AI-assisted coaching

An AI ski coach should make your video easier to understand

A useful AI ski coach does not shout generic tips. It helps you see your actual movement, compare turns, and bring better questions to your next practice run or lesson.

Where AI helps

Most skiers already have video, but raw video can be hard to read. The skier moves across the frame, the camera pans, and small timing differences vanish at full speed. AI can help by tracking the skier, stabilizing the view around the body, and making pose easier to inspect.

That creates a better feedback loop. Instead of relying only on memory from the run, you can review a specific turn, pause at the transition, and compare left and right sides. The value is not magic. It is a clearer view of the movement you actually made.

Where a human coach still matters

Ski technique depends on snow, terrain, speed, intent, equipment, and the skier's history. A coach can watch the whole person, choose the right drill, and keep feedback safe. Poser should support that process rather than replace it.

The product is intentionally beta-worded because automated interpretation needs humility. When Poser adds more written feedback, it should explain what it sees and why, while leaving room for a coach or skier to judge context.

How to use Poser between lessons

Film one or two runs with a specific focus: balance through the transition, earlier edge engagement, calmer upper body, or more symmetrical turns. Upload the clearest clip, watch the replay slowly, and write down one observation to test next time.

That rhythm keeps feedback practical. The goal is not to collect endless clips. The goal is to notice one movement pattern, try a focused change, and compare the next clip against the previous one.

Use your own ski clip as the test.

Replay output is most useful when it comes from a turn you remember. Upload one clear clip and review it slowly.