What doesn't work
The initial pitch was extremely confusing and didn't articulate the problem or solution. It took several questions to uncover the real value proposition, which is a major red flag for a product designed to clarify pitches.
The initial pitch was extremely confusing and didn't articulate the problem or solution. It took several questions to uncover the real value proposition, which is a major red flag for a product designed to clarify pitches.
The biggest risk is execution. The idea of an AI with a specific, challenging, yet empowering personality is brilliant, but incredibly difficult to implement. If the AI's copy and logic feel generic or robotic, the entire product promise collapses.
How will you scale the 'soul' of the AI's copy and feedback system to handle thousands of different pitches without it becoming a generic template machine?
ou started with one of the weakest pitches I've seen, but your answers revealed a deeply personal and compelling vision. You have a formidable understanding of the user because you *are* the user. The success of this hinges entirely on your ability to translate your passion and insight into an AI that truly has a soul.
The user experience is still conceptual, but the idea of a dialogue-based interaction is sound. The core challenge will be designing an interface that makes the AI's tough love feel empowering, not demoralizing.
Your description of the 'echo chamber of politeness' is perfect. You are the ideal user, you understand the pain intimately, and you're building the mirror you wish you had. This is your strongest asset.
Your example of the AI's voice was strong—it had personality and purpose. The challenge is maintaining that unique, memorable voice across countless interactions without it feeling repetitive.
Your final answer was pure conviction. It's obvious this problem is personal and you're not just chasing an opportunity. This passion is exactly what's needed to build a product with a soul.