A teleprompter for creators
If you talk to a camera — or want to — the gap between a written script and a natural delivery is where the time goes. letter maps is built to close it for people working solo.
Made for people who record themselves
Most teleprompters assume a crew: someone to run the scroll, a rig on the camera, a studio. Creators usually have none of that — you're the talent and the operator at once. letter maps runs in the browser on what you already have: paste the script, prop your phone or laptop by the lens, and the text follows your voice while you keep your attention on the take.
Who gets the most out of it
- YouTubers and short-form creators shooting talking-head videos solo.
- Course and tutorial makers recording long, structured lessons.
- Founders and marketers filming product, launch and demo videos.
- Coaches, educators and speakers rehearsing or delivering to camera.
Why it fits the workflow
- No account, nothing to install — open a tab and go.
- Scripts stay in your browser, so drafts don't leak to a server.
- Voice-following means fewer retakes when you ad-lib or restart a line.
- Mirroring supports a beam-splitter rig if you graduate to one.
Frequently asked questions
- Do I need a teleprompter rig?
- No. Most creators just place their phone or laptop near the lens. If you use a beam-splitter rig, turn on mirroring.
- Does it record my video?
- No — letter maps is the prompter. Use your own camera, phone or OBS to record.
Related: Use cases, Features, Quick start