Interview to Blog Post
Paste the YouTube link to your recorded interview and get a structured, ready to edit article. Vid2Blog transcribes the conversation, keeps the strongest quotes, and writes the post so you publish a Q&A or feature in minutes instead of an afternoon.
Everything a writer or content team needs to turn one recorded conversation into a publish ready article.
Publish or unlist the recorded interview on YouTube so the converter can read the spoken audio from the video.
Copy the link and drop it into the converter at the top of this page to start the conversion.
The tool reads the conversation, keeps the best quotes and answers, and arranges them into a readable outline.
Add your intro and analysis, tighten the quotes, drop in a photo of the guest, and publish the post on your blog.
A good interview is full of material a reader would never find otherwise: a guest's firsthand account, a number they cite from experience, a line that frames a problem better than you could. The catch is that all of it sits inside a video or an audio file, where search engines cannot read it and a busy reader will not sit through it. A written article fixes that. It puts the conversation into a form people can skim, search, quote, and share.
Doing the conversion by hand is the slow part. The usual process means replaying the recording, transcribing every answer, cutting the filler and the cross talk, then reshaping what is left into something that reads well. Writers commonly lose two to three hours per interview to that work. Vid2Blog removes the slowest piece. It reads the spoken audio from your interview's YouTube link, keeps the answers and quotes that matter, and writes a structured draft, so you start from an editable article instead of a blank page and a long replay.
Search engines read text far better than they parse audio or video. An article built from your interview can rank for the guest's name, the topics they discuss, and the questions your audience types into Google, while the original recording keeps its own audience on YouTube. One conversation then earns attention in two places instead of going quiet a day after it goes up.
Written interviews also reach the people who never press play. Plenty of readers will skim a 1,200 word Q&A during a busy day but will not commit to a 40 minute video. The article version lets them scan the questions, jump to the answer they came for, and pull a quote for their own work. That is reach the recording alone cannot deliver, which is why media sites, recruiters, and B2B brands publish a written companion for the interviews they run.
An interview can become two very different posts, and the draft works for both. A straight Q&A keeps the questions and answers intact, which suits expert interviews where the exact wording carries weight. A feature reshapes the same material into a narrative, weaving the strongest quotes into your own framing and analysis. Decide which fits the guest and the audience, then edit the draft toward it.
The part a tool should not do for you is the judgment. Add the context a reader needs about who the guest is and why their view matters, cut the answers that wandered, and keep the lines that say something only this person could say. The draft gets you past the transcription and the first structure so your time goes to the editing that actually makes the piece worth reading.
The fastest reliable workflow has three parts. First, get an accurate draft from the recording, which is the step Vid2Blog handles when you paste the YouTube link. Second, edit for a reader rather than a viewer: write a short intro that says who the guest is and what the piece covers, add subheadings, and keep only the quotes that earn their place. Third, finish it for search and for your audience by putting the guest's name and the main topic in the title and first paragraph, adding a photo with alt text, linking to related posts, and embedding the original video so people can watch the full exchange.
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Paste your interview's YouTube link and see the article draft Vid2Blog writes for you.
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The main Vid2Blog converter for turning any YouTube video into a full blog post.