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Conference Talk

Rehearse your talk until every minute earns its place

Practice conference talks, keynotes, and workshops with an AI coach that evaluates your storytelling arc, audience engagement, energy consistency, and narrative coherence.

Why good talks still lose the audience

  • -You have great content but no narrative thread — it feels like a list of facts, not a story
  • -Your energy is high in the opening but drops in the middle when the audience is deciding whether to stay
  • -You can't tell which sections are too long and which are too rushed without an outside perspective
  • -Conference audiences are fighting phones and fatigue — you need to earn their attention every minute
  • -Practicing alone gives you no signal on whether your talk is engaging or just informative

How PitchPilote helps speakers

  • Record your full talk and get engagement-focused analysis
  • Storytelling arc score — does your talk have a beginning, tension, and resolution?
  • Energy consistency tracking across the entire talk
  • Narrative gap detection — where the story loses momentum
  • Audience engagement prediction based on pacing, tone, and content density
  • Face questions that test whether your key takeaways actually landed

What you get

Storytelling Arc Score (0-100)

Audience Engagement prediction

Energy Consistency tracking

Narrative gap detection with specific moments flagged

Tone arc: opening hook, middle depth, closing impact

Pace analysis for content density vs. audience absorption

Filler word detection

Progress tracking for iterative rehearsal

Example AI questions you'll face

These are the kind of questions PitchPilote's AI audience will ask after your practice session:

You opened with a statistic but never came back to it. How would you use that number as a thread throughout your talk?

The middle 5 minutes felt like a different talk from the opening. How do you connect your technical deep-dive back to the audience's daily work?

You ended with 'thank you' — what's a stronger closing that gives the audience a specific action to take?

You covered 6 topics in 15 minutes. If you had to cut 3, which would you keep and why?

Your demo section was the most energetic part. How would you bring that same energy to the problem framing at the start?

Rehearse Your Talk Free

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