![]() Click the three dots and select Edit on Classic Studio. If you mouse over the row containing the automatic subtitles, three dots in a vertical line will appear on the right.If you need to fix the subtitles, go back to EDIT VIDEO, More options and press Subtitles.If the auto-generated subtitles are OK, you’re done and can go straight to the download step, below. Play the video and press C to switch the captions (subtitles) on.When they are available, the Subtitles/closed captions (c) button will be visible on your video (mouse over to see).Then the automatic subtitles will be added. For most of us that will be: This content has never aired on television in the US. Answer the Caption certification question by selecting from the dropdown.Under Original video language, subtitles and CC, select your video language.(You may want to keep this screen open in its own browser tab - we will come back here a lot.) Click EDIT VIDEO (blue button under your video).(You can always change it to Public later.) If you don’t want people to see it yet, you can set it to Private.This is the easiest way to create the subtitles. Use a desktop computer (mine is running Windows 10).And the good news is, it’s all FREE - no paid software! So here it all is, in one place: how you can put permanent subtitles on your video. It involved piecing together several steps from different internet pages. It was tricky but after many hours I eventually solved it. By adding permanent subtitles, I could upload the videos anywhere (including here on LinkedIn) and they would always have the correct subtitles. This is exactly the situation I found myself recently when making a series of videos to promote my new book. You’ve probably seen online videos where you can switch subtitles on and off, right? For example, on YouTube just press C to toggle them (C for captions).īut if you create a video, how can you embed subtitles? That is, how can you put subtitles permanently into your video?
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