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Guides

How to use a teleprompter

A teleprompter only helps if your delivery still sounds unscripted. Here's how to use one well, whatever tool you're on.

  1. Write for the ear — short sentences, plain words, contractions. If it's awkward to say, rewrite it.
  2. Place the screen as close to the lens as you can, at eye level, so your gaze stays near the camera.
  3. Set the text size large enough to read at your filming distance without leaning in.
  4. Choose how the scroll is controlled — let it follow your voice, or set a fixed speed you can keep up with.
  5. Do a short test read and adjust size, distance and pace before the real take.
  6. Read in natural phrases, pause for emphasis, and let your eyes move a little rather than locking a stare.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Reading too fast to 'beat' a fixed scroll — use voice-following so you don't have to.
  • Putting the screen too far below the lens, which makes your eyes visibly drop.
  • Cramming dense, written-style sentences that are hard to say out loud.
  • Staring without blinking — it reads as robotic on camera.

Try it on letter maps

Frequently asked questions

How do I not look like I'm reading?
Script in spoken language, keep the text near the lens, and let the pace follow your voice so you're not chasing the scroll. Small natural eye movement and pauses help.
Where should the teleprompter be placed?
As close to the camera lens as possible and at eye level, so the camera sees you looking at it rather than down or to the side.
What reading speed should I aim for?
Whatever sounds natural — often 130–160 words per minute. With voice-following you don't set a speed; the text matches you.

Related: Quick start, Reading speed, What is a teleprompter