AI Audio Misconceptions

Every conversation about AI audio eventually lands on the same two questions.

It doesn't matter whether the room is full of marketers, business owners, or media buyers. Whether the conversation happens over coffee or at an industry event. The questions are always a version of these:

Is AI audio actually good enough? And is it safe to use?

They're the right questions to ask. AI presents genuine risks — to brand reputation, to legal standing, to creative quality — if it's adopted without thought. So let's answer both directly.

Is AI Audio Good Enough? The short answer is yes. The longer answer is: it depends on who's producing it and how.

AI audio has reached the point where a well-produced piece is functionally indistinguishable from content voiced by a human in a professional studio. This isn't aspirational — it's the current state of the technology. The brands already using it are not fringe operators experimenting on the margins. They include some of the largest advertisers in the world.

What separates AI audio that sounds exceptional from AI audio that sounds flat or unnatural isn't the technology itself — it's the production process wrapped around it. Voice selection, sound design, mastering to broadcast specifications, quality control — these aren't optional steps. They're what makes the difference between an ad that earns trust and one that undermines it.

AI doesn't replace the craft. It changes where the craft is applied.

This matters particularly for radio, where the audio is the entire brand experience. There's no image to carry the weight. No video to hold attention. The voice, the mix, the pacing — every element is doing real work. AI audio that hasn't been produced to a broadcast standard will be noticed, even if listeners can't articulate exactly why.

Done well, they won't notice at all. That's the benchmark.

Is AI Audio Ethical and Safe to Use? Yes — when the right partners and processes are in place.

The concern here is legitimate. AI voice technology raises real questions about consent, ownership, and transparency. There have been well-publicised cases of AI-generated voices being used without authorisation. The legal and regulatory landscape is still developing, including here in Australia. But the existence of bad actors in any industry doesn't make the technology itself unsafe. It makes partner selection important.

A reputable AI audio provider operates with clearly licensed voice talent — voices created specifically for commercial use, with full consent and appropriate agreements in place. They can answer direct questions about how their voice models were built, what usage rights apply, and how content is stored and handled.

At Brand New Day, every AI voice used in production is sourced from licensed providers with transparent terms. The voices are purpose-built for commercial audio. There is no grey area around consent or ownership — and there shouldn't be.

The ethical question for marketers isn't whether to use AI audio. It's whether the business you're working with has done the due diligence to use it responsibly. Ask the question. A credible provider will have a clear answer.

The Honest Position

AI audio is not a shortcut and it's not a compromise. It's a production method — one that, in the right hands, delivers the same quality as traditional studio production, faster and at a lower cost.

The questions around quality and ethics are worth asking every time. They're the right instinct. The answers just happen to be more reassuring than most people expect.

If you'd like to understand how Brand New Day approaches AI voice production — or if you have specific questions about quality or compliance — get in touch. We're happy to walk you through our process before you commit to anything.

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Are AI Voices Good Enough for Radio?

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