Practice the meetings you actually have
Daily standup. Sprint review. 1:1 with your manager. Cross-functional sync. Budget discussion. Each is a different muscle — Workplace mode rotates through them so you build the right reflexes.
Improve your English communication skills for the workplace with AI-powered conversation practice. Standups, meetings, presentations, status updates, salary discussions — practice every situation you'll actually face. Free, voice-to-voice, with structured feedback after every session.
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Daily standup. Sprint review. 1:1 with your manager. Cross-functional sync. Budget discussion. Each is a different muscle — Workplace mode rotates through them so you build the right reflexes.
'Hop on a call' (casual) vs 'schedule a meeting' (neutral) vs 'arrange a discussion' (formal). Every report shows you 5–8 phrasing upgrades labeled by register so you sound natural at the level your workplace expects.
The AI plays roles — pushy stakeholder, skeptical engineer, distracted exec. You learn to handle interruptions, push back politely, and stay structured when the conversation goes sideways.
Workplace English isn't textbook English. The grammar you learned in school doesn't help when your manager pings you on Slack with 'got a sec?' and you have 30 seconds to give a coherent project update. The vocabulary you memorized doesn't help when a colleague says 'let's circle back on that' and you don't know if that means yes or no. The skill gap between conversational English and professional English is huge — and almost nothing addresses it directly.
Most learners try to bridge that gap by reading business books or watching TED talks. That helps your input, not your output. The only way to get better at speaking up in meetings is to speak up in meetings — but practice meetings don't exist, and real meetings are too high-stakes to be your training ground.
fluentwith's Workplace mode is built specifically for this. The AI plays a workplace role — your manager, a stakeholder, a colleague — and runs you through real scenarios: explaining why a project is delayed, asking for a raise, pushing back on a deadline, presenting a status update, handling a tough question after a presentation. Each scenario is 5–15 minutes of voice-to-voice practice. After every session you get a report with five scores (fluency, confidence, clarity, grammar, naturalness), an annotated transcript showing where you hesitated, and concrete vocabulary upgrades.
The personalization engine notices what you keep getting wrong. If you say 'I think maybe' as a hedge in every answer, you'll see a drill on confident phrasing the next day. If your transitions are weak ('and... and... and...'), tomorrow's drill will swap those for 'first... then... finally'. Small, targeted, daily.
There's no course to enroll in, no schedule to keep, no fixed curriculum. You pick the scenario that matches what's coming up this week. 15 minutes a day, 5 days a week. Free.
Three things: (1) speak out loud daily, even alone — speaking is a motor skill; (2) get feedback on what you said, not just whether it was 'right'; (3) target the specific situation you'll face, not generic conversation. fluentwith's Workplace mode is built around exactly that - voice practice on real workplace scenarios with structured feedback after every session.
It's better than a course for most learners. A course is a fixed sequence; fluentwith adapts to what you specifically need. After each session, the system tracks your recurring weak spots and queues drills targeting them. You're not learning a syllabus — you're closing your specific gaps faster.
Daily standups, sprint reviews, 1:1s with your manager, status updates to leadership, asking for a raise or promotion, declining a request politely, explaining a delay, presenting a project, handling Q&A after a presentation, and small talk transitions ('how was your weekend' → real conversation).
Yes. Workplace mode is role-agnostic by default but you can specify your role in onboarding so the AI uses domain-appropriate scenarios. An engineer gets sprint planning and code-review situations; an analyst gets stakeholder presentations and data-deep-dive Q&A; a designer gets critique sessions.
The AI calibrates to whatever industry context you give it in your responses. If you say 'I work on fraud detection at a fintech', the conversation steers there. Domain-specific terminology comes from your input; the AI mirrors register and vocabulary back at you.
15 minutes a day, 5 days a week, beats 2 hours once a week. Most users report noticeable confidence gains within 2-3 weeks. The streak tracker keeps you consistent.
More ways to practice English speaking with AI: all modes · interview English practice · business English · pronunciation practice