You produce podcasts. CutCue handles the chapter work.

A 90-minute episode lands. Before you publish, you need chapters, highlight timestamps, and sponsor mentions verified. CutCue generates all of that — from the audio alone.

What is CutCue for podcast chapter workflows?

Podcast teams use CutCue to turn episode audio into reviewable structure — chapter markers, highlight candidates, sponsor or keyword hits (Custom Highlighters), transcripts or subtitle-oriented outputs where supported, and potential monetization or brand-safety risk flags for human review. You export to Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, Vegas Pro, or use timestamps in show notes and YouTube descriptions; CutCue supplies cues, not the final edit.

Plans from €29/month · No minimum contract

See how it works ↓

This is what an analyzed episode looks like.

Interactive demo: 90-minute sample. Chapters follow the content — longer and shorter sections, like real episodes. Filters and timeline like the app: Chapters, Highlights, Demonetization, Editor notes, Audio fingerprint. Click to explore.

Demo

EU AI Act für Creator & Studios — Deep Dive (90 Min.)

1:30:00  ·  DE  ·  18 Kapitel  ·  4 Highlights  ·  40 Treffer

0:00 – 1:30:00
Kapitel
Marker
Zeit
Übersicht
Hover or click any chapter to preview  ·  click any or marker to explore

The part that keeps you from publishing faster.

Finding chapter breaks takes as long as recording

A 90-minute episode means scrubbing through 90 minutes to find topic shifts. For weekly shows, that's hours every month spent not editing.

Chapters improve discoverability

Podcast apps and YouTube surface chapters in search. Episodes without chapters lose visibility to competitors who include them.

Sponsor mentions need tracking

Sponsors expect ad-read verification. Manually checking timestamps for every mention across multiple episodes doesn't scale.

From recording to chapter markers — in four steps.

CutCue analyzes your podcast audio and generates chapter markers, highlights, and keyword timestamps — before you open your editor.

1

Upload your episode

Drop your podcast audio into CutCue. Common formats supported: MP3, WAV, AAC, M4A, FLAC and others.

2

CutCue analyzes your content

CutCue analyzes the audio, detects topic changes, identifies key moments, and generates chapter markers with descriptive labels. Processing runs in the background.

3

Review your markers

Chapters, highlights, hooks, and custom keyword matches — all marked with timestamps. You see at a glance what's where.

4

Export to your tools

Import markers into Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, Vegas Pro, Audacity, or Reaper — or use the timestamps directly in your podcast description. Premiere Pro requires the free "CSV Marker Importer" plugin from Adobe Exchange.

A 1-hour podcast typically processes in 2–3 minutes.

What CutCue finds in your podcast

Chapters — topic shifts detected and structured with descriptive labels
Highlights — key quotes and memorable moments marked with timestamps
Hooks for Shorts, Reels, and TikToks — found in seconds, not hours
Demonetization risks — flagged with timestamps before you upload 1
Sponsor mentions — tracked automatically with Custom Highlighter
Custom keywords — guest names, recurring segments, topic-specific terms

1 Demonetization checks identify known risk terms. No tool can guarantee compliance — YouTube's policies change regularly.

Built for podcast producers

Independent podcasters

You record, edit, and publish alone. Adding chapters used to mean another hour of work per episode. CutCue gives you chapters in minutes so you can focus on content.

Podcast editors and producers

You edit multiple shows per week. CutCue pre-marks every episode so you spend your time on the creative cut — not the discovery phase.

Podcast networks and agencies

When sponsors expect ad-read verification across dozens of episodes, manual spot-checks fail. CutCue tracks every mention automatically.

Works with your podcast tools.

Adobe Premiere Pro · DaVinci Resolve · Vegas Pro · Audacity · Reaper

DaVinci Resolve, Vegas Pro, Audacity, and Reaper import natively. Premiere Pro requires the free "CSV Marker Importer" plugin from Adobe Exchange.

Frequently asked questions

How does CutCue generate podcast chapter markers?

CutCue analyzes the audio track of your podcast, detects topic changes and key discussion points, and creates timestamped chapter markers. You can review and adjust before exporting.

What audio formats does CutCue support?

Common audio formats including MP3, WAV, AAC, M4A, and FLAC. Export the audio from your recording software and upload directly.

What is a Custom Highlighter?

A Custom Highlighter is a word or phrase CutCue watches for and turns into reviewable timestamped matches where detected. Common uses: sponsor mentions, recurring segments, guest introductions, or topic-specific terms. Available on Creator and Studio plans.

Does CutCue work with podcast editing software?

Yes. CutCue exports markers that import into Adobe Premiere Pro (requires the free "CutCue.io CSV Marker Importer" plugin from Adobe Exchange), DaVinci Resolve, Vegas Pro, Audacity, Reaper, and other editing tools.

Can CutCue create YouTube chapters or podcast show notes?

CutCue produces chapter markers and transcript-oriented outputs where your plan supports them; you can use timestamps in YouTube descriptions, show notes, and NLE imports. Exact export formats depend on your workflow and plan.

Is CutCue only for Premiere Pro?

No. CutCue is not only for Premiere Pro. It analyzes audio or Twitch VODs and exports timestamped markers for workflows including Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, Vegas Pro, and publishing-oriented outputs.

Does CutCue guarantee demonetization safety?

No. CutCue flags potential demonetization or brand-safety risk segments for human review. It does not guarantee monetization or ad safety.

Does CutCue replace the editor?

No. CutCue does not replace the editor. It helps surface chapters, keywords, and risks before the editor reviews the timeline.

Your next episode. Already chaptered.

Upload the audio. Get timestamped chapters, highlights, and keyword markers. Open your editor and know exactly where everything is.