Teleprompter for remote interviews
The most costly interview moment is rarely not knowing the answer — it's freezing, losing your train of thought, or looking unsettled on camera. Keep the key points by the lens and your delivery matches your real preparation.
Knowing what to say and delivering it smoothly on camera are two different things.
Self-introductions, behavioral questions, project walkthroughs — once you stall on one line, the rhythm of the whole answer can fall apart.
Bridge the gap between "I know what to say" and "I can say it steadily."
Put your key sentences, transitions, STAR structure, and result numbers near the camera. You'll finish answers more completely instead of searching for words mid-sentence.
Not a full script — just the joints that might break under pressure.
Best things to have ready: self-introduction, key experiences, behavioral answer structure, questions to ask, and any numbers or terms you tend to blank on when nervous.
A clear answer is half of it. Looking composed is the other half.
When your gaze isn't constantly dropping to the bottom of the screen, the interviewer sees someone who came prepared — not someone who's assembling sentences on the fly.
FAQ
What types of interviews is Talktalk suited for?
It's well suited for video interviews, remote interviews, and any on-camera situation where you want to have your self-introduction, behavioral answers, and key points within eye-line.
Will it make me look like I'm reading from a script?
Reading from notes off to the side looks far more scripted than glancing at a prompt near the camera. Talktalk keeps the cue close to the lens, so your eye-line stays natural.
What should I prepare before an interview?
Start with your self-introduction, key experiences, behavioral answer structures (like STAR), questions you want to ask, and any numbers or proper nouns you tend to blank on under pressure.