add a second voice, the structure's already there.
A template structure that works for most faceless niches:
Narrator [Hook -- 2-3 punchy sentences]
Narrator [Context -- why this matters]
Narrator [Main content -- 3-5 sections]
Narrator [Conclusion -- key takeaway, call to action]
Step 2: Pick One Voice and Lock It In
Voice consistency is brand identity for faceless channels. Viewers should recognize your narrator within three seconds. That familiarity builds trust and retention.
Browse the 100+ voices and pick one that fits your niche. Finance channels want something grounded -- David Stone or Anderson Pike. Tech needs energy -- Alex Bright or Jamie Cruz. History needs warmth -- Morgan Vale or Professor Williams.
Save your choice as a favorite. Then lock your settings: same voice, same engine, same mastering preset across all 30 videos. If video 1 and video 30 sound audibly different because you tweaked things mid-batch, your audience notices.
Step 3: Generate in Bulk
Thirty scripts, one voice. Here's the math.
The fast engine runs at ~3x real-time. A 10-minute script generates in approximately 3 minutes. Thirty videos: 90 minutes of generation time.
You won't just generate once and move on -- you'll catch pacing issues and regenerate sections. Add another 30-60 minutes for corrections. Call it 2-2.5 hours total.
The critical advantage: unlimited generation means unlimited iteration. On a per-character platform, regenerating a section because the emphasis wasn't right costs another chunk of your allocation. On Vois, it costs nothing. The flat subscription doesn't change.
Step 4: Build a Timeline Template
This is the efficiency hack most creators miss. Your videos share a consistent structure: intro, content, outro. Build it once, duplicate for every video.
A standard template:
- Track 1: Narration (empty, waiting for generated audio)
- Track 2: Intro music (faded in, first 5 seconds)
- Track 3: Outro music (faded in under last 10 seconds)
Set crossfade durations and track volumes. For each video, duplicate the template and drop generated narration onto Track 1. The intro and outro are already configured.
With a template: 5-10 minutes per video. Without: 15-20 minutes. Across 30 videos, that's 2.5 hours versus 7.5 hours. And Vois's timeline supports 50 levels of undo, so if you shift something by accident while working fast, just undo it.
Step 5: Master Everything With One Preset
"Why do my videos sound quieter than everyone else's?" Because they're not mastered correctly.
YouTube normalizes to -14 LUFS. Too loud and YouTube turns it down. Too quiet and you just sound weak. Vois's YouTube export preset handles this automatically: LUFS normalization, de-esser at 7kHz, parametric EQ, limiter at -1.0 dB ceiling. Every one of your 30 videos hits the same loudness target.
For details on other platforms, the export presets guide covers Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and ACX.
The Complete Production Day
All together, here's what audio production day looks like:
| Phase | Time | What you're doing |
|---|---|---|
| Setup | 15 min | Open project, verify voice settings |
| Generation (batch 1) | 45 min | Generate videos 1-15, quick listens |
| Generation (batch 2) | 45 min | Generate videos 16-30, quick listens |
| Spot corrections | 45 min | Regenerate sections that need better pacing |
| Timeline arrangement | 2.5 hrs | Drop audio into templates, adjust spacing |
| Mastering and export | 30 min | YouTube preset, batch export |
| Total | ~5.5 hours | One focused day |
Five and a half hours for a month of audio. Scripts are written separately. Video editing happens separately. This is purely audio production -- and it fits into one day.
Plan the volume before you generate
Thirty ten-minute videos can mean a large amount of narration. The exact character count will vary with the scripts, but the production question is consistent: can you review and revise every episode without treating each correction as a budget decision?
| Workflow | What changes at 30 videos |
|---|---|
| Credit-based voice generation | Every rewrite and retake consumes an allowance, so the monthly limit can steer editorial decisions. |
| Separate generation and editing tools | Voice files, naming, loudness, and version tracking move between applications. |
| Vois production workflow | Projects hold the scripts, the saved voice keeps the series recognizable, and the timeline, mastering, and export preset stay with the episode. |
Vois does not make a month of videos automatic. You still need good scripts and a deliberate listen-through. It does remove the need to ration retakes while you correct a hook, name, or pacing issue. See current plan details before choosing a production cadence.
Five Rules for Sustainable Scaling
1. Never skip the review. Listen to every video's audio at least once before export. Batch generation doesn't mean batch neglect.
2. Keep a pronunciation list. Technical terms and proper nouns trip up any voice engine. Maintain a running list. By month three, first-pass quality improves dramatically.
3. Rotate content, not voice. Variety comes from topics and scripts, not voice changes. Switching narrators confuses your audience.
4. Build a buffer. Produce two weeks ahead. One extra production day gives you a cushion for busy weeks or technical hiccups.
5. Track what works. Some videos perform better. Pay attention to which hooks and pacing styles drive retention. Feed those insights into your next batch.
The Bigger Picture
Thirty videos a month isn't about grinding harder. It's about systems. Write in batches, generate in batches, arrange with templates, master with presets. Each phase gets full attention, and the mechanical parts take a fraction of the time people assume.
The creators who scale aren't working more hours. They're working in concentrated bursts with tools that don't penalize volume. A flat-rate, unlimited subscription changes the question from "can I afford this video?" to "what should I make next?"
Build the system around a voice your audience recognizes and a review pass you can maintain. Explore Vois for YouTube creators, then get started when you are ready to turn the batch into finished, consistent episodes.
The Vois Team