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Articulated vs Speeko: Which Speech App Fits You

Speeko drills presentation delivery with guided exercises. Articulated trains conversational fluency with AI scenarios. Here's the honest breakdown.

By Articulated Team

Two approaches to speaking practice side by side

Speeko has been coaching presentation delivery since before "AI speech coach" was a category anyone searched for. Articulated showed up later with a different bet: that most people's speaking problem isn't their presentation. It's the unscripted conversation right after it.

Both apps listen to your voice and tell you what's wrong with it. That's roughly where the similarity ends.

Full disclosure up front: Articulated is our product. We'll try to be as fair to Speeko as we were in our best speech coaching apps roundup, where it also appears.

What Speeko Actually Is

Speeko (official listing: Speeko: AI for Public Speaking on the App Store) is a guided exercise library. You open the app, pick a lesson -- impromptu speaking, audience engagement, business storytelling -- and work through structured drills built around pacing, tone, and filler words.

The app pulls in content from voice coach Roger Love, runs Live Events (group coaching sessions), and offers Courses that adapt to your stated goals. There's also a feature called Convos: an AI roleplay mode for practicing scenarios like job interviews or "everyday small talk," which Speeko added as the roleplay-coaching space got more competitive.

As of July 2026, Speeko is free with in-app purchases; the App Store listing shows $24.99/month or $89.99 billed annually (about $7.49/month). Older write-ups quote lower numbers, so treat any single figure as a snapshot -- check the listing before you commit. It's English only, rated 4.7 stars from more than 4,500 App Store reviews, and lives under the Education category.

What Articulated Actually Is

Articulated starts with a short quiz about where you actually struggle -- job interviews, dating, work meetings, social situations -- then builds scenarios around your specific answers. "Asking for a raise." "Pitch to a skeptical manager." "First date, mind goes blank." You have a real back-and-forth voice conversation with an AI character playing the other person, not a scripted prompt you read aloud.

Afterward, you get a composite Articulation Score plus a breakdown across six skills: Clarity, Fluency, Structure, Vocabulary, Confidence, and Engagement. Key Moments highlight your actual words. Phrase Lab rewrites your weakest lines. Speech Pattern analysis flags recurring habits -- trailing off mid-sentence, hedging, burying your point. Every observation ties back to a cited framework, and the app builds you a 4-week coaching plan from the results.

It's available in 12 languages, starts with a free trial, and runs about $9.99/month for Premium as of this writing.

The Real Difference: Rehearsal vs. Reaction

Here's the distinction that actually matters, and it's not "scripted vs. unscripted" anymore -- Speeko's Convos closed part of that gap.

Speeko is built around a curriculum you complete. Pick a lesson, do the drill, get scored on delivery mechanics like pace and filler words, move to the next lesson. Even Convos sits inside that structure: a guided roleplay you select from a list, not a scenario matched to a quiz about your specific weak spots.

Articulated is built around a conversation you can't fully predict, followed by analysis deep enough to change what you do next time. The AI character responds to what you actually say, not a script you're following. The six-skill breakdown afterward goes past "your pace was fast" into pattern-level feedback -- Phrase Lab shows you the exact sentence that fell flat and a sharper version next to it.

The honest way to put it: Speeko optimizes how you deliver material you've prepared. Articulated optimizes how you perform when you haven't prepared the exact words -- which describes most real conversations, including the ones that actually matter to your career and relationships.

If your problem is that you ramble once you start talking or blank out mid-sentence under pressure, a lesson library won't reproduce that pressure. A live scenario will.

Here's a concrete way to see the difference. Say your actual problem is that you go quiet and hedge when a manager pushes back on your idea in a meeting.

In Speeko, the closest match is a lesson on assertiveness or a Convos scenario you pick from a menu -- useful, but generic. It doesn't know that your specific failure mode is trailing off after the second objection.

In Articulated, you'd tell the onboarding quiz that pushback in meetings is where you freeze. The scenario puts you in exactly that exchange, twice, with an AI manager who actually pushes back. The Speech Pattern analysis afterward can name the moment your confidence score dropped -- not "you seemed less confident," but the specific sentence where it happened and what to say instead.

Both are legitimate approaches to skill-building. They're just not the same skill.

Pricing, As of July 2026

Pricing is the one category where "as of today" matters, because both apps run experiments and both change tiers without much warning.

Speeko lists on the App Store as free with in-app purchases. The listing shows $24.99/month or $89.99 billed annually, which works out to roughly $7.49/month. You may see lower numbers on third-party review sites -- those are often stale or reflect a promotional tier that isn't currently live. Trust the in-app listing over a blog post, including this one, by the time you're reading it.

Articulated offers a free trial, then Premium at roughly $9.99/month for unlimited scenario practice, coaching plans, and full progress tracking.

Neither number is the whole story. Speeko's higher price buys a bigger content library and live group coaching. Articulated's lower price buys unlimited personalized scenarios and a deeper post-session breakdown, but no group sessions. Compare what you'd actually use, not just the sticker.

