Effective audio review uses **timestamped notes** that automatically convert into actionable tasks linked to project context.
Instead of scattered notes in emails or text files, professionals use systems that capture feedback at specific timestamps and create tasks that reference the exact moment in the audio that needs attention.
Audio review generates feedback: "strings too loud at 1:23", "add reverb to vocals around 2:45", "fix timing issue at 0:38". Without timestamped notes, this feedback gets lost in emails, text files, or memory.
Composers receive feedback from multiple sources:
Without a centralized system, composers must manually track feedback across emails, messages, and notes—then remember which track and which timestamp each note refers to. Feedback gets lost, forgotten, or misinterpreted.
During audio review, the composer listens to Track 03 and leaves notes:
The system automatically creates tasks for each note, linked to Track 03 and the specific timestamp. When the composer opens the task, they can jump directly to 1:23 in the audio and hear the exact moment that needs attention—no manual searching or guessing.
Timestamped notes eliminate the need to manually track feedback across emails, messages, and text files. Everything is captured at the exact moment it occurs, and tasks are automatically created with full context.
Effective audio review uses **timestamped notes** that automatically convert into actionable tasks linked to project context.
Scattered feedback in emails and text files gets lost or forgotten. Timestamped notes capture feedback at the exact moment it occurs, create tasks automatically, and provide full context—eliminating manual tracking and ensuring nothing is missed.