Journalists
Journalists use TrueTalk to test questions and hear unfiltered responses, often revealing new angles and unexpected voices.
TrueTalk helps journalists understand how people think about an issue before it becomes polarized. It surfaces underlying beliefs and questions that don’t usually make it into public debate.
Politicians
TrueTalk lets policymakers test early policy ideas anonymously, before they’re shaped into positions or platforms.It’s a way to listen and learn without committing.
Philosophers
TrueTalk allows abstract ideas to meet lived beliefs, revealing where concepts hold – and where they fracture.
Authors
Authors use TrueTalk as a low-pressure space to test themes, tensions, and questions without turning them into content… a new story line.
Mediators
TrueTalk reveals the language people use to express values and grievances, which helps mediators practice reframing without pressure.
Sociologists
Sociologists use TrueTalk as a kind of open field site, where belief, identity, and social context intersect naturally.
Neurologists
It offers informal insight into how cognition, emotion, and identity interact when people explain what they believe.
Activists
Activists post their beliefs on TrueTalk and then help people understand their position by answering their questions.
Job Seekers
Job Seekers post on TrueTalk to help them stay intellectually active and engaged during a job search, without the pressure to perform or pitch. Seekers can also receive an AI-generated career map.
Political Parties
Political parties use a white label version of the site to state their platform beliefs and train their members by encouraging them to ask questions.
Community Organizers
Posting on TrueTalk supports understanding across belief differences, without meetings, slogans, or positional conflict.