Legal training covers research, analysis, and procedure. It doesn't cover delivering bad news to a client who doesn't want to hear it, controlling a deposition when the witness won't cooperate, or negotiating when the other side digs in. Commy does.
No credit card. No bar number required.
Every attorney recognizes at least three of these.
You've explained the risk three times. They hear what they want to hear. The conversation always lands the same way — until it doesn't.
The witness went sideways. Opposing counsel got what they needed. You knew what to do but didn't move fast enough.
You know your position is strong. The other side digs in. You don't know whether to push, concede, or reframe — and hesitation costs you.
You disagree with the strategy. You're not sure how to raise it without damaging the relationship or your standing.
Practice the exact situations that define your reputation as a practitioner.
The case isn't going the way they hoped. Practice delivering the update clearly, managing emotional reaction, and preserving trust.
The witness is running out the clock with non-answers. Practice how to interrupt, redirect, and maintain control without escalating.
You need to anchor without showing weakness. Practice framing, tone, and how to read the other side's signals.
They want updates every day. They second-guess every decision. Practice how to set boundaries while keeping the relationship intact.
You think the strategy is wrong. Practice how to raise it — assertively, with evidence, without it becoming a personal confrontation.
Before
Hedged language. Client doesn't understand the risk. You repeat yourself.
After Commy
Clear, empathetic, direct. Client understands and trusts your counsel.
Before
Evasive witness runs out the clock. You lose momentum.
After Commy
Crisp interruptions, controlled redirects. You get what you came for.
Before
Premature concessions. You reveal your BATNA too early.
After Commy
Anchored, patient, reading the room. You settle in your zone.
"I've been in practice 12 years and never had a way to practice client conversations without doing it live and hoping. Commy is the first thing that's actually changed how I handle difficult updates."
Senior Associate
Litigation, AmLaw 200 firm
"The deposition control drill is uncomfortably realistic. I found three things I do wrong when witnesses are evasive. Would not have seen that otherwise."
Trial Attorney
Mid-size firm, 7 years
"I used Commy before a settlement negotiation on a high-stakes deal. The prep on anchoring and tone was directly applicable. We landed exactly where I wanted."
Transactional Partner
M&A practice, BigLaw
Try a client communication or negotiation drill now — no signup required. Get scored on clarity, control, and how you handle pressure.
No signup. No credit card. Full AI feedback on your first drill.
Commy is an AI communication coaching platform that helps professionals practice salary negotiation, difficult conversations, leadership communication, and public speaking through interactive drills with real-time AI feedback and scoring.
You choose a realistic professional scenario — like negotiating a raise or handling a conflict. You speak or type your response. Commy's AI analyzes your communication in real time and provides specific scores and feedback on clarity, confidence, empathy, assertiveness, and structure.
Yes. Commy offers a free plan with 5 drills per day, all scenario types, and full AI feedback and scores. No credit card required. The Pro plan ($12/month) offers unlimited drills and personalized coaching.
Commy covers 12+ scenario categories including salary negotiation, job interviews, conflict resolution, performance reviews, public speaking, client pitches, executive presence, difficult conversations, investor pitches, giving feedback, brainstorming sessions, and cross-cultural communication.
Traditional communication coaching costs $200-500 per session and requires scheduling. Commy provides unlimited AI coaching available 24/7 at a fraction of the cost, with consistent scoring and immediate feedback after every drill. You can practice the same scenario repeatedly until you master it.