Lucy
Talk
Talk Practice · 2026

How to Record Yourself Speaking for Practice

Recording yourself speaking and listening back is one of the highest-leverage solo practice techniques available. Most people find it uncomfortable, which is exactly why it is valuable. Your recorded voice reveals pace, filler words, energy drops, and structural gaps that you cannot detect while you are speaking.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR

The three things that actually matter

1

Record one run, review once

Record a complete section and listen through once from start to finish without stopping. Make notes on the top two or three issues. Do not try to fix everything on one listen, it is overwhelming and unproductive.

2

Check pace first

Pace is almost always the first problem in practice recordings. Most people speak too fast under practice conditions and faster still under real pressure. If your recording sounds rushed to you, slow down by 15 percent in the next take.

3

Count filler words

On your second listen, count your filler words. Um, uh, so, like, you know. Quantifying them makes the habit visible and creates the awareness needed to reduce them.

TLDR:Use Lucy to prepare what you will record. Work through your content in conversation, identify what you want to say, then record your practice run. Review the recording and bring the specific issues back to Lucy for targeted follow-up work.

Why Lucy OS1

Record one run, review once

Record a complete section and listen through once from start to finish without stopping. Make notes on the top two or three issues. Do not try to fix everything on one listen, it is overwhelming and unproductive.

Check pace first

Pace is almost always the first problem in practice recordings. Most people speak too fast under practice conditions and faster still under real pressure. If your recording sounds rushed to you, slow down by 15 percent in the next take.

Count filler words

On your second listen, count your filler words. Um, uh, so, like, you know. Quantifying them makes the habit visible and creates the awareness needed to reduce them.

Review energy and conviction

Does your recording sound like you believe what you are saying? Energy and conviction are audible in the recording and missing in most practice runs that focused too heavily on words rather than communication.

QUICK COMPARISON

Lucy OS1 vs most AI tools

Capability Lucy OS1 Most AI tools
Memory across sessions ✓ Permanent, never resets ✗ Resets after every session
Voice quality ✓ Lucy OS1 Natural Voice (best-in-class) ✗ Basic STT, struggles with noise
Calendar awareness ✓ Reads Google Calendar in real time ✗ No calendar access
Available 24/7 Always on, any device Available but stateless each time
Gets personal over time ✓ Builds your context continuously ✗ Starts from zero every session

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How to use Lucy OS1

1

Create your free account

No credit card required. Sign in with your Google account and you're inside in under a minute.

2

Connect your Google Calendar

Lucy reads your upcoming events before every conversation, so it already knows your day before you say a word.

3

Start talking about how to record yourself speaking for practice

Speak naturally. Lucy listens, responds by voice, and begins building context from your very first exchange. The more you use it, the better it gets.

Start for free → Free tier available. No credit card.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it normal to hate the sound of your recorded voice?
Yes, very normal. Your voice sounds different to you when recorded because you normally hear it through bone conduction as well as air, which adds resonance. Most people adjust to hearing their recorded voice within a few sessions.
How many times should I review a recording?
Once through completely to identify the top issues. Then targeted replaying of specific problem moments. Do not review the same recording more than three times, diminishing returns set in quickly and it becomes unproductive.
Should I record video or audio only?
Audio is enough for most content and delivery feedback. Video adds body language awareness but is harder to review casually. Start with audio. Add video when you need specific feedback on physical presence and gesture.
What should I do after identifying issues in my recording?
Fix one issue at a time. Record again targeting only that issue. Confirm the fix is working before moving to the next problem. Working through issues sequentially is faster than trying to fix everything simultaneously.

MORE IN THIS CATEGORY

→ How to Warm Up Your Voice Before a Presentation → Voice Warm-Up Exercises for Speaking → Breathing Exercises Before Speaking → How to Prepare Your Voice for a Speech → How to Practice Your Presentation Out Loud → What to Do the Day Before a Presentation → How to Stop Stuttering When Nervous → How to Calm Nerves Before a Presentation → See all

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Lucy OS1 vs Siri → Lucy OS1 vs ChatGPT → Lucy OS1 vs Google Gemini → Lucy OS1 vs Google Assistant → Lucy OS1 vs Amazon Alexa → See all comparisons →

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