Real-time answers in ~4s
Generate concise talking points and solution drafts in about four seconds so you can keep pace with a Google Meet interviewer's follow-ups and changing constraints without freezing when the conversation speeds up.
CoPilot Interview is an AI assistant for Google Meet interview rounds that listens to the question in your Meet tab, drafts a structured answer in about four seconds, and shows it in a private panel only you can see—so you can keep pace on coding, system design, and behavioral follow-ups during a live Google Meet call while owning every word you say.
A Google Meet interview AI assistant is desktop software that runs alongside your Meet tab and turns the question you just heard into a useful draft—talking points, a solution outline, code, complexity notes, or a behavioral story you can adapt and deliver in your own words.
Google Meet is browser-native: most candidates join the interview from a link in their inbox or Google Calendar, and the call lives inside a Chrome or Edge tab rather than a separate desktop client. That makes Meet fast to join but it also shapes the workflow—you are often juggling the Meet tab, a shared document or coding editor in another tab, and the interviewer's video, all at once. CoPilot Interview is designed for exactly that browser-first setup, reducing the working-memory load so you can concentrate on explaining your thinking.
Because CoPilot Interview is a native desktop app for Windows and macOS rather than a Chrome extension or a Google Workspace add-on, it does not run inside the Meet tab and does not attach to your Google account. It captures the interview audio your machine is already playing, so it understands the exact wording of the question rather than guessing from a generic template. When a Google Meet interviewer adds a constraint after your first answer or asks a sharper follow-up, you can ask again and get a revised draft grounded in what was actually said on the call.
The detail that matters most on Google Meet is what happens when you present your screen. Meet gives you three present options—a single Chrome tab, a window, or your entire screen—and each shares something different. CoPilot Interview includes Ghost Mode, designed to keep its panel off whatever you present. It is support, not evasion: test your exact present mode beforehand, understand what your operating system exposes, and follow Google Meet's terms and each employer's interview policy. You always own the answer; the assistant just shortens the path to a clean draft.
From opening the Meet link to delivering your answer, CoPilot Interview follows a simple loop tuned to how Google Meet interviews run: launch the desktop app, let it hear the question in your tab, read the structured draft, then speak in your own voice.
Open the CoPilot Interview app for Windows or macOS, then join your Google Meet interview from the calendar invite or email link in your browser. Because the assistant is a separate desktop window and not a Chrome extension, it stays entirely outside the Meet tab—there is nothing installed into Meet and nothing for the call to surface as a participant or add-on.
CoPilot Interview captures the interview audio your computer plays from the Meet tab, so it works from what the interviewer actually asked rather than a retyped summary. On Google Meet, where you often jump between the Meet tab and a shared Google Doc or coding editor, this keeps the assistant anchored to the real question even as your attention moves between tabs.
A structured draft appears in your private panel in about four seconds—an approach and implementation for a coding round, an API and data model for system design, or a STAR-style outline for a behavioral question. With Ghost Mode enabled, that panel is designed to stay off whatever you Present in Meet, so you can glance at it without it appearing in the tab, window, or screen you share.
Choose from nine AI models and switch per question—use a fast model to keep up when a Meet interviewer moves quickly, then switch to a deeper reasoning model for a hard algorithm or design problem. Verify the examples and edge cases, then explain the solution aloud yourself. Hiring teams grade how you reason on the call, so the draft is only a starting point you make your own.
These capabilities are what candidates need from a serious Google Meet interview AI assistant: speed during a live call, depth across interview types, and discretion when you present your screen in Meet.
Generate concise talking points and solution drafts in about four seconds so you can keep pace with a Google Meet interviewer's follow-ups and changing constraints without freezing when the conversation speeds up.
Ghost Mode is designed to keep the assistant panel off whatever you Present in Meet—a tab, a window, or your full screen. Test your exact present mode first and follow each employer's and Google Meet's policies on the day.
Choose per question from nine models—Groq, Gemini, OpenAI GPT, Anthropic Claude, xAI Grok and more—so you can favor speed on a fast-moving Meet call or deeper reasoning on a hard design problem.
Get implementations in mainstream interview languages, compare approaches, and review time and space complexity—ideal when a Meet round sends you into a shared Google Doc, CoderPad, or a browser-based editor in another tab.
Work through APIs, data models, caching, sharding, and consistency trade-offs with structured prompts when a Meet interviewer pushes past the happy path into bottlenecks and failure modes.
Because Meet lives in a tab and CoPilot Interview is a native Windows and macOS app capturing system audio, it works regardless of which browser hosts your call—no Chrome extension and no Google Workspace add-on required.
Companies on Google Workspace run most of their interviews on Meet, from recruiter screens to full technical loops. These are the candidates who get the most from an AI interview assistant for Google Meet—especially when they pair it with real practice and fundamentals.
Backend, frontend, and full-stack candidates run live Meet coding rounds in shared docs or browser editors. The assistant helps compare algorithms, catch edge cases, and keep spoken explanations aligned with the code in the other tab.
Meet panels that switch between theory and a practical exercise benefit from quick refreshers on experiment design, evaluation metrics, and implementation details between questions.
PM screens on Meet mix metrics, prioritization, and stakeholder stories. Structured drafts help you organize trade-offs and answer crisply when questions stack up on the call.
If the company runs on Google Workspace and defaults to Meet, the assistant reduces anxiety with scaffolding—while you still do the work to explain concepts fluently and own your story.
Across these profiles the pattern is the same: candidates who improve fastest combine a live Meet tool with deliberate practice. Use the assistant to debrief after mock Google Meet interviews, find weak patterns, and rehearse explanations—not as a substitute for understanding. That balance keeps offers durable, because you still have to perform on the job after you pass the loop.
Generic chat tools were not built for a live Google Meet call. CoPilot Interview focuses on the candidate's real Meet constraints: a browser-first setup, a ticking clock, multiple interview types, and discretion when you present your screen.
No product can guarantee an offer—hiring is noisy. What CoPilot Interview can do is shorten iteration time on a live Google Meet call, improve the quality of your first draft, and help you rehearse at a higher standard, so when the round breaks your way you are ready to capitalize.
Common questions from candidates evaluating an AI assistant for Google Meet interview rounds and live technical screens.
CoPilot Interview is a native desktop app for Windows and macOS that runs next to your browser tab while you are in a Google Meet interview. It captures the interview audio your computer plays, turns the question into a focused prompt, and returns a structured answer