LifeEcho Blog
Voice memory guides, family storytelling tips, and heartfelt advice on preserving the stories that matter most.
The Best Questions to Ask for a Family History Recording
A genealogy-specific question bank organized by category — covering immigration stories, occupational history, naming traditions, historical events, family mysteries, and lost branches of the family.
Building a Living Family Tree with Voice Recordings
A living family tree doesn't just show names and dates — it contains the voices, stories, and personalities of the people in it. Here's how to build one that future generations can actually use and add to.
Genealogy Beyond Documents: Why Voice Recordings Complete the Picture
Documents tell you who existed. Voice recordings tell you who they were. Here's why genealogists who rely only on records are missing half the story.
How to Create an Oral History Archive for Your Family
A step-by-step guide to building a lasting oral history archive: recording, transcribing, organizing, and preserving family stories so future generations can find and use them.
How to Record Your Family's Immigration Story
Immigration stories are uniquely at risk of being lost. Language barriers, trauma, and the pressure to assimilate all work against preservation. Here's how to approach the conversation and capture what matters most.
How to Record Oral History for Your Family Tree
A practical guide for genealogists who want to go beyond documents. Learn why oral history is the missing layer of a family tree and how to record it — even with distant relatives.
How to Use Voice Recordings with Ancestry.com and FamilySearch
A practical walkthrough of how voice recordings and transcripts complement your Ancestry.com trees and FamilySearch records — and how to attach them so they're actually useful.
Why DNA Tests Don't Tell Your Family's Real Story
DNA testing tells you where your ancestors came from genetically. It will never tell you who they were, what they believed, or what they went through. Here's why oral history is the irreplaceable complement to genetic genealogy.