Voice to Text for Chief Financial Officers

Your expertise is in financial strategy, not typing. Blurt lets you draft board updates, investor communications, and earnings narratives by simply speaking. Hold a button, articulate your financial insights naturally, release. Text appears wherever your cursor is — in your email client, presentation software, or document editor. No transcription delays. No assistant intermediaries. Just you, your thoughts, and instant text. Your financial narrative flows as fast as you can think it.

First 1,000 words free macOS only $10/month or $99/year
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The Typing Problem

Board presentations that take hours to draft

You have the quarterly story crystal clear in your head. Revenue drivers, margin pressures, strategic pivots — you could explain it all in a 10-minute conversation. But translating that into a polished board deck means hours at your keyboard, typing and retyping until the narrative feels right. Your time is worth thousands per hour, yet here you are, hunt-and-pecking through financial prose.

Investor updates that never capture your voice

When you talk to investors, you're compelling. You weave data into narrative, anticipate concerns, project confidence. But your written updates read like they were drafted by committee — because by the time you've typed, edited, and over-thought every sentence, the authenticity is gone. The version of you that closes deals never makes it to the page.

Earnings call prep that consumes entire weekends

Earnings season means disappearing into your home office with a laptop. The prepared remarks need to be precise, the Q&A anticipated, the narrative airtight. You know exactly what to say — you've said it a hundred times in internal meetings. But converting those verbal explanations into written scripts takes 10x longer than it should. Your family sees the back of your head for days.

Strategic memos that sit half-finished in drafts

You spotted a market opportunity three weeks ago. You've discussed it with your CEO, refined the thesis in your head, know exactly why the company should act. But the strategic memo documenting your analysis sits at 200 words in your drafts folder. Every time you open it, the blank page defeats you. The opportunity window is closing while you struggle to type.

Email replies that stack up during deal negotiations

During M&A negotiations or capital raises, your inbox explodes. Bankers need guidance, lawyers need clarification, your CEO needs updates. Each response requires careful thought and precise language. You know what to say, but typing 50 thoughtful emails a day leaves you exhausted by noon. Important responses get delayed. Deals slow down because you can't type fast enough.

How It Works

Blurt works everywhere you communicate — email, Google Docs, PowerPoint, Slack, anywhere you can place a cursor on macOS.

1

Hold your hotkey

Press your chosen shortcut. A subtle indicator shows Blurt is listening.

2

Speak your thoughts

Articulate your financial narrative naturally. Blurt handles punctuation and formatting.

3

Release and review

Text appears at your cursor instantly. Edit if needed, or send as-is.

Real Scenarios

Composing investor update emails

Monthly investor updates used to take half a day. Now you hold the button and talk through the business the way you would on a call: 'This month we closed our largest enterprise deal to date, a three-year contract worth 2.4 million ARR. Pipeline remains strong heading into Q4, with particular momentum in financial services.' Your authentic voice comes through because you're actually using it.

Preparing earnings call remarks

You've explained Q3 performance to your leadership team a dozen times. The story is polished from repetition. Hold your hotkey and deliver those same talking points: 'We delivered strong results this quarter despite macro headwinds. Our focus on operational efficiency drove 200 basis points of margin improvement while maintaining our growth trajectory.' The prepared remarks write themselves because you've already prepared them — verbally.

Responding to banker and lawyer emails during deals

The acquisition is heating up and your inbox shows 47 unread. Each needs a thoughtful response. Hold button, speak: 'The working capital adjustment mechanism in section 4.3 needs revision. Our position is that receivables over 90 days should be excluded from the calculation. Please propose language.' Reply sent in 8 seconds. Move to the next. The deal stays on track.

Writing strategic analysis memos

You've been thinking about the competitive landscape for weeks. The analysis is complete in your head. Hold your hotkey and let it flow: 'The proposed acquisition gives us three strategic advantages. First, geographic expansion into markets where we currently have no presence. Second, technology capabilities that would take 18 months to build internally. Third, a customer base with minimal overlap and significant cross-sell potential.' The memo that's been stuck in drafts for a month gets finished in an afternoon.

Quick updates to CEO and leadership team

Your CEO pings asking for a quick take on the latest competitor news. Instead of typing a careful response, hold and speak naturally: 'Interesting move. Their pricing change suggests margin pressure, which aligns with what we heard from their former VP of Sales. I'd recommend we hold our pricing but emphasize our support quality in competitive deals. Happy to discuss further in our one-on-one.' Thoughtful response sent in 15 seconds.

Annotating financial models with context

The model is done but needs documentation. Hold your hotkey over each key assumption: 'Revenue growth assumes 15% expansion in existing accounts based on historical cohort data, plus new logo acquisition at current pipeline conversion rates. Downside case reduces expansion to 10% to account for potential macro deterioration.' Future you and your team will actually understand the model's logic.

Why CFOs choose Blurt over built-in dictation tools

Blurt macOS Dictation
Activation Single hotkey, instant response Multiple clicks or 'Hey Siri' interruption
Speed Text appears in under 500ms 2-3 second delay disrupts thought flow
Financial terminology Handles EBITDA, ARR, basis points accurately Frequently misinterprets financial terms
Privacy No always-listening, no stored recordings Ambient listening concerns for sensitive discussions
Reliability Consistent performance across sessions Intermittent failures and silent errors

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Blurt handle financial terminology accurately?
Yes. Blurt transcribes financial terms like EBITDA, ARR, MRR, basis points, year-over-year, and quarter-over-quarter accurately. Industry-specific jargon and company names may occasionally need minor edits, but standard financial vocabulary works reliably.
Is Blurt secure enough for confidential financial communications?
Blurt processes audio in real-time and does not store recordings. Your dictation is transcribed and delivered to your cursor — we don't keep copies of what you say. For highly sensitive material, review your company's policies on voice transcription tools.
What's included in the free tier?
The free tier includes first 1,000 words free, which resets automatically. This is enough to test Blurt thoroughly and handle light usage. For executives who communicate extensively, the paid plan at $10/month or $99/year offers unlimited transcription.
Does Blurt work with my existing tools?
Blurt works anywhere you can type on macOS — Outlook, Gmail, Google Docs, Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, Slack, and any other application. If you can place a cursor there, Blurt can insert text there.
Can I use Blurt during video calls?
Yes. Blurt captures audio through your microphone independently of call software. You can be muted on Zoom and still dictate notes, emails, or follow-up items. Just ensure you're muted before speaking to Blurt during sensitive calls.
How does Blurt compare to hiring a transcriptionist or executive assistant?
Blurt is instant and private — no scheduling, no waiting, no sharing sensitive information with another person. At $10/month, it costs less than 10 minutes of assistant time. Many CFOs use Blurt for first drafts and quick communications, reserving human assistance for complex formatting and research tasks.

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