Get more from expensive recordings
Turn the ideas already inside podcasts, webinars, interviews, and demos into a larger publishing calendar.
Content repurposing software
Bytecap connects clip discovery, scene editing, captions, platform copy, scheduling, and publishing—so a podcast, webinar, interview, or YouTube video becomes more than one post.
Try it with your video
Preview your source before creating an account.
Stop scrubbing full recordings and rebuilding the same caption workflow.
source recording becomes a queue of editable vertical clips.
Edit, caption, schedule, and publish without exporting between tools.
The workflow
Bytecap keeps the entire repurposing job connected. The AI makes the first pass; you keep final control.
Try your videoPaste a supported public link or upload the podcast, webinar, interview, demo, or long video.
Bytecap looks for hooks, useful ideas, reactions, payoffs, and prompt-matched scenes.
Review the cut, adjust framing, style captions, remove silences, and add a hook title.
Prepare the final multi-platform content for YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, LinkedIn, Facebook, and X.
Built for the actual bottleneck
Turn the ideas already inside podcasts, webinars, interviews, and demos into a larger publishing calendar.
Keep AI clipping, captions, scene edits, platform copy, scheduling, and publishing connected.
Move each source through the same reviewable workflow instead of improvising a new production chain every week.
Every run can produce
Content repurposing software turns an existing asset into additional formats. Bytecap focuses on turning long video into short clips and the editing, captions, copy, scheduling, and publishing work around them.
Common sources include YouTube videos, podcasts, webinars, interviews, tutorials, product demos, courses, and marketing recordings.
Yes. Bytecap keeps generated clips editable and lets users review the cut, captions, layout, and post details before scheduling or publishing.
It removes repetitive first-pass work and keeps the workflow connected. Human review still matters for context, brand fit, accuracy, and final creative decisions.