Transcript search finds words.SearchByVideo finds scenes.
Transcript search only finds spoken words. SearchByVideo finds visual scenes, actions, objects, and on-screen text — so it works even on silent footage and returns the exact timestamp of what you describe.
Transcript search vs SearchByVideo
Both help you navigate video, but they answer different questions. Here is exactly where each one wins.
| Capability | Transcript search | SearchByVideo |
|---|---|---|
| Finds spoken words | Yes — its core strength | Yes — plus everything else |
| Finds visual scenes & actions | No — words only | Yes — describe what you saw |
| Works on silent footage | No — nothing to transcribe | Yes — reads the frames, not audio |
| Detects objects & on-screen text | No — only if spoken aloud | Yes — sees objects and text on screen |
| Returns precise timestamps | Only where words appear | Yes — jumps to the exact moment |
| Jump & export clips | Limited to spoken segments | Yes — jump to and export any moment |
When transcript search is enough
If you only need to find something that was said out loud, transcript search is direct and reliable. It shines when:
- You want to locate an exact spoken quote or keyword.
- The video is a podcast, interview, or lecture with clear speech.
- Everything you care about was described verbally.
When you need scene search
The moment your query is about something you can see rather than something that was said, transcripts fall short. Choose SearchByVideo when:
- You are looking for a visual scene, action, or object.
- The footage is silent — security clips, b-roll, drone video.
- You need on-screen text or a specific moment nobody narrated.
How SearchByVideo finds visual moments
Instead of indexing an audio transcript, SearchByVideo reads the video itself.
It analyzes the frames
AI examines the actual visual content of your video — people, actions, objects, scenes, and any text shown on screen — not just the words that were spoken.
You describe it in plain language
Type what you are looking for the way you would say it — for example “person carrying a box” — and the model matches your description to what appears in the footage.
It jumps to the exact timestamp
You land on the precise moment your description happens, ready to review, jump to, or export as a clip — no scrubbing through the whole video.
Frequently asked questions
Can you search a video without a transcript?
Yes. SearchByVideo searches the visual content of a video, so you do not need a transcript, captions, or any spoken audio. Describe the scene, action, object, or on-screen text you want and it returns the exact timestamp — even on silent footage.
Does transcript search find visual scenes?
No. Transcript search only matches words that were actually spoken and transcribed. It cannot find a visual scene, an action, an object, or on-screen text unless someone happened to say those words out loud. For anything you can see but nobody described, you need scene search.
How do I search a video for an object or action?
Describe it in plain language — for example "person opening a red door" or "close-up of a laptop screen." SearchByVideo analyzes the frames of the video, matches your description to what appears visually, and jumps you straight to the timestamp where it happens.
Is scene search more accurate than transcript search?
For visual queries, yes — transcript search simply has no data about what appears on screen, so it cannot answer them at all. For finding an exact spoken quote, a transcript is direct and reliable. The two approaches answer different questions, and SearchByVideo covers the visual half that transcripts miss.
Can I search silent video footage?
Yes. Because SearchByVideo reads the visual content rather than an audio track, it works on security footage, drone clips, b-roll, screen recordings, and any other video with no speech. Transcript-based tools return nothing on silent footage because there are no words to index.
Search what you saw, not just what was said
Upload a video and find the exact moment of any scene, action, or object — even on silent footage.