
Plaud NotePin S
The world's most wearable physical AI note taker. Interview recording that stays out of the subject's line of sight. Hands-free, all day.
Interview recording · How-to guide
Managing a recording device during an interview competes with maintaining the rapport that produces honest, detailed answers. A subject who notices the device changes how they speak. The best recording setup is the one they stop thinking about.
Best for in-person interview capture
Quick answer
Whether the interview is in-person or remote, the setup decisions before pressing record determine whether every word is usable for transcription or quotation.
Ask permission before recording, especially in jurisdictions with strict recording laws. State clearly what the recording will be used for. For in-person interviews, confirm before any device is placed on the table or clipped to clothing. For remote interviews, confirm on-record at the start of the session.
Place the device 6 to 18 inches from the speaker's mouth, resting on a soft surface to reduce vibration noise from the table. Use a room with carpet, curtains, or other soft furnishings to reduce echo. Close windows and turn off fans before starting. A digital recorder or dictaphone provides a reliable backup.
Record a short warm-up exchange and play it back. This confirms audio quality and catches placement problems before anything important is said. For remote interviews, test your platform's recording function before the subject joins.
A second device, a backup app, or a spare recorder means one hardware failure does not lose the interview. For published work or legal proceedings, a backup recording is not optional.
Methods
Compared on audio quality relative to distance from subject, how much device management is required during the session, battery reliability for full-day use, and whether transcription is built in.
Convenient and always available. Visually prominent. The subject stays aware of the device throughout the session. Notifications and battery drops can interrupt.
Good audio quality. Requires the interviewer to hold or redirect the mic, which signals recording pressure and requires active device management.
Excellent proximity audio. Requires physical contact with the subject and an extended setup discussion, inappropriate in most journalism, research, or HR contexts.
Clips to the interviewer's collar at 17.4 g. Runs hands-free up to 20 hours. Out of the subject's direct line of sight. Always record with consent.
Based on common interview recording methods and Plaud product data. Always confirm participant consent and follow local recording laws before recording any conversation.
Tips
Three factors determine whether the recording produces a usable verbatim record. Whether audio is captured close enough to the conversation for word-level clarity. Whether the device stays out of the subject's field of vision throughout the session. Whether the battery covers the full session without interruption.
The easier way
Plaud NotePin S weighs 17.4 g and clips to a collar, lanyard, or wristband. It is small enough that the subject's attention stays on the conversation rather than on the device. It runs up to 20 hours on a single charge, covers the full session without battery risk, and Plaud Intelligence generates a transcription after the session without a separate upload. Always confirm the subject's consent before recording any interview.

The world's most wearable physical AI note taker. Interview recording that stays out of the subject's line of sight. Hands-free, all day.
Plaud NotePin S for in-person interviews where the wearable form minimizes observer effect. Plaud Note Pro for phone or mixed-format interview workflows where call capture is also needed.

Wearable clip recorder for natural in-person interviews.

Best for phone interviews, call recording, and mixed-format workflows.
Use a device placed close to the conversation rather than across the table. A wearable recorder like Plaud NotePin S clips near the conversation and runs hands-free for the full session. Plaud Intelligence generates a transcription automatically after the interview.
For in-person interviews, a wearable clip recorder like Plaud NotePin S minimizes observer effect because it does not sit on the table or require handling. For phone or remote interviews, Plaud Note Pro captures call audio directly. Always confirm consent before recording.
Yes. A phone works for short interviews in quiet environments. It is visually prominent and can be interrupted by notifications or battery drops. For longer or more sensitive interviews, a dedicated recorder with no notification interruptions gives more reliable capture.
Use a wearable recorder that clips to clothing rather than placing a device on the table between you and the subject. Low profile does not mean covert: always inform the subject and confirm their consent before the session begins. Consent before recording is required by law in most jurisdictions.