AI Public Speaking Coach
Rehearse your talk to a patient empty room.

Public speaking improves with reps. The problem is finding the reps — most of us only give a talk every few months, and the only feedback is the one nervous moment when we're already on stage. Soulit's public speaking coaches are an audience that doesn't get tired. Walk through your talk, get feedback on structure, pacing, and clarity. Run it ten times if you need to.
What the coach does
You paste or describe your talk. The coach reads it back to you in structured form — what's the thesis, where does it lag, where does the audience get lost. Then you can run sections out loud (typed or via the chat), and the coach gives feedback: was the opening sharp, did the example land, where could you cut.
Good for
Conference talks, internal company presentations, weddings and toasts, classroom lectures, sales pitches, podcast appearances — anywhere structured speech matters. Especially useful when you have one chance and want it to land.
What it can't do
It can't hear your delivery — pace, tone, body language. For that, record yourself or work with a real coach. It can analyze the words and structure, which is most of what makes a talk good or bad. Free to start.
Frequently asked questions
- Can it write my speech for me?
- It can draft, but the talk should be yours. The strongest speeches are written by the speaker; the coach helps you make yours sharper.
- Will it tell me my pacing?
- From the text, it can flag sections that read too long or skip too fast. For actual delivery pacing, you need to record yourself.
- Is it useful for non-English speeches?
- Yes — the coach can work in many languages. Quality is best in English, French, Spanish, German, Japanese, Korean, Chinese; varies elsewhere.
- How many times should I rehearse with it?
- Three to five rounds for a 15-minute talk usually finds the rough spots. More for a high-stakes keynote. Past 10 rounds you're polishing diminishing returns.