Feature Comparison

DimensionArticulatedSpeeko
Core formatMulti-turn AI voice conversations matched to your scenarioGuided exercise library + lessons
Unscripted practiceEvery session -- the AI responds to what you sayConvos roleplay mode (newer, list-based scenarios)
Scripted rehearsalNot the focusGuided drills, voice-coach lessons
Post-session analysisSix-skill breakdown, Key Moments, Phrase Lab, Speech Pattern detectionPace, tone, and filler-word feedback
PersonalizationOnboarding quiz builds scenarios around your stated strugglesCourses adapt to stated goals
Group/live coachingNoYes -- Live Events
Languages12English only
Pricing (as of July 2026)~$9.99/mo, free trial$24.99/mo or $89.99/yr, free tier with IAP
Best single use caseInterview or meeting you can't script in advancePresentation or talk you're rehearsing word-for-word

Who Should Pick Speeko

Give Speeko real credit here -- it's not a lesser version of anything, it's built for a different job.

  • You have a specific talk to rehearse. A TED-style talk, a wedding toast, a quarterly all-hands. Speeko's structured drills and Roger Love content are built for exactly this.
  • You want a curriculum, not a scenario generator. If you like working through a defined sequence of lessons with clear progression, Speeko's course structure delivers that in a way an open-ended conversation format doesn't.
  • Voice fundamentals are your gap. Pacing, projection, tone, filler words -- Speeko has years of exercises built specifically around these mechanics.
  • You want group accountability. Live Events give you a coached session with other people, which a solo app can't replicate.
  • You're a content creator rehearsing scripted delivery. Video scripts, social content, talks you'll deliver close to word-for-word benefit from repetition-based drilling.
  • You want a name-brand coaching voice behind the content. Roger Love's involvement matters to people who want to feel like they're learning from someone with a public track record, not just an algorithm.

Speeko's biggest strength is depth in one lane: presentation and delivery mechanics. If that's your actual problem, don't let a comparison post talk you out of the tool built for it.

Who Should Pick Articulated

  • Your problem shows up in conversation, not in a script. Interviews, negotiations, tough feedback conversations, first dates -- anywhere you can't know the other side's next line.
  • You want scenario practice tailored to your actual life, not a generic lesson list. The onboarding quiz means your first scenario already matches a situation you named as a struggle.
  • You want to know why, not just that. Six-skill scoring plus Phrase Lab rewrites give you a concrete next move instead of a generic "watch your pace" note.
  • You need this in a language other than English. Speeko's English-only; Articulated covers 12.
  • You're preparing for something specific and soon -- a job interview, a hard conversation, a networking event -- and want to rehearse a version of that exact situation rather than a generic drill.
  • You'd rather practice the response than the delivery. A lot of people don't lack polish. They lack a rehearsed answer to "so why do you want to leave your current job" that doesn't fall apart the second it's asked a different way than expected.

If you're an introvert working on public speaking or trying to cut filler words specifically in live conversation rather than rehearsed speech, the scenario format is the more direct fit. Everyday conversation is also where this shows up hardest to notice -- if you think slower than you'd like mid-conversation, rehearsed drills don't train the specific muscle of generating a response in real time. You can try the underlying idea yourself with the conversation practice app or the dedicated filler word reduction tool.

The Honest Verdict

Speeko is a legitimate, well-built tool for a real problem: rehearsing prepared speech until it's polished. If you have a talk on the calendar, its exercise library and voice-coach content will make you better at delivering it. Convos is a genuine step toward conversational practice, and it's worth watching how far Speeko pushes that feature.

But Articulated and Speeko aren't really competing for the same five minutes of your day. Speeko wants you rehearsing a known script. Articulated wants you handling an unknown response -- which is what happens in the job interview, the hard conversation with your manager, the date where your mind goes blank.

Neither replaces the other's core use case. If you give talks and dread unscripted conversations -- which describes a lot of people -- there's no rule against using both. Rehearse the keynote in Speeko. Rehearse the Q&A that follows it in Articulated.


FAQ

Is Speeko or Articulated better for public speaking practice?

Speeko is built for rehearsing prepared remarks -- presentations, talks, scripted delivery. Articulated is built for unscripted speaking under pressure -- interviews, meetings, real conversations. If your speaking problem shows up mid-conversation rather than mid-speech, Articulated is the closer fit.

Does Speeko have AI conversation practice like Articulated?

As of mid-2026, Speeko added a feature called Convos -- a roleplay mode for practicing scenarios like interviews and small talk. It's a newer addition alongside Speeko's core library of guided exercises. Articulated's entire product is built around multi-turn scenario conversations plus a six-skill breakdown afterward, so the depth of analysis differs even where the format now overlaps.

Is Speeko worth it compared to other speech coaching apps?

Speeko is worth it if you give prepared talks or presentations and want a structured exercise library plus voice-coach content. It's less suited to people whose main problem is freezing up or rambling in live, unscripted conversation -- that's a narrower, more conversation-specific use case.


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