If you’re like most people, you probably use voice assistants to do things like control your smart home or play music. But what if you don’t want them listening to your every move? You can use them without them ever knowing, by using a voice assistant that listens only when you ask it to. Here are four tips on how to do this:

  1. Set up a schedule for the assistant to listen: Make sure the assistant is set up to listen when you’re ready it. For example, if you have an Echo device, set it up so that it listens when you say “Alexa,” “Alexa,” or “Alexa” in your room at night.
  2. Use a specific phrase for the assistant: If the assistant is Echo, make sure that you say “Alexa” or “Alexa” in a specific way each time so that the assistant knows which voice command to listen for. For example, if your Echo device has an " Alexa" button on the front, say “Alexa” three times instead of just once.
  3. Use a different phrase for each day: If the assistant is Echo and there are multiple commands per day (like with Spotify), make sure to use different phrases each time so that the assistant knows which one to listen for on which day. For example, if there are three commands per day (like with Spotify) and one of those days has an Alexa command but another has a Google Play Music command, then use different phrases on those days (like “Google Play Music” instead of “Alexa”).
  4. Don’t forget about voice commands: Don’t forget about voice commands! If there’s something specific that you want your assistant to do (like play music from your phone), just say it in a voice command and it will do it!

What We Mean When We Say “Always Listening”

Smart speakers (and mobile devices, when they have features like “Hey Siri” or “Hey Google” enabled) aren’t “always listening” in the way you might think. They’re always listening for the voice command that activates them. However, they’re not always recording you. They only record and upload audio when they hear that voice command.

Of course, sometimes they hear the voice command incorrectly. A smart speaker, smartphone, or smart watch might think it hears “Hey Siri,” “Hey Google,” or “Alexa” and start listening, uploading something you really didn’t intend for it to hear. That audio might then be listened to by a human being for quality assurance reasons—unless you change your privacy settings to prevent employees and contractors from listening to your recordings.

RELATED: Is My Smart Speaker Always Listening to Me?

Press a Button to Trigger the Assistant

If you don’t like the sound of this but really love the convenience of voice assistants, there’s an alternative: Activate the assistant by holding a button instead of using a voice command.

Here’s how this works on common devices:

iPhone: Press the Side button and immediately start speaking to Siri. On an iPhone with a Home button, press the Home button and immediately start speaking. iPad: Press the Home button and immediately start speaking. On iPads without a Home button, press the Top button and immediately start speaking. Apple Watch: Press the Digital Crown on the side of the watch and immediately start speaking. Android: Long-press the Home button to launch Google Assistant. (This may vary between devices. ) Windows 10: Click the “Cortana” button to the right of the search box at the left side of the taskbar. Mac: Click the “Siri” button to the left of the clock at the top-right corner of your Mac’s screen.

Whenever you want to talk to your voice assistant, just press the button and start talking.

If you find this convenient enough, you can disable the voice commands like “Hey Siri,” “Hey Google,” and “Hey Cortana” in your device’s settings. Now they’ll only listen when you press a button.

What About Smart Speakers?

Unfortunately, smart speakers don’t offer a way to disable their “always listening” feature while also issuing them commands at the same time. It makes sense—are you really going to walk over to a smart speaker and press a button on it each time you want to issue a command?

However, smart speakers do allow you to disable their microphones to stop that always-listening feature. But you won’t be able to speak to the smart speaker until you turn on its microphone again.

For example, let’s say that you use a smart speaker a lot while cooking. You could have the microphone off most of the time and turn it on only while cooking. Or, let’s say that you have guests over that aren’t comfortable with the smart speaker’s recording features—you could mute its microphone while they’re visiting.

Look for a button or switch on your smart speaker that temporarily disables the always-listening feature. For example:

Now it’s entirely up to you when your smart speaker listens, and you can easily control it with a button or switch.

RELATED: How to Mute Your Google Smart Speaker or Display’s Microphone