Many professionals experience this the first time they try to record a Google Slides presentation with audio. Hours go into perfecting the slides. The presentation runs smoothly. But later, when reviewing the recording, the audio is missing - completely silent slides with no explanation.
If you’ve ever tried to record Google Slides presentations with audio, you already know the challenge isn’t the slides themselves. The real struggle is everything around them: choosing the right recording tools, syncing audio correctly, remembering what was said, and turning spoken explanations into something useful after the presentation ends.
This guide walks you through practical, real-world ways to record Google Slides with audio, highlights common mistakes to avoid, and shows how pairing slide recordings with smarter voice notes and AI transcription using Remi8 can eliminate re-recording, lost context, and wasted time.
Why Recording Google Slides with Audio Matters More Than Ever?
Slides without audio are like bullet points without context. They show what, but never explain why.
For busy professionals, students, and creators, audio turns static slides into something human. I’ve used recorded Google Slides with audio for client walkthroughs, internal training, onboarding new hires, and even explaining proposals asynchronously so no one had to sit through another meeting.
Here’s where audio really pays off:
Teams across time zones can watch and listen when it suits them
Students can replay explanations instead of guessing from text
Presenters don’t have to repeat the same talk five times a week
The catch? Recording is only half the job. Remembering what you said later, finding key points, or pulling action items from a 30-minute presentation is where most people fall apart.
Can You Record Audio Directly in Google Slides?
The short answer: sort of, but not the way most people expect
Google Slides lets you insert audio files, but it doesn’t natively record your voice while you present. That’s the first thing that trips people up. You can’t just hit record and talk like you can in PowerPoint.
To record Google Slides presentations with audios, you need one of three approaches:
Screen recording tools
Google Meet or similar video platforms
External voice recording with synced playback
Each method works, but they’re not equal. I learned that the hard way after juggling half-baked recordings that sounded fine live but were useless afterward.
Method 1: Recording Google Slides with Audio Using Screen Recording Tools
When you need slide visuals and voice in one file
This is the most common approach. Tools like built-in screen recorders or browser extensions capture your slides and your microphone at the same time.
How it usually works:
Open your Google Slides in presentation mode
Start a screen recording tool
Speak through the slides as you present
Export a video file with audio included
This method is popular for tutorials and training videos, but it has downsides.
From experience, here’s what often goes wrong:
Audio quality depends heavily on your mic and environment
You end up with long videos that are hard to search
If you misspeak, you either live with it or re-record everything
This is where I started recording my voice separately using Remi8. While the screen recorder handled visuals, Remi8 captured my spoken explanation as clean voice notes and turned them into searchable AI transcripts. That way, even if the video was long, I could still find specific points in seconds.
Method 2: Recording Google Slides Presentations with Audio via Google Meet
A surprisingly effective workaround
This method works well for team presentations or client demos.
The basic setup:
Start a Google Meet
Share your screen with Google Slides
Hit “Record meeting”
Present as usual
Google Meet saves both the slides and your voice into a recording. It’s simple, but the output is still just a video file.
The problem I ran into? Rewatching a 45-minute meeting just to find one decision or number. That’s when I began pairing Meet recordings with AI transcription from Remi8.
I’d record the session audio separately using Remi8 on my phone or the AI voice recorder device, then let the AI:
Transcribe the entire presentation
Generate a summary
Extract action items automatically
Suddenly, presentations stopped disappearing into a black hole.
Method 3: Recording Audio Separately for Better Control (Go-To Way)
Why separating slides and voice changed everything
This method feels counterintuitive until you try it. Instead of forcing everything into one recording, you:
Present your Google Slides normally
Record your voice separately as a voice note
Started doing this during long strategy presentations where I needed clean documentation afterward. Remi8 became my default voice notes app for this.
What changed immediately:
Spoke more naturally without worrying about visuals
Audio quality improved
Could reuse the same audio for different slide versions
Once recorded, Remi8 transcribed everything in minutes, handled accents and technical terms, and gave me a full text version of my presentation. That transcript became:
Speaker notes
Training documentation
Meeting summaries
Follow-up emails
This alone saved me hours every week.
Turning Slide Audio into Something You Can Actually Use
Recording is easy. Managing the information is not.
Most people stop at “I recorded it.” That’s where productivity breaks down.
When you record Google Slides presentations with audios, you’re creating a lot of spoken information. Without structure, it’s impossible to reuse. This is where Remi8 quietly does the heavy lifting.
After each recording, I rely on:
AI-powered summaries that give me the TL;DR instantly
Ask Your Notes, where I literally ask questions like, “What decision did we make about pricing?”
Automatic action item extraction, so follow-ups don’t get buried
I’ve pulled exact quotes from presentations recorded months earlier. No rewinding. No guessing. Just answers.
Using the Remi8 AI Voice Recorder Device for Presentations
When phone apps aren’t enough
For high-stakes presentations, interviews, or workshops, I stopped relying only on my phone. Remi8’s dedicated AI voice recorder device became a game changer for me.
Unlike apps, this is a physical recorder built for professionals who can’t afford missed audio.
Why it stands out in real use:
One-touch recording means no fumbling before a presentation
Battery lasts through full-day workshops
Advanced noise cancellation handles conference rooms and open offices
Records offline and syncs later, which saved me during spotty Wi-Fi
Once synced, the audio flows straight into Remi8 for transcription, summaries, and searchable notes.
Real-World Scenarios Where This Setup Shines
Journalists and researchers
Field interviews often happen in unpredictable environments. The recorder captures clean audio, and Remi8 turns hours of interviews into organized interview transcription and summaries.
Doctors and healthcare professionals
Recording patient explanations (with consent) helps document symptoms and treatment plans accurately. Medical terminology is handled surprisingly well in transcription.
Sales and consulting teams
Recording slide-based pitch calls ensures nothing gets lost. I’ve seen teams revisit exact client objections weeks later using searchable voice notes.
Educators and trainers
Lecture recordings paired with transcripts mean students can search instead of rewatching entire sessions.
Common Mistakes to Avoid When Recording Google Slides with Audio
Even now, I catch myself making these mistakes if I’m not careful:
Relying only on video recordings without transcripts
Forgetting to test audio levels before presenting
Recording everything but reviewing nothing
Not extracting action items immediately
Pairing Google Slides with a proper AI meeting assistant like Remi8 fixes most of this automatically.
Final Thoughts: Make Your Presentations Work After You’re Done Talking
Learning how to record Google Slides presentations with audios is useful. Learning how to use those recordings afterward is what actually saves time.
Slides explain structure. Audio explains meaning. Transcripts, summaries, and searchable notes explain everything later when your brain is fried and deadlines are tight.
If you’re tired of rewatching recordings, retyping notes, or losing key decisions, tools like Remi8 make a real difference. Between the voice notes app, AI transcription, Ask Your Notes feature, and the professional AI voice recorder device, your presentations stop being one-time events and start becoming reusable knowledge.
If you’re already recording your slides, you’re halfway there. The other half is making sure your words don’t disappear once the presentation ends.

