
AskPitch
AI voice rehearsal for pitches, interviews, and sales calls
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About AskPitch
AskPitch is a voice-based practice platform for the conversations that make you nervous, sales pitches, job interviews, and high-stakes presentations. You rehearse out loud with an AI coach that plays the other side of the table, then get feedback you can act on before the real thing. The premise is simple and honest, most people script these moments in their head but never actually say the words until it counts, and that first rep should not be the live one.
The signature feature is Pitch Duel, a timed voice challenge that runs about ninety seconds. An AI persona called Pitch speaks first, setting up a scenario, you answer naturally by voice, and AskPitch scores the attempt. There are focused variants to choose from, a busy prospect who is barely interested and needs to be kept on the line, a tough interview with pointed questions to answer clearly under pressure, and a business pitch where you have to make an idea land fast. Your first duel is free, and after it you can send one private challenge link to someone else without even signing up, which quietly turns solo practice into a small competition between colleagues or friends.
Beyond the duel, the core of AskPitch is a rehearsal loop. You choose a conversation type, practice speaking with the AI coach as it challenges you, guides you, and keeps the session moving, then review the feedback and go again. It covers interviews, sales calls, business pitches, presentations, objection handling, and custom scenarios you define yourself. The point is repetition against a partner that pushes back, not a static script you read once and hope sticks. Each pass is a full spoken run, so the muscle you build is the actual one you need in the room.
The feedback is where the practice turns into improvement. AskPitch aims at the things that actually sink a live conversation, responding under pressure, handling objections, keeping your tone right, and cutting the filler words that creep in when nerves take over. Sessions produce concrete notes rather than a vague thumbs up, so each round gives you something specific to fix before the next attempt. Over several sessions that adds up to a track record you can look back on, which is more useful than a single practice run you forget by the next day.
It fits salespeople sharpening a pitch, job seekers who want to walk into an interview already warmed up, founders rehearsing an investor conversation, and anyone whose work hinges on speaking well when it matters. Because you can build custom scenarios, it also stretches to niche situations a generic interview-prep tool would never cover, like a specific objection you keep losing to, a particular kind of stakeholder you struggle with, or the exact opening line of a cold call you can never quite nail. You aim the practice at your real weak spot rather than a canned list.
What makes it different is that it's built around your voice under time pressure, not typed answers or a checklist. Plenty of tools will help you write a pitch or draft interview answers, and plenty more will critique a document. AskPitch makes you say the words out loud to a coach that talks back and scores you, which is much closer to the real experience than reading prepared lines off a screen. The duel framing and the shareable challenge links also add a bit of social pull that keeps people coming back to practice instead of doing it once and drifting off.
The scenarios are grouped so the practice stays focused rather than generic. The busy-prospect challenge trains you to hold attention when the other side would rather hang up. The tough interview drills clear answers to hard questions without rambling. The business-pitch mode forces a compelling case inside a tight window. Higher tiers lean into professional depth, with advanced objection handling, lead follow-up openings, and support for compliance-sensitive wording, which points the product at regulated sales conversations where what you say and how you say it both matter.
On access, AskPitch is freemium. There's a free tier at no cost for trying the core loop with limited sessions and preview feedback, then paid plans that scale up how much you can practice and how deep the coaching goes, Starter at twelve dollars a month, Pro at twenty-nine, and Elite at forty-nine for high-stakes rehearsal. There's also a custom option for teams that want guided setup, full buildout, and admin rollout. You can start free without committing, which is the natural way to see whether talking to an AI coach actually calms the nerves before you rely on it for something that counts.
Key Features
- Ninety-second Pitch Duel challenges
- AI coach that speaks and responds
- Voice-based practice with live scoring
- Interview, sales, and presentation scenarios
- Custom scenarios you define
- Feedback on tone and filler words
Pros & Cons
What we like
- Practice out loud, not just on paper
- AI coach pushes back like a real person
- First duel is free with no signup
- Shareable challenge links add motivation
Room for improvement
- Requires a microphone and speaking out loud
- Deeper feedback sits behind paid tiers
- AI scoring is a proxy for a real audience
- Younger product still expanding its scenarios
Frequently Asked Questions
What is AskPitch?
What is a Pitch Duel?
Is AskPitch free?
Who is AskPitch for?
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Reviews (8)
Quietly excellent
Three months of AskPitch later, here is what holds up. Their take on shareable challenge links add motivation is genuinely good. It fits well for warming up for a tough job interview. Would sign up again without thinking twice.
Solid daily driver
Have been running AskPitch for a while, here is where I land. Their take on feedback on tone and filler words is genuinely good. It slotted into my routine without much fuss. Glad I made the switch.
Good, with a few caveats
AskPitch has quietly become part of my daily flow. Got real value out of practice out loud, not just on paper. The catch is requires a microphone and speaking out loud. Recommending it to people in a similar spot.
Finally something that fits
Picked AskPitch for the price, stayed for the quality. What stands out is how it handles practice out loud, not just on paper. The thing I keep coming back to is how reliable it is. Found it works best for rehearsing a sales pitch before a real call. Glad I made the switch.
Two months in, no regrets
AskPitch has quietly become part of my daily flow. What stands out is how it handles shareable challenge links add motivation.
Quietly excellent
AskPitch has quietly become part of my daily flow. What stands out is how it handles interview, sales, and presentation scenarios. It fits well for practicing objection handling under pressure. Glad I made the switch.
Decent with some rough edges
Picked AskPitch for the price, stayed for the quality. Support actually answered when I had a question, which surprised me. The thing I keep coming back to is how reliable it is. The catch is deeper feedback sits behind paid tiers. Glad I made the switch.
Solid daily driver
Tried AskPitch on a side project first, then rolled it out everywhere. Got real value out of feedback on tone and filler words. It does what it says, which is rarer than it should be. Mostly using it for rehearsing a sales pitch before a real call.
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