Fitness Star Brooke Ence and Ally Solutions Turn to Voice AI to Rethink Naked Training

This article was written by the Augury Times
A bold partnership aims to put Brooke Ence’s coaching in your ear
This week fitness personality Brooke Ence said she is teaming up with Ally Solutions and its CEO, Trevor Schrier, to relaunch her Naked Training brand with a heavy dose of voice and conversational artificial intelligence. The core idea is simple: use AI to scale the coaching and community work that made Ence known, so fans can get real-time, spoken guidance, motivation and program tweaks without waiting for a live class or a one-on-one session.
The announcement frames the move as more than a new app — it’s pitched as a reimagining of what a trainer can be when their voice, coaching style and cueing are available to thousands of people at once. That promise is what the partners are selling: a way for users to feel coached instead of just following a recorded video.
What the collaboration will deliver and who is responsible
According to the companies’ announcement, the partnership pairs Ally Solutions’ conversational and voice AI tools with Brooke Ence’s Naked Training content and brand. Ally brings software that can host a spoken interface, understand natural language, and manage personalized sessions. Ence contributes workout programs, cueing style, and the creative control over how her coaching voice is used.
Planned products mentioned in the release include a suite of mobile and smart-speaker experiences, on-demand audio workouts that adapt to users mid-session, and potentially a subscription offering for ongoing coaching and progress tracking. The partners said they will pilot early versions with a limited group of users before a broader rollout, and they suggested new content and features will arrive in stages rather than all at once.
How the voice AI will actually work for a home workout
At its simplest, voice and conversational AI replaces menu taps and fixed video timelines with talk-and-respond coaching. A user starts a session, the system asks a few quick questions about goals or fatigue, and then guides the workout while listening for basic voice cues or simple commands. Over time the system tailors workouts by remembering preferred formats, typical load, and how a user responds to intensity.
That personalization comes from data: what workouts you complete, how you describe your condition, and possibly sensor signals from phones or wearables. Those signals let the AI change a set, slow down a tempo, or offer easier regressions when you are tired. The partners say they will use voice and text logs to tune the coaching, but any product like this raises privacy questions — how long voice clips are stored, who can access them, and whether sensitive health details are shared with third parties.
How this fits into the fast-moving fitness-tech world
Ally and Ence are entering a crowded space where big platforms and smaller creator-led brands both compete. Established players like Peloton and Apple have shown that subscription audio and video can work, while newer brands lean on celebrity trainers and tight-knit communities. Voice interfaces are still early in fitness, but they map neatly to hands-free workouts and the desire for a more natural coach voice.
Monetization paths are familiar: subscriptions, paid content drops, branded products, and licensing the trainer’s likeness. The unique angle here is the focus on natural-sounding, responsive voice coaching tied directly to a single trainer’s style — a bet that fans will pay for a consistent, on-demand coaching personality.
What to watch next — signs this could succeed or stumble
There are a few concrete signals that will show whether this play works. A smooth beta launch with high engagement and repeat users would prove the tech can mimic a live coaching feel. Partnerships with wearables or gyms could broaden data inputs and reach. Commercial deals, like sponsorships or retail tie-ins, would show the brand’s business side is scaling.
On the risk side, look for any privacy missteps or poor voice realism that makes the experience feel artificial rather than helpful. Competition from larger platforms that can bundle similar features into already-popular ecosystems is another major hurdle. If Ally and Ence can deliver believable, flexible coaching without sacrificing user privacy, this could be a smart way to extend a trainer’s reach. But execution will be everything — the idea is easy to sell on paper, harder to pull off in the sweaty middle of a hard workout.
Photo: RDNE Stock project / Pexels
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