Presentable puts you in front of an AI audience that listens hard and pushes back harder — before the real moment.
No install required · Works in any modern browser · Free tier included
Stage Mode for presentations and talks. Boardroom Mode for job interviews. Both use the same cast of AI characters.
Set your topic, pick a category (or let Auto-detect decide), choose a difficulty level, and optionally upload your materials.
Characters listen in real time and ask questions live as you speak, or hold them all until the end. Your choice.
Six scored dimensions, every point cited from your transcript, and a single highest-leverage next step.
Stage Mode and Boardroom Mode share the same cast but are tuned for completely different goals.
Practise presenting anything — pitch, lecture, keynote, or workshop — in front of six characters, each focused on a different dimension of your delivery.
Simulate a full job interview with an AI panel. Your CV drives every question — behavioural, technical, and situational — scored against six hiring dimensions.
Each character has a specific mandate and won't let you off the hook until it's met. They aren't interchangeable — they're specialists.
If your content doesn't hook the room through story, vivid example, or a clear why-it-matters moment, Mochi will tell you. She tests every presenter with the same question the audience is already thinking.
Asks for sources, tests your logic, and probes the mechanism behind every causal claim. Unsupported assertions, vague statistics, and hedged conclusions end with Rex. In Boardroom Mode, he sets live technical tasks.
Rejects jargon and complexity. If a non-expert can't follow every step of your argument in plain language, Naps will stop you mid-sentence and ask you to say it again — simpler.
Goes well beyond the surface — counterarguments, edge cases, nuance, and the limits of your evidence. Prof expects honest acknowledgment of what you don't know and won't accept shallow answers.
Monitors your narrative arc. Disconnected points, missing transitions, weak signposting, and arguments that arrive before their setup — Pip spots them all and names exactly where the thread broke.
Listens not for content but conviction. Tone, presence, and whether you sound like someone worth listening to. Biscuit asks one question most presenters dread: would you be persuaded by your own delivery?
Everything you set before a session shapes what the characters ask and how hard they push. The more context you provide, the more targeted the pressure.
Presentable monitors your speaking volume and pace in real time. If your delivery drifts, a hint surfaces immediately on screen — not in the debrief when it's too late to act on it.
Every session ends with a full debrief. Not vague encouragement — scored dimensions with moments cited verbatim from what you said, and a single highest-leverage next step.
Stories, human anchors, and emotional hooks. Did your content resonate beyond the facts?
Sources, logic, and causal claims. Were your assertions credible and backed under questioning?
Plain language and followable reasoning. Could a non-expert track every step of your argument?
Nuance, counterarguments, and genuine insight. Did you go beyond the surface?
Flow, signposting, and narrative arc. Did the whole thing hold together from open to close?
Tone, presence, and conviction. Not what you said — whether you sounded like you believed it.
Were your behavioural answers grounded in Situation, Task, Action, and Result — or did they drift?
Structure and signal density. Were you concise, followable, and free of filler?
Specifics, trade-offs, and domain expertise when probed. Did you go beyond surface-level answers?
Honest reflection on gaps, mistakes, and growth. Were you credible about your limits?
Did you answer what was actually asked, without deflection, evasion, or pivoting to a prepared story?
Natural, unscripted, and composed under follow-up pressure. Did you sound genuine or rehearsed?
The single best moment of your session — who asked what, exactly what you said, and why it landed. If there wasn't one, you're told what it would have taken.
Top filler words counted from your transcript — "you know" 9 times, "basically" 6 times — rated against professional speaking thresholds.
Strong Yes · Yes · Maybe · No · Strong No — what a real panel would decide, and the specific evidence behind it.
Practise it here, on your terms, before it counts.
Start your first session →