Hi friend,
Today's business is for the person who read last week's letter and thought: that sounds like it works, but I really do not want to spend my evenings writing.
This one requires no writing at all.
Let me tell you about a specific moment that made me take this business seriously.
I was watching a YouTube channel I follow about personal finance, the kind with decent production values and genuinely useful content. About three minutes into the video, the creator switched from their own narration to what was clearly a poorly recorded voiceover in a slightly different acoustic environment. The audio quality dropped noticeably. The pacing felt off. The whole thing had the texture of something a person did at midnight when they ran out of time.
I checked the comments. 12 people in the first 20 had mentioned the audio. Most of them were kind about it. A few were not. The creator had replied to one of them,
"I know, I know, my microphone died. Working on it."
I thought about what that video had cost them. Not in money, but in credibility. In the 10 seconds of goodwill that a viewer gives you when the audio is not quite right and they decide whether to keep watching or close the tab.
Then I thought about what it would have cost to fix it.
With Murf AI, that creator could have had a studio-quality narration for that 3-minute segment in about 15 minutes. The cost would have been the time it took to paste in the script and choose a voice. That is the gap you are stepping into.
There are millions of creators, course builders, and video producers right now who need professional voiceover but are either recording themselves and unhappy with the result, skipping narration altogether, or paying $200 to $500 per project to hire a voice artist on a platform like Voices.com or Voice123. You become the person who delivers the same quality, faster, at a fraction of the price, and pockets the difference.
Murf AI has over 120 voices across 20 languages and 50 accents. The quality today is not "surprisingly good for AI." It is genuinely good. Indistinguishable from a professional recording in most use cases. You pick the voice that fits the content, paste in the script, adjust the speed and emphasis at the key moments that matter, and export a clean audio file or a narrated video.
For a 5-minute piece of content, the whole process takes 20 to 30 minutes.
Here is what that is worth.
A typical voiceover project for a five-minute YouTube video runs $75 to $150 on Fiverr. If you complete five projects a week, which is entirely manageable in evenings, that is $375 to $750 a week. Stretched across a month that is $1,500 to $3,000.
The ceiling is higher than that. Several creators I know who have built this service have moved their best clients onto monthly retainers: a YouTube channel pays them $350 a month for 4 narrated videos, and the whole thing takes 2 to 3 hours of actual work. That is a $116 hourly rate for work you do on a Wednesday evening in your pajamas.
There is also a version of this business that goes beyond Fiverr entirely. Corporate clients who need narration for training videos, product demos, and internal communications will pay $500 to $2,000 per project. One corporate client can change the entire revenue profile of this business overnight.
The startup cost: Murf's free tier gives you 10 minutes of voice generation per month. That is enough to produce your demo reel, which is the only thing you need to get started. After that, the Creator plan is $29 a month. You will earn that back from your first paid project.
The 90-day income potential: $500 to $3,000 a month on Fiverr alone. More if you move into corporate clients or retainer relationships. I have seen people hit $2,000 a month within 8 weeks of their first listing going live because the Fiverr algorithm rewards consistent delivery and five-star reviews, and this business makes both easier to achieve than almost any other service on the platform.
The tools:
120+ AI voices, studio-quality output, free tier available with no credit card required. This is the tool. There are others, but this is the one I keep seeing deliver consistent quality for this exact business model.
Eleven Labs is a great alternative.
Thursday's letter is the full blueprint: the 3 specific demo reels that get orders, the Fiverr listing structure that the algorithm rewards, the type of client who converts to a retainer versus the type who orders once and disappears, and the one upgrade inside Murf that most people do not find for weeks and that changes the quality of everything you produce once you discover it.
This is a business you could have your first demo reel ready for by this weekend. And a Fiverr listing live by Sunday.
See you Thursday.
Dee S.
P.S. If you have a voice you like the sound of, you can record yourself and use Murf's Studio Sound feature to clean and enhance the audio to professional quality. Some of my readers prefer this approach because it keeps their personality in the narration. Thursday's blueprint covers both options in detail.
