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Have Questions?
Audio description narration adds spoken details about important visual moments in a video, film, show, presentation, or live experience.
Think facial expressions, actions, scene changes, text on screen, or anything else audiences would normally need to visually see to fully follow what’s happening. It makes your content available for blind and low vision audiences while giving more people more ways to experience and connect with your content.
Audio description expands your reach and makes videos more accessible, flexible, and engaging for wider audiences.
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Because you're super smart. Because more people should be able to experience what you worked hard to create.
Audio description makes video content accessible for blind and low vision audiences by narrating important visual details, but it also helps broaden audience reach and improve the overall viewing experience. It gives people more ways to engage with your content instead of relying only on visuals.
It’s also becoming a bigger priority across streaming, corporate, educational, and branded media. Adding audio description shows your company is thinking about accessibility, audience experience, and the long term value of your content.
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Everyone, honestly.
Audio description is designed for blind and low vision audiences, helping narrate important visual details so they can fully follow and enjoy content. But it also benefits people who process information differently, multitask while listening, or simply want another way to engage with a video or story.
For companies and creators, it means wider reach, stronger accessibility, and content that works for more audiences in more situations.
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Pretty much anything with important visual information.
Audio description can be added to streaming content, commercials, corporate videos, training materials, eLearning, social media campaigns, documentaries, museum exhibits, live events, theater productions, explainer videos, and branded content. If visuals help tell the story, audio description can help make that story more accessible and engaging for wider audiences.
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Yes, and that's usually how it's happening.
Audio description can absolutely be added to existing videos, whether it’s branded content, corporate narration, training material, streaming media, or social campaigns. The process usually involves scripting descriptions for important visual moments, recording narration, and mixing it into the final video in a way that feels natural and easy to follow.
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Yes. Audio description can help support accessibility goals and compliance efforts by making video content more accessible for blind and low vision audiences.
Requirements can vary depending on the platform, industry, organization, or type of content involved, but adding audio description is an important step toward creating more inclusive media and improving audience access overall. It also shows your company is thinking beyond minimum requirements and prioritizing a better experience for more people.
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Audio description helps people stay connected to what’s happening instead of missing important visual moments.
By adding clear narration around actions, expressions, scene changes, and on screen details, audio description creates a fuller experience that keeps audiences more engaged with the story and message. It also gives people more flexibility in how they consume content, which can help videos feel more accessible, immersive, and easier to follow overall.
For brands and businesses, that means content with wider reach and stronger audience connection.
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A lot more than people realize.
Major streaming platforms like Netflix, Disney+, Max, and others regularly support audio description tracks for films and series. Audio description can also be added to corporate videos, training content, eLearning platforms, museums, live events, branded media, and online video platforms depending on how the content is delivered.
Basically, if your content has visuals, there’s a good chance audio description can be part of the experience.
Absolutely. Corporate videos and training content are actually great candidates for audio description.
Whether it’s onboarding videos, internal communications, eLearning, presentations, safety training, or branded explainers, audio description helps make important visual information accessible for blind and low vision audiences while creating a clearer experience overall. It also helps companies expand the reach and usability of content they’ve already invested time and money into creating.
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Captions describe what you hear. Audio description describes what you see.
Captions provide text for spoken dialogue, music, and sound effects, making audio content accessible for deaf and hard of hearing audiences. Audio description adds spoken narration for important visual details like actions, facial expressions, scene changes, and on screen text, helping blind and low vision audiences follow the full experience.
They work together, but they serve different purposes.
Audio description is usually recorded after a script has been written for the important visual moments in a project. The narration is timed carefully around dialogue and key scenes so it fits naturally into the flow of the content without stepping on what’s already happening.
Kelly works with a variety of brands, studios, and platforms to match the recording needs of each project, whether that means recording remotely from her professional home studio or joining live directed sessions in studio. Once recorded, the audio can be mixed directly into the video or delivered as a separate audio description track depending on the platform or project requirements.
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Because audio description only really works when it feels natural, clear, and easy to follow, not stiff or distracting.
A professional audio description narrator understands pacing, tone, timing, and how to deliver important visual details without pulling people out of the experience. The goal is to support the story, not compete with it.
Kelly has voiced thousands of audio description projects for platforms like Netflix, Disney+, and Max, bringing a conversational, approachable style that helps audiences stay connected to the content from start to finish.
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Absolutely. Audio description should feel like part of the project, not something dropped on top of it afterward.
The pacing, energy, and delivery can all be adjusted to fit the tone of the content, whether it’s dramatic, playful, corporate, emotional, educational, fast paced, or understated. Good audio description supports the experience while still feeling natural to the world of the project.
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The earlier, the better.
Audio description can absolutely be added later, but planning for it early usually creates a smoother process and a stronger final result. It gives production teams more flexibility with timing, scripting, delivery, and platform requirements while helping accessibility become part of the content strategy from the start instead of an afterthought.
Don't be afraid to reach out anytime - I can be added whenever you're ready to go!
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