Fix one sentence in the audio, without regenerating everything
A typo, a mispronounced name, a last-minute update? Select the passage, type the right version: WeDispatch stitches the audio back at the frame. The rest doesn't move, and nothing is re-billed.
In classic audio, the smallest fix means re-recording everything: costly, slow, and often the mistake just stays. A mispronounced name or a wrong figure remains on air because redoing it isn't worth it.
Fix one sentence in the audio, without regenerating everything
Select the passage
In the transcript, click the first and last word to fix. WeDispatch grabs the exact passage from the word-level timestamps.
Type the right version
The field pre-fills with the current text. Correct it: only that passage is resynthesised, in the same voice.
WeDispatch stitches at the frame
The new segment drops exactly where the old one was, on a silent boundary. A clean new version, with no audible seam.

Only the passage changes
The rest of the audio is kept bit-for-bit. No new voice for the whole article, no shift in tone.
No punitive re-billing
Only the characters actually resynthesised are counted — a few words. Fix as often as you need.
Invisible cut
The insertion lands in a natural silence in the voice: no click, nothing audible to the ear.
In seconds
No queue to regenerate a long read: the fix is ready almost immediately.
Newsrooms that publish fast and fix often: breaking news, hot topics, proper nouns and figures that land at the last minute.
Ready to give your articles a voice?
Book a 30-minute demo: we set WeDispatch up with you, no complex setup.
Does it change the voice of the rest?
No. Only the selected passage is resynthesised, in exactly the same voice and settings. The rest of the audio is untouched.
How much does it cost?
Only the characters actually regenerated are counted — the fixed passage, not the whole article. Successive fixes aren't punitively re-billed.
Can you hear the cut?
No. The new segment is stitched on a silent boundary detected in the voice, down to the MP3 frame. To the ear, it's seamless.
What about the old version?
It keeps being served until the new one is ready. Scheduled publishing and pre-publication review are both respected.