Note-Taking for Public Speakers on iPhone: Prepare Talks, Capture Feedback, and Improve Faster
How public speakers use Nemos on iPhone to capture talk ideas, audience reactions, and post-event feedback — building a personal improvement system.
# Note-Taking for Public Speakers on iPhone: Prepare Talks, Capture Feedback, and Improve Faster
Public speaking improvement requires a specific kind of feedback loop: capture observations before, during, and after each talk, then review them before the next one. Most speakers who want to improve don't have a system for this — they rely on general impressions and occasional feedback from friends.
Nemos is an iPhone note-taking app built for fast capture. For public speakers, it creates a structured record of everything that goes into and comes out of each speaking engagement.
What Speakers Need to Capture
Speaking generates insight across multiple phases:
Pre-talk preparation: - Ideas for talk structure and flow - Stories and examples that could illustrate key points - Audience questions you anticipate and how you'd answer them - Opening lines you're considering - Transitions between sections
During the talk (not possible to note directly, but immediately after): - Moments where the audience visibly engaged or disengaged - Jokes or asides that landed or didn't - Sections that ran long or short - Anything you improvised that worked better than the scripted version
Post-talk feedback: - Specific comments from audience members - Feedback from organizers - Your own gut-feel self-assessment - What you'd cut or change for next time
Without a capture system, most of this evaporates within 24 hours.
Pre-Talk Idea Capture
Ideas for talks arrive at unpredictable moments. A story that would perfectly illustrate your point surfaces while you're making coffee. An opening hook arrives in the shower.
Nemos captures these immediately:
- Press iPhone Action Button → Nemos opens
- Speak the idea: "Opening hook idea — start with the statistic about how many people fear public speaking more than death, then reframe: the audience wants you to succeed. They're rooting for you."
- Done. Under 15 seconds.
When you sit down to build the talk, search the topic in Nemos and find every fragment you've captured across days or weeks.
Post-Talk Debrief — The Most Important Practice
The single highest-leverage habit for speakers: a 5-minute voice debrief immediately after leaving the stage.
While details are fresh: - What worked better than expected? - What fell flat? - What question from the audience revealed a gap in the talk? - What would you change if you gave this talk tomorrow?
Voice notes capture this faster and more accurately than typing. The emotional texture of the experience — the energy of the room, your own confidence level, the moment where you felt the audience disconnect — is only available in the minutes after.
Example debrief: "Conference talk done. Opening worked — saw heads nodding immediately. The middle section on implementation ran too long, I could feel attention drifting around minute 12. The Q&A question about legacy systems was asked by three different people — that's clearly a gap in the talk. Strong close, people came up afterward. Next version: cut implementation to 8 minutes, add a legacy systems section."
Audience Feedback Collection
After a talk, people often share specific feedback — from the stage, in the hallway, via email. Capture it immediately:
"John from the fintech panel said the financial risk framing resonated strongly with his team. Two people asked about the book I mentioned — need to add the title to my slides."
Search "audience feedback" before building the next version of any talk and surface the full history of reactions.
Building a Talk Library
Over time, your Nemos library becomes a searchable archive of speaking material:
- Stories and examples, tagged by theme
- Opening hooks that have worked
- Closing lines that landed
- Answers to questions you've been asked repeatedly
Search "vulnerability story" or "data point on attention spans" and find every fragment you've captured across years of speaking.
Feedback on Others' Talks
When watching other speakers at conferences:
- Voice note what they did that worked: "The way she paused after the big claim — full 3 seconds — gave it weight. Try that."
- Note specific techniques: "He opened with a question, not a statement. Room immediately leaned in."
- Screenshot slides that have good structure
Your observation library compounds. Before any talk, search "opening techniques" and find everything you've collected.
Apple Watch for Post-Talk Capture
In the minutes after leaving the stage, you're often in conversation. Apple Watch lets you capture privately:
- Raise wrist, tap Nemos complication
- Speak a quick note
- Lower wrist and continue the conversation
No phone out, no obvious note-taking. The observation is preserved before the next conversation replaces it.
Review Workflow Before Each Talk
Before any significant speaking engagement:
- Search the talk title or topic in Nemos
- Review all preparation notes, prior debrief notes, and feedback
- Voice note any final adjustments or mental anchors
- Review your notes on techniques that work for you personally
This review synthesizes everything you've learned about this topic and your own speaking patterns into a pre-talk mental state.
Taha built Némos after years of losing screenshots and voice memos across a dozen apps. He writes about on-device AI, personal knowledge management, and building privacy-first tools for iPhone.
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