For managers & leads

Rehearse the conversations you keep postponing

Avoidance feels safer than saying the wrong thing—until feedback that never lands becomes a surprise review, or a delayed problem becomes a termination nobody saw coming. Practice out loud first: voice-first sessions with emotional pushback, debriefs that sharpen your next take, and progress you can track over time.

No credit card · Private sessions

Person rehearsing a difficult conversation at a desk with headphones and a laptop in a bright, calm office

In progress

“Missed deadline” feedback

24h

Completed

  • Lead with the outcome, not the attackDone
  • Name the gap without making it personalDone
  • Hold silence without filling itDone

What it is

An AI simulation for the talks you keep moving: performance pressure, mediation, tough feedback, and high-stakes endings.

Why it helps

Discomfort in practice is the point—the role-player reacts like a person, so your first draft lands here, not on someone’s career.

Who it is for

New and experienced managers who would rather be clear than nice-and-vague—and teams rolling out cohort practice.

Difficult conversations that don't happen don't disappear—they get more expensive every week you wait.

PracticeTalk is where you pay that cost in rehearsal, not in damage control.

Example scenarios

Conversations you can practice inside the product

Performance reviews, conflict mediation, difficult feedback, and endings—starter scenarios you customize, then run as voice sessions with a role-player calibrated for emotional realism.

The room goes quiet. You still have to say it.
Loyalty, kids, a mortgage, and a role that is no longer working.

You practice: Steady presence when they are shattered; clarity without cruelty.

You love them. The roadmap does not.
Missed deadlines, defensiveness, and a company stuck in the middle.

You practice: Direct expectations without torching the relationship or the cap table.

Slack is polite. The team is not okay.
Two strong ICs eroding trust in reviews and threads, and everyone notices.

You practice: Address impact first, pick sides never; open a path back to respect.

Ready to rehearse?

Create a free account, choose a scenario, and run your first practice session. The goal is simple: get the words wrong here, not on a person.

Create free account

Why not just ChatGPT?

Scenarios, stakes, and benchmarks—beyond a one-off prompt

A freeform chat can help you think. PracticeTalk is built to help you perform: repeatable runs, consistent rubric, and progress signals a pasted thread does not preserve.

Ad-hoc AI chat
Helpful for drafting a paragraph—easy to steer, easy to forget. No shared scenario library, no session history that tells you whether you are actually getting better.
PracticeTalk
Voice rehearsal with a role-player tuned for discomfort, structured starters for real managerial moments, and debriefs that stack so you can see weak spots and improvement over time.

What you get

The discomfort in practice is cheaper than the surprise in real life

Most harm at work is not malice—it is a rushed sentence, a tone you did not notice, or feedback that lands as an attack. PracticeTalk exists so you run that moment with your voice first, with enough emotional friction to matter, then show up clearer for the human in front of you.

Voice-first, emotionally real
You speak out loud while the AI plays the other side—defensiveness, deflection, silence, even tears—so the rehearsal feels closer to a human nervous system than a polite chatbot. Nothing you say here is shared with your team.
Structured scenarios—not a blank prompt
A library of work situations (feedback, conflict, performance pressure, endings) gives you rails, stakes, and replay. You are not inventing the scenario and the rubric from scratch every time.
Progress you can see
Sessions add up: debriefs highlight weak spots, patterns across runs, and what improved—so practice turns into measurable readiness, not one-off venting.

How it works

Four steps to rehearse before the real conversation

Hover a step on desktop—or tap to select on touch—to preview what changes at each stage.

Step 1

Your context

Drop in half-formed notes—structure comes later.

What the feedback teaches you

Not only gentler for them—clearer for you

Debriefs are scored against skills from real leadership and difficult-conversation training: clarity, structure, listening, boundaries, and how you handle resistance—not a politeness score.

More than “be careful”

You refine the message, rehearse answers to pushback, and practice boundaries—so the talk is less painful for the receiver and more legible: what you need, what is true, and what happens next.

Clarity and directness
State purpose and outcome early, with observable facts instead of vague worry—so people know what the conversation is about, not just that something is wrong.
Structured honesty
Build habits from how real training works: facts before story, invite dialogue, speak tentatively where it helps—plus SBI-style coaching on what you actually said.
Respect without losing the point
Deliver hard news with dignity: directness that does not humiliate, and focus that stays on the issue—not a pile-on.
Listening and emotional intelligence
Practice making space, paraphrasing, and naming emotion without turning it into a debate—so you steer instead of spiral.
Boundaries and professionalism
Hold the line on what you can promise, what belongs in HR or legal, and what a fair next step looks like—without improvising commitments you will regret.
Dialogue under pressure—and a clean close
Handle pushback, silence, and traps more calmly; land logistics, timelines, and support framing when the scenario allows.

Coaching reflects your practice session and transcript; it does not replace HR, legal, or employment advice.

Why rehearse first

Your employee is not a practice audience

PracticeTalk is for managers and leads who use it before performance reviews, project resets, and “we need to talk” meetings. The first time you say the hard thing out loud should not be the first time their nervous system hears it.

“I heard myself blaming the person instead of the problem. Fixing that in practice meant my report did not have to recover from a talk I never meant to give that way.”
Engineering manager, Distributed product team

Built for cohorts and learning budgets—not just individuals

The same simulation engine works for manager onboarding: predictable intake, practice on each person's schedule, and something concrete left behind when the workshop slot ends. Roll out to a team when you are ready.

Start free, expand later