Introduction

Recently I was using my mobile phone to message back-and-forth with someone in a language that I speak well but not fluently. The person preferred to send me voice messages, using the microphone to record himself speaking and then sending me the audio file.

Normally this would be a fine way to communicate, but as someone who doesn’t speak the language fluently, I found myself wishing I could read his messages along with having the option to listen to them.

This of course gave me an idea for how I could use Deepgram to make my life easier.

The Solution: Deepgram + Make.com

Deepgram has just released an integration with Make, giving me the perfect tool to build a no-code automation solution to turn those audio messages into text messages.

In this blog post, I’ll walk you through how I created the automation. I chose Telegram as the messaging app, but you could do this with WhatsApp or another messenger app of your choice. Once you’ve built one tool like this in Make, you’ll be ready to create all sorts of automations.

Check out the Make + Deepgram documentation to learn more about getting started with Deepgram’s Make integration

The Scenario: Voice to Text with Deepgram

Here’s the scenario (i.e. workflow) we’ll build in Make: