Make your speaking sound deliberate, not scrambled.
Like Umm is built for the moments where your brain outruns your mouth. Practice with filler-word detection, pace feedback, and quick drills that build steadier delivery over time.
See filler words and pacing as you speak.
Use 60-second reps before meetings, talks, and interviews.
Track progress without turning it into homework.
Set a filler limit, choose a charity, and turn overages into a weekly donation pledge.
Practice in short reps, then pay for the polish when it matters.
Start with quick filler-word practice, track improvement over time, and upgrade when you want extra help shaping the result.
| Feature | What it does | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Practice | Short speaking reps with filler-word awareness. | Before meetings, interviews, and talks. |
| Scorecards | Simple progress tracking without turning it into homework. | Building confidence over a few weeks. |
| Charity jar | Set a filler limit and turn overages into a pledge. | Making practice feel playful and accountable. |
| Plus | Extra polish, custom wording help, and one follow-up tweak. | When the words really need to land. |
Start small. Upgrade when the stakes are higher.
Pro gives customers the full practice kit. Plus is for the moments where they want the wording tightened and checked properly.
Every “um” over the limit adds to a running pledge.
If the user chooses a registered charity and donates directly, the payment can be structured to keep donation records clean. The app should phrase this carefully and avoid promising deductibility on its own.
Brand voice
The copy should stay plain, sharp, and a little playful. No fluff. The product is about sounding more composed, so the site should feel composed too.
Suggested headline: “Speak clearly. Cut the filler. Keep the room with you.”
Suggested charity line: “Go over your limit and your chosen charity gets the win.”