TYPE · HEAR · SHIP
Nine boxes. Ninety seconds. The Lean Canvas with a voiced pitch.
Type the canvas. Press play. Hear the pitch. The whole thing is local.
Three local AI agents that ask the next question. A voiced 90-second reel that turns nine sections into something you can hand a stranger. All in your browser.
For founders who'd rather hear their pitch than re-read their plan.
Why typing isn't enough
Reading is silent. Pitching is loud. Most founders only ever read their own business model — they never hear it.
Hearing your business out loud is a debugger. Sentences that look balanced on screen turn into seventeen-second monologues. Words that read crisply trip your tongue. The bridge between Problem and Solution that worked on paper goes missing when you have to actually deliver it. You don't notice any of this until you say the thing out loud, in front of someone, the first time it counts.
Or you press a button on Tuesday at 11:14 PM and listen to a 90-second voiced pitch generated from nine boxes you wrote thirty seconds ago. You hear the word that doesn't fit. You hear the section you over-explained. You hear that the founder framing reads as visionary but the seed-investor framing falls flat. You go back. You edit. You press play again.
Five tones cross with six audiences. Thirty distinct combinations, all generated on your laptop. The first one runs in two seconds; the next runs instantly. By the time you have to stand in front of a real audience, you've already rehearsed with thirty.
Type. Hear. Ship. In that order, ninety seconds at a time.
What a Lean Canvas does in nine boxes.
A Lean Canvas is a one-page business model — Problem, Solution, Unique Value Proposition, Channels, Customer Segments, Unfair Advantage, Key Metrics, Cost Structure, Revenue Streams. It replaces a 30-page business plan with the nine questions a founder actually has to answer to know if the idea works.
Totally Lean runs the canvas in your browser. No account. No server. The data lives in your local storage. Three local AI agents help you fill it; a 90-second voiced pitch generator turns the canvas into something you can hand to a stranger.
When you click Start, you're editing in seconds, no signup, no email, no team workspace. Share via URL when you want someone in. Export JSON when you want a copy.
Other ways founders frame the same canvas.
The same nine boxes, framed for different moments. Pick the one that fits where you are right now.
- NOT A SPREADSHEET · NOT A DECKThe Lean Canvas for the business plan you'll actually open.
- BEFORE THE DECKA Lean Canvas you write before you write the pitch.
- FOR THE 11 PM IDEAThe Lean Canvas you draft the night you have the idea.
- NO ACCOUNT · NO SERVER · NO ROOM FULL OF PEOPLEThe Lean Canvas that never leaves your laptop.
Frequently asked
- How does the pitch generator work?
- It reads your filled-in canvas and produces a 90-second spoken pitch in about two seconds. Five tones × six audiences = thirty distinct combinations. Each weights the nine sections differently and uses a different verbal rhythm. The model runs locally — WebGPU or your own Ollama daemon.
- Do I need to write the pitch first?
- No. The canvas IS the pitch source. Write the boxes; the generator turns them into a spoken paragraph. You can edit the generated pitch, but you don't have to write one to start.
- Can I hear the pitch read aloud?
- Yes. The default uses your browser's speech synthesis (free, every browser has it). For a more natural sound there's an optional 80MB Kokoro-82M neural voice download — a one-time, fully offline upgrade.
- Why ninety seconds specifically?
- The elevator-pitch convention. Most investor first meetings give the founder 30-90 seconds to land the thesis. Generating at the upper bound forces the canvas to fit into a real-world delivery window — if it doesn't, the canvas is too vague.
Nine boxes. Ninety seconds. The Lean Canvas with a voiced pitch.
No signup, no server, no email. Open the editor and start sketching.