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The write up is the part that quietly costs you
Every one-to-one practice runs on what happens in the session. In a single hour you might agree on a direction, set a goal, hand out a next step, and surface something that needs a follow up. By the time it ends, the person you work with has a lot to act on and so do you.
Capturing all of that by hand is the part that quietly costs you. You either type notes during the session and lose the room, or you write the summary afterward when half the detail has already faded. Either way the follow up gets shorter and later, and your client is left to reconstruct what was decided from memory.
How Slide writes the session recap for you
The core of Slide Practice is simple: it writes your session recaps for you. With consent, you record or upload the session. In about a minute, Slide drafts three things for you to review:
- A recap of what was covered and decided, in plain language, so nothing from the session gets lost.
- The next steps, pulled out and listed clearly, with each one tied to a person and, where it helps, a date.
- A client follow up email ready to send, so the person you work with has the recap and next steps in writing before the session has even cooled.
You read it, fix anything you want, and send. The ten minutes you used to spend writing the recap becomes a two minute review. That is the whole pitch, and everything else on this page is secondary to it. You can read more about AI session recaps and how they work.
Consent comes first
Recording is consent first. You ask the person you work with before you record, and you decide what is kept, shared, or deleted. Your clients and your data belong to you. Slide is built so the recording serves the work, not the other way around.
Pick your field, and Slide fits it
When you sign up, you tell Slide what you do: coach, consultant, tutor, trainer, nutritionist or health pro, mentor, or advisor. Slide uses that to tailor the recap template, the words it uses for the people you work with (client, student, or member), and the progress record it keeps.
- A tutor sees students and lesson notes.
- A trainer sees members and their plan.
- A consultant sees clients, decisions, and owners.
- A music teacher sees students, pieces worked, and practice assignments.
- A college counselor sees applicants, deadlines, and next steps for parents.
- An interview coach sees candidates, the questions drilled, and what to prep next.
If your work does not fit a named field, pick Something else and Slide gives you a clean, general setup you can shape to your own practice. You are never forced into someone else's vocabulary.
A sample session recap
Here is the kind of recap Slide drafts for you to review after a session. It is an illustration, not a real client. You edit anything you want, then it is ready for the client portal and the follow up email.
Sample session recap: week 4
What we covered. Agreed to focus the next month on two priorities and to set the third aside until things are steadier. The weekly check in stays where it is.
Recommendations. Break the larger goal into two smaller steps, and track one simple measure each week so progress is visible rather than a feeling.
Next steps.
- Client to try the new routine three times before the next session.
- Client to note, in a sentence each time, what got in the way.
- You to send the one page plan you talked through.
Commitments tracked. New routine three times (client), one page plan by Monday (you). Both carried forward to the next agenda so nothing slips.
Progress so far. The first goal is now on track, the second is ahead of plan, and the third is parked by choice, not forgotten.
Outcomes you can see across your clients
One recap earns its keep on the day. A run of them, whatever you practice one to one, is where the real value shows up. Slide keeps a running record of what changed for each person you work with, the commitments they take on, and how their progress is moving, so momentum over sessions is something you can both see rather than something you try to hold in your head. That is the outcomes layer of your practice: a clear record of what was decided and what moved, session by session, that you can open before each meeting.
Built around the work, not just the recap
The recap is the reason most practitioners come to Slide. A few supporting features make the rest of the work lighter:
- Booking on one shared link. People pick a time without the back and forth. One link does it.
- A private client portal. Each person has one calm place to see their recaps, next steps, and history. Learn more about the client portal.
- Flexible rates. Set the rate tiers that fit different clients and session types, and keep all of what you charge.
- Programs and multi session work (coming). Soon you will group a series of sessions into a program so longer work holds together.
Your sessions and client contact, logged automatically
Every session you run in Slide is logged for you, with the date, the person, and the time on the work. Alongside it, Slide keeps an automatic client contact log, so you have a running record of who you met and when without keeping a separate spreadsheet.
When it is time to reconcile hours, prep for a review, or write an update, the record is already there. You are not stitching the history back together from your calendar and your inbox. The log is built as you work, one session at a time.
An honest comparison
Slide is the newcomer, and one-to-one practices already run on plenty of established tools. It helps to be clear about where Slide fits and where one of those may serve you better today.
| What you need | Slide Practice | Established practice and CRM tools |
| Writing session recaps for you | Records or uploads, then drafts the recap, next steps, and follow up in about a minute | Usually manual notes and templates; writing the write up is on you |
| Booking and a client portal | Included, kept simple and focused | Often deeper and more configurable, with years of refinement behind them |
| Admin, pipeline, and reporting | Not the job; Slide is the session and follow up layer, used alongside your tools | Many cover admin, pipeline, and reporting in one place |
| Collecting client payments | Not yet a processor; you invoice your own way with your existing tools | Many handle invoicing and payments natively today |
| Cut of what you earn | No commission, ever | Varies by tool; some take a fee or bundle payment processing |
| Track record | New and live, few public customers yet | Established, with large user bases and longer histories |
If you need a full CRM, invoicing, and a long feature list under one roof today, a mature tool may be the better fit right now. If the thing eating your evenings is writing up what happened in each session, that is exactly what Slide was built to take off your plate.
Pricing that respects your margins
However you price your one-to-one sessions, Slide takes no commission, on any plan. You keep every rate you set. Every new account starts with a 7-day Pro trial, no card. Plans run Starter at $14.99 a month, Pro at $29.99 a month (the best value), and Max at $49.99 a month. Add ons are pay as you go: Auto Join is $1.99 per session and extra recaps are $0.99 each. Your own Slide subscription is billed through Paddle, our merchant of record. You can see the full breakdown on the pricing page. There is no per seat trap and no cut on the sessions you run.
Where things stand, honestly
Slide Practice is built by a team of three, founder-led from Manila. We come from a business and software background, which is why the product sticks to the practical mechanics of running a practice and leaves the substance of the work to you. It is live. The founding offer is open now. The founding group is capped at 30 members, who get Pro at $19 a month for their first 12 months, then $29.99.
One thing to be clear about: Slide is practice software for the session and the follow up, not a CRM, a practice management suite, or a billing platform. It does not run your pipeline or deliver your projects. If you need those, keep your existing tools and let Slide handle the part it is built for: your session recaps, client follow ups, booking, and a private client portal.
How does recording work, and is it consent first?
You record or upload a session, and Slide drafts the recap, the next steps, and a client follow up in about a minute for you to review and send. Recording is consent first. You ask the person you work with before you record, and you stay in control of what is captured, kept, or deleted. Your clients and your data are yours.
Does Slide replace my CRM or practice management tool?
No. Slide is the recap and follow up layer for your practice, not a CRM or a full practice management suite. It captures what happened in each session, the next steps, and the follow up to your client. You can keep using your CRM or admin tools alongside it.
Does Slide Practice collect client payments for me?
Not yet. Slide is not a payment processor or marketplace, so it does not collect client payments for you. You still invoice and collect your own way, with your existing tools, for now. Your own Slide subscription is billed separately through Paddle, our merchant of record.
Who owns my notes and client data?
You do. Your notes, your client list, and your session data belong to you, and you decide what is kept, shared, or deleted. Slide is built so the record serves you and your client, and you can export or remove your data when you want to.
How does the 7-day Pro trial work?
Every new account starts with a 7-day Pro trial, with no credit card required. You get Pro features while you try it on real sessions, with 5 AI recaps included in the trial. After the trial you can choose Starter at $14.99, Pro at $29.99, or Max at $49.99 a month, and founding members lock in Pro at $19 a month for their first 12 months.