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Automate your iPhone by voice alone via Vocal Shortcuts

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Control Your Phone With Your Voice
Vocal Shortcuts can feel like a superpower.
Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

Vocal Shortcuts let you control your phone by speaking a command out loud. Think “Hey Siri,” but for running your own custom actions from Apple’s Shortcuts app. (Here’s a quick rundown on Shortcuts, if you’re not familiar with this powerful tool.)

Using Vocal Shortcuts is a versatile way to automate tasks on your iPhone with the power of your voice alone. You don’t need to make space on your Home Screen for a Shortcuts widget, type anything into Spotlight or, god forbid, open the Shortcuts app.

You can create a Vocal Shortcut that opens an app you use often, like the Apple TV remote, for instant access with your voice.

You can even use this feature as a roundabout way to use “OK Google” — or whatever your favorite alternative voice assistant may be — instead of Siri.

Watch our quick video or keep reading.

Set up custom voice commands with Vocal Shortcuts

Shortcuts can quickly run automated actions on your iPhone, iPad or Mac. They’re made using Apple’s Shortcuts app, where you can visually piece together actions offered by the apps installed on your device. You can roll your own or use shortcuts made by other people.

People typically run a shortcut by asking Siri or through a widget placed on the iPhone’s Home Screen. But any shortcut you create also can be triggered via a Vocal Shortcut. (For a look at how useful this feature can be, see our roundup of the eight best iPhone shortcuts to get you started.)

Table of contents: Set up custom voice commands with Vocal Shortcuts

  1. Enable Vocal Shortcuts
  2. Create an action
  3. Create a trigger phrase and train your phone
  4. Run your Vocal Shortcut at any time
  5. Use Vocal Shortcuts to use Google Assistant or ChatGPT
  6. More awesome accessibility power features

Enable Vocal Shortcuts

Setting up Vocal Shortcuts on iPhone
Make a custom Siri command.
Screenshot: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

To start using Vocal Shortcuts, open the Settings app on your iPhone, then go to Accessibility > Vocal Shortcuts. (You’ll find it in the Speech section toward the bottom of the list.) Tap Set Up Vocal Shortcuts if this is your first time.

If you previously had some set up but disabled the feature later, simply reenable Vocal Shortcuts to make them active again.

Create an action

Tap Add Action to create a Vocal Shortcut. A Vocal Shortcut can either run a Siri Request — something you would have asked Siri — or run an existing shortcut.

  • Create a Siri Request by typing a command you frequently give to Siri, like, “Text my partner that I’m on my way home” or “Play music by Driftless Pony Club” or “Roll a D20.”
  • Alternatively, scroll down to pick any shortcut currently on your phone.

Create a trigger phrase and train your phone

Training a trigger phrase for a Vocal Shortcut
Repeat it three times and it’ll be ready.
Screenshot: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

Next, enter the trigger phrase you want to use to activate the shortcut. This can be anything you want, from something as simple as “Stock update” or “Favorite music” to something silly like, “Ahoy, computer!”

You’ll need to repeat the phrase three times so your phone can learn it, but then it’ll be ready to go. I recommend saying the phrase in different pitches and holding your phone at various distances from your mouth, so it learns to listen in all the different ways you might speak your custom Vocal Shortcut aloud.

I created a Vocal Shortcut that I use for making coffee. Because of the way that I am, I have eight identical coffee mugs. If I grabbed the first mug I saw every time, that one mug would get worn down much more than the others. So I created a Siri request, “pick a random number between one and eight,” with the trigger phrase, “Which coffee mug should I use?” I can shout that at my phone, and it’ll tell me which mug to grab.

Run your Vocal Shortcut at any time

Just like “Hey Siri,” your phone will always be listening for your command. Speak it out loud to trigger the action. You’ll see a small banner at the top of the screen showing the Vocal Shortcut’s been activated, followed by any Siri results from your request.

Use Vocal Shortcuts to use Google Assistant or ChatGPT

If you take issue with Siri’s often unhelpful responses to basic questions, you’ve previously had no other option. Siri has system-wide access by holding down the side button; all the other voice assistants need to be launched from an app.

But Vocal Shortcuts can set up an “OK Google” voice trigger, just like Siri.

After you download the Google Assistant app from the App Store, download this shortcut with a single Ask Google action. You can create a Vocal Shortcut that runs your Ask Google shortcut, then train the trigger phrase as “OK Google.”

If you prefer ChatGPT, download the ChatGPT app from the App Store, then download this shortcut that runs ChatGPT’s Voice Mode action. Set that as your Vocal Shortcut, with a trigger phrase like “Hey ChatGPT.”

More awesome accessibility power features

Check out other neat accessibility settings:

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