PowerPoint Copilot Speaker Coach in 2026: Get AI-Powered Feedback on Every Presentation
Delivering a great presentation is about more than having polished slides — it's about how you speak, the pace you set, the words you choose, and the confidence you project. In 2026, Microsoft's Copilot-powered Speaker Coach in PowerPoint has evolved into one of the most sophisticated AI presentation coaches available anywhere, and it's built right into the app you already use every day.
This guide walks you through how to use Speaker Coach effectively, what kinds of feedback it provides, and how to turn its insights into a genuinely better presenting style.
What Is Speaker Coach in PowerPoint?
Speaker Coach is an AI-powered feature in PowerPoint that listens to you as you rehearse your presentation and provides real-time and post-session feedback on:
Pace — are you speaking too fast or too slow?
Pitch monotony — are you varying your vocal tone or speaking in a flat drone?
Filler words — how often are you saying "um", "uh", "like", or "you know"?
Repetitive language — words or phrases you're overusing
Sensitive phrases — language that might come across as culturally insensitive or jargon-heavy
Eye contact — in 2026, with camera-enabled coaching, it can also assess whether you're looking at the camera or reading from notes
In 2026, Microsoft has integrated Copilot deeply into Speaker Coach, so it no longer just reports statistics — it gives you contextualised, narrative feedback and even suggests specific rewrites of sections you consistently stumble over.
How to Start a Coaching Session
Open your PowerPoint presentation in Microsoft 365
Click the Slide Show tab in the ribbon
Click Rehearse with Coach (or press Alt+R on Windows)
Allow microphone access when prompted
Begin presenting — speak as you would in the real presentation
When finished, press Esc and your Rehearsal Report will open automatically
For the most accurate feedback, present in a quiet room and speak at your normal presentation volume — not a whisper. Speaker Coach calibrates to your natural speaking environment.
Understanding Your Rehearsal Report
After your session, Speaker Coach generates a detailed Rehearsal Report with the following sections:
Summary Statistics
At the top of the report you'll see how long you spoke, your average pace in words per minute (aim for 120–150 for most business presentations), and an overall coaching score.
Pace Timeline
A visual timeline shows your speaking pace across the presentation. Look for red sections — these are moments where you rushed through slides. These often correspond to sections you're less confident about, and they deserve extra rehearsal attention.
Filler Words Breakdown
Speaker Coach lists every filler word it detected and how many times it appeared. Don't be alarmed if the first count is high — most people say "um" and "uh" far more than they realise. The goal isn't zero fillers (that's robotic) but reducing them over successive rehearsals.
Copilot Narrative Feedback (New in 2026)
This is where the 2026 version really shines. Instead of just numbers, Copilot now writes a short narrative paragraph about your performance — something like: "Your opening was strong and well-paced, but slides 4 through 6 showed a significant increase in filler words, which often indicates uncertainty about this section. Consider practising the product demo segment with more focus on key message clarity."
This contextualised feedback is far more actionable than raw statistics alone.
Advanced Coaching Features in 2026
Side-by-Side Comparison Mode
After multiple rehearsal sessions, Copilot can show you a comparison report across all your sessions for a given presentation. This lets you track genuine improvement over time — seeing your filler word count drop from 47 to 12 over five rehearsals is tremendously motivating.
Script Suggestion Mode
If Copilot detects you consistently struggle with a specific slide (you pause, use lots of fillers, or rush through it), it can suggest a rewritten speaker note for that slide based on the content. You can accept, modify, or dismiss the suggestion.
Camera-Based Eye Contact Coaching
With your webcam enabled, Speaker Coach can assess whether you're maintaining eye contact with your audience (the camera) versus reading from your notes. The report shows an eye contact percentage — ideally above 70% for most presentations.
Tips for Getting the Most from Speaker Coach
Rehearse at least three times before any important presentation — the first run-through always has the most errors, and the report improves dramatically after targeted practice
Focus on one feedback area per session — don't try to fix pace, fillers, and eye contact simultaneously
Use Presenter View during actual delivery to see your speaker notes on your own screen while the audience sees the slides
Share your Rehearsal Report with a manager or coach for additional human feedback alongside the AI assessment
Copilot can generate a condensed version of your speaker notes if you find them too long to use in rehearsal. Ask it to "summarise slide notes to 3 bullet points per slide" in the Copilot chat pane.
Conclusion
Speaker Coach in 2026 is no longer just a nice-to-have feature — it is a genuine AI presentation partner that helps you develop real skills over time. The combination of real-time alerts, detailed post-session reports, and Copilot's narrative feedback creates a coaching loop that used to require hiring an actual speaking coach.
Whether you're preparing for a board presentation, a client pitch, or a team all-hands, invest 30 minutes with Speaker Coach before the big day. The improvement is real, measurable, and sometimes startling.
Explore more PowerPoint and Copilot tips at officelearner.net — and remember, the best presentation is the one you've rehearsed.













