From your submission to a confident performance
Both phases run off a single analysis of your real submission — so the lesson plan and the panel both feel like they're about you, not a generic candidate.
1 · Ingest your submission
Onboarding collects four inputs: your target qualification and route, your profile/background, your summary of experience, and your case study. Paste them or upload .docx, .pdf or .txt. Missing a document? Generic Mode still works, clearly flagged.
- Pick your awarding body and route
- Paste or upload your documents
- A one-time AI analysis finds the weak points a panel would target
2 · Learn the lesson plan
From your body's profile and the analysis of your submission, PanelReady builds an ordered, personalised lesson plan. The plan structure appears immediately; each module's full content generates when you open it, drawing examples from your own documents.
- Understand the format, framework and levels
- Your submission reviewed — gaps, contradictions, rewrites
- How to answer, ethics, hot topics, and targeted drills
3 · Face the mock panel
Your panel — a named Chair and assessors with distinct personas — runs the interview your body actually uses. They ask one question at a time, by voice if you like, choosing each next question from your last answer: pressing vagueness, challenging contradictions, acknowledging strength.
- One panelist, one question per turn — a real conversation
- Voice in (speak your answers) and out (the panel speaks)
- Timer, sections and live competency coverage
4 · Get an honest debrief
After the interview you get a structured debrief in your body's grading language: a verdict, a Red/Amber/Green competency grid, three strengths and three development areas, the moments you dodged or got caught in a contradiction — and an annotated transcript.
- Verdict and RAG competency grid
- Every development area links back to a lesson module
- Track your readiness across attempts over time
Ready to meet your panel?
Create a free account and run your first mock interview today — or try a demo first.