One of the most common things people tell us after installing Voice Keyboard Pro is: "Wait, that's it?" The entire setup process takes less than 30 seconds, and you will be dictating text into any app on your Mac before you finish reading this sentence. Here is exactly how it works.
Step 1: Download and Install
Head to voicekeyboardpro.com and click the Download button. You will get a standard macOS installer package (.pkg file). Double-click it, follow the two-click installation wizard, and Voice Keyboard Pro will be installed in your Applications folder.
The app is lightweight — under 20 MB — so the download takes just a few seconds on most connections. There is no account to create, no email to enter, and no license key to manage. Just download and install.
Step 2: Grant Microphone Access
When you launch Voice Keyboard Pro for the first time, macOS will ask for permission to access your microphone. Click Allow. This is essential — Voice Keyboard Pro needs your microphone to hear what you say so it can transcribe your speech to text.
If you accidentally click "Don't Allow," you can fix it later by going to System Settings > Privacy & Security > Microphone and toggling Voice Keyboard Pro on. But it is much easier to just click Allow when prompted.
Step 3: Grant Accessibility Access
Voice Keyboard Pro will also request Accessibility permissions. This is how it types text into whatever app you are using. Without this permission, Voice Keyboard Pro can transcribe your speech but cannot insert the text into your active application.
macOS will prompt you to open System Settings, where you will see Voice Keyboard Pro listed under Privacy & Security > Accessibility. Toggle it on and enter your password if prompted. This is a one-time setup step that macOS requires for any app that types on your behalf.
Step 4: Choose Your Hotkey
Once permissions are granted, Voice Keyboard Pro appears as a small icon in your menu bar. Click it and you will see settings where you can choose your activation hotkey. The default is Left Control — you hold it down to start recording, speak naturally, and release to transcribe.
Some users prefer other keys depending on their workflow:
- Left Control (default) — Works well for most people. Easy to reach with your left pinky.
- Right Command — Good if you use Left Control for other shortcuts.
- Fn key — Convenient on MacBook keyboards where Fn is in the bottom-left corner.
- Globe key — Available on newer Macs, and rarely used for other purposes.
Pick whatever feels natural. You can always change it later from the menu bar settings.
Step 5: Your First Dictation
Open any app — Notes, a browser, Slack, your terminal, whatever. Click where you want text to appear. Now hold your hotkey, say something, and release. Your spoken words will appear as typed text in about half a second.
Try something simple first: hold the key, say "This is my first dictation with Voice Keyboard Pro," and release. You should see the text appear almost instantly. Congratulations — you are now set up and dictating.
Tips for the Best Results
Voice Keyboard Pro works remarkably well out of the box, but a few habits will make your experience even better:
Speak Naturally
You do not need to slow down, over-enunciate, or speak in a robotic voice. Voice Keyboard Pro's advanced AI transcription is trained on natural conversational speech. Talk the way you normally would to a colleague. Complete sentences work better than isolated words, because the AI uses context to improve accuracy.
Use a Quiet Environment
Voice Keyboard Pro handles moderate background noise well, but you will get the best results in a reasonably quiet space. If you are in a noisy environment, a simple headset microphone can make a significant difference. Your MacBook's built-in microphone works great in quiet to moderate settings.
Use Voice Commands
Voice Keyboard Pro recognizes natural voice commands for common formatting needs. Say "period" or "comma" naturally within your sentence and Voice Keyboard Pro will insert the appropriate punctuation. You can also say "new line" to create a line break or "new paragraph" for a paragraph break. These commands work seamlessly within your dictation without any special syntax.
Start with Low-Stakes Text
If you are new to voice dictation, start with text where perfection is not critical — Slack messages, draft emails, quick notes. This lets you build comfort with the workflow before using it for more important writing. Most people are surprised by how accurate it is on the first try, but building the habit of talking instead of typing takes a few sessions.
Check Your WPM Stats
Voice Keyboard Pro tracks your dictation speed in words per minute. After a few days of use, check your stats in the menu bar. Most users find they dictate at 120 to 150 WPM — three to four times faster than they type. Seeing those numbers can be a powerful motivator to make voice input a regular part of your workflow.
Troubleshooting
If Voice Keyboard Pro is not working after setup, check these two things:
- Microphone permission — Go to System Settings > Privacy & Security > Microphone and make sure Voice Keyboard Pro is toggled on.
- Accessibility permission — Go to System Settings > Privacy & Security > Accessibility and make sure Voice Keyboard Pro is toggled on.
If both permissions are granted and you are still having issues, try quitting and relaunching Voice Keyboard Pro from your Applications folder. In rare cases, macOS requires a restart after granting Accessibility permissions for the first time.
That is it. Thirty seconds from download to your first dictation. No accounts, no subscriptions, no configuration wizards. Just hold, speak, and release.