AI Scenario Training 

AI can be your practice partner for any difficult conversation. Not scripted role-play. Real-time scenarios that adapt to your responses, test your thinking, and prepare you for the pressure of the actual moment.

The conversations that matter most—the ones where your response changes the outcome—are exactly the ones you never get to rehearse. Sales pitch with a skeptical buyer. Presentation Q&A with tough executives. Setting boundaries with pushy requests.

Here’s how it works. You give AI a scenario prompt. It asks questions to understand your context. Then it becomes your training partner—the skeptical prospect, the challenging executive, the pushy requester. You practice in real-time.

Sales pitch (handling objections):

AI learns about your product, your customer, common pushback. Then it becomes the skeptical prospect. “Why is this worth the premium?” “Your competitor offers this for 30% less.” You practice responding without defensiveness, pivoting objections into value, reading what they’re really asking.

This template works for any scenario: Use the (*) text or pick your own to replace the [placeholder text].  

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“Test my ability to handle a realistic scenario. Start by asking me questions one at a time about who I am, my work, my [product/service, target customer, pricing/value proposition] etc. You can ask me up to five questions. When you have enough information, lead me into a hyper-personalized [sales pitch conversation] tabletop that will have subtle [objections, skepticism, and competitor comparisons] and involve very careful navigation on my part. Ask the first question.”

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*Presentation Q&A: (topic, audience, stakes)
(presentation Q&A session), (challenging questions and skepticism)

AI becomes the executive who asks the question you hoped wouldn’t come up. The one that exposes a gap in your data. The one that challenges your core recommendation. You practice staying composed, acknowledging concerns without backpedaling, defending your work under pressure.

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*Setting boundaries: [relationship, history, current request], [boundary-setting conversation], [pressure, guilt, and manipulation]

AI becomes the person who won’t take no for an answer. Your boss asking for weekend work. A relative requesting money. A friend demanding your time. Guilt trips. Emotional manipulation. Escalating pressure. You practice holding your position without explaining yourself to death, staying firm without damaging the relationship.

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*Teaching complex concepts: [topic, audience, confusion points], [teaching session], [misunderstandings and repeated questions]

AI becomes the team member who doesn’t get it. They ask the same question three different ways. They misunderstand your analogy. They’re frustrated and you’re losing them. You practice finding new explanations, reading their confusion, adapting your approach in real-time.

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Most people walk into high-pressure moments hoping they’ll find the right words. But the best responses don’t come from improvisation under stress. They come from having already thought through the hard parts.

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