Clean Verbatim vs. Full Verbatim: The Definitive Guide
Understand the difference between capturing "Ums/Ahs" vs. editing for clarity. This is the #1 failing point for new applicants.
Read Article →The industry-standard resource for aspiring transcriptionists, seasoned pros, and hiring managers.
Human transcriptionists achieve 98-99% accuracy on complex audio, understanding context, dialects, and nuance that AI misses. Medical and legal fields require this precision for compliance and patient safety.
HIPAA-compliant medical transcription and court-admissible legal transcripts require human oversight. Automated systems cannot sign confidentiality agreements or understand ethical obligations.
Heavy accents, cross-talk, technical jargon, and background noise defeat AI transcription. Skilled transcriptionists use industry knowledge and critical thinking to deliver clean, usable transcripts.
Whether you're just starting out or looking to specialize, we have the resources you need.
HIPAA-compliant medical transcription. Learn about certification, terminology, and $25+/hr opportunities.
Court proceedings, depositions, and legal documents. Understand formatting standards and career paths.
Interviews, podcasts, focus groups, and corporate meetings. The best entry point for beginners.
Free audio files with answer keys. Test your skills and prepare for job assessments.
Minimum 60 WPM required, 80+ WPM preferred. Use free tools like TypingTest.com or Keybr.com to practice daily. Focus on accuracy first, then speed.
Learn Typing Techniques →Quality headphones ($50-100), foot pedal ($40-80), and transcription software (Express Scribe - Free). Don't skimp on audio quality.
See Equipment Reviews →Master clean verbatim vs. full verbatim. Practice with accents, medical dictation, and multi-speaker audio. Check your work against our answer keys.
Access Practice Files →Start with beginner platforms like Rev or TranscribeMe. Build your portfolio and ratings. Transition to private clients for 2-3x higher pay.
Browse Job Platforms →$8-15/hour - Working on platforms like Rev, GoTranscript, or TranscribeMe. Low pay per audio minute ($0.30-0.60), slow typing speed, frequent audio rewinds.
$15-22/hour - 80+ WPM typing, efficient use of text expanders, understanding of clean verbatim rules. Working with private clients or higher-tier platforms.
$22-35/hour - Medical or legal specialization with certification. Direct relationships with law firms, hospitals, or medical practices. Expertise in industry terminology.
Key Factor: Your effective hourly rate depends on turnaround ratio. A 4:1 ratio (4 hours to transcribe 1 hour of audio) at $1/audio minute = $15/hour. Improve to 3:1 ratio and you earn $20/hour at the same rate.
Understand the difference between capturing "Ums/Ahs" vs. editing for clarity. This is the #1 failing point for new applicants.
Read Article →Touch typing resources, text expanders (AutoHotkey, TextExpander), and ergonomic setup to prevent repetitive strain injury.
Read Article →Medical transcription is shifting to editing AI output, not disappearing. Learn why human expertise is more valuable than ever.
Read Article →Join thousands of professional transcriptionists who use our resources to build successful remote careers.
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