Scenario-based leadership training for director-to-VP talent.
When the next level conversation is board-facing or career-defining, practice matters. Most leaders don't get any.
Most VP-level leadership capability is shaped by accidents.
Directors promoted to VP are often thrown into board presentations, investor calls, and org-wide strategy decisions without ever having practiced those specific conversations. The outcome is predictable: stumble early, lose credibility fast, sometimes lose the role.
Leadership capability is almost entirely shaped by lived experience — but the highest-stakes leadership moments don't repeat often enough to learn by doing. A VP-level board presentation happens once a quarter. A difficult termination conversation happens once a year. That's not enough reps to develop the skill before the stakes are real.
Coachvyne compresses that learning cycle. The scenario is realistic. The conversation partner adapts. The score is immediate. The drill targets the specific gap, not a generic development area.
Three scenarios built for this specific transition
Simulates earnings presentations, strategic update calls, and adversarial Q&A from skeptical board members. The AI conversation partner is tuned to push for specificity and challenge assumptions — the way real board members do.
Simulates town halls, difficult team announcements, and one-on-one conversations about role changes. Tests ability to communicate honestly under ambiguity while maintaining team trust.
Simulates resource negotiation with a reluctant peer VP, alignment conversations with a skeptical executive, and influencing decisions you don't control. The hardest skill to develop without reps.
Measurable dimension improvement, not impressions
"Our director cohort moved from an average Narrative Coherence score of 61% to 78% over eight weeks. That's not soft feedback — that's a number we can track and act on."
"Our new VPs walked into their first board meetings having already practiced them. That's a different level of preparation than anything we had before."