
RiseGuide Team

If you only want the shortlist, here are the five, each with the kind of person it suits:
Choose RiseGuide if you want to learn the craft and rehearse it as you go, Gleam if you struggle to read people or find the right words, Wellspoken if you want a short daily drill on clarity, Orai if you like fast feedback right after you record yourself, and Speeko if your focus is tone and delivery.
"Communication skills" covers a lot of separate abilities. Listening closely, keeping small talk going, sensing the mood in a room, sounding clear, holding your nerve in a tense conversation — these are different skills, and no single app is strong at all of them. That is worth knowing before you download anything, because the apps below are built for different parts of the problem.
The reason to use one at all is practice. Real conversations that let you work on any of this happen only occasionally, and the ones that matter most tend to be the ones you cannot rehearse in advance. An app gives you a private place to try, get feedback, and repeat as often as you like. For each of the five apps for improving communication skills below, you will see what it teaches, its current rating, who it is for, and what are possible limitations.
App Store (4.6 ⭐) Google Play (4.1 ⭐)
Best for: people who want practical learning, built on expert insights, that they can put into action.

RiseGuide organizes its content into journeys, which are step-by-step paths through one skill at a time, built from the work of experts in each field. The Communication Mastery journey is the relevant one here. It moves through speaking, listening, body language, voice, storytelling, and first impressions in short daily lessons, so the skill builds in a sensible order rather than arriving as scattered tips.
Sitting around those lessons are the tools that let you apply them. Speech Analyzer records up to a minute of you talking and reports back on your pace, confidence, and pauses, with notes on what to adjust. A small talk simulator, an intro builder, and a thoughts organizer help you shape and rehearse what you want to say. Across every journey, SEEK answers a question from a curated library of expert sources and links back to the originals. Lessons run about 15 minutes, which keeps the habit realistic on a busy day.
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If communication is the skill you most want to build, that is what RiseGuide was made for. You can start the Communication Mastery journey and practice in about 15 minutes a day.
App Store (4.8 ⭐) Google Play (4.7 ⭐)
Best for: people who want to understand a conversation, not only deliver one.

Gleam is a social intelligence coach, which means it works on the part of communication that happens before you speak: reading a situation, sensing what the other person needs, and choosing how to respond. It covers active listening and empathy alongside small talk, and many people reach for it to take the edge off social anxiety.
Where a delivery coach helps you sound better, Gleam helps you understand the interaction you are in. That makes it a good partner to a more speaking-focused app rather than a replacement for one.
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App Store (4.8 ⭐) Google Play (4.1 ⭐)
Best for: people who want a short daily routine focused on clarity and delivery.

Wellspoken is an AI articulation coach built around short daily sessions of about five minutes. It trains the mechanics of clear speech, including clarity, filler words, and the way you carry a sentence, which makes it one of the more focused apps to improve speaking skills on this list. The feedback strikes a useful balance between plain advice and the numbers behind it.
Because it is so targeted, it works best as a daily habit that runs alongside whatever else you are doing to improve. A few minutes here adds up over a couple of months.
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Wellspoken can polish your delivery, but if you also want help with what to say and how to build it, RiseGuide's Communication Mastery journey teaches that side. Try RiseGuide.
App Store (4.6 ⭐) Google Play (4.2 ⭐)
Best for: people preparing for an interview, meeting, or conversation who want fast, concrete feedback.

Orai runs on a simple loop: record yourself, then get an instant read on your filler words, speaking speed, energy, clarity, and confidence. Short gamified lessons sit beside the recorder, and a freestyle mode lets you rehearse anything you have coming up, whether that is answering an interview question or getting an idea across in a meeting. It works on both iPhone and Android.
The value is in the fast turnaround. When you have a conversation that matters in a few minutes, a quick recording tells you where you are rambling or filling space before you do it for real.
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App Store (4.7 ⭐)
Best for: people who want to sound warmer and clearer, not only cut filler words.

Speeko gives real-time feedback on your pace, tone, pitch, and filler words, then suggests exercises based on what it hears. It leans toward voice and delivery, with content shaped in part by voice coach Roger Love, and it includes AI roleplay conversations for rehearsing real situations like a tricky chat with a colleague. The design is polished and the exercises vary enough to keep a daily habit interesting.
If the issue is less about what you say and more about how you come across - a flat tone, a rushed pace, trailing off at the end of a sentence - this is the one built for that.
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Ratings shift over time, so treat these as a snapshot from July 2026.

Start from the part of communicating you find hardest. If you are never sure how to read a room or what to say next, Gleam works on exactly that. If your ideas are fine but your delivery lets you down, Wellspoken turns clarity into a short daily habit, Orai gives you fast feedback after you record yourself, and Speeko coaches the tone and pace behind how you come across.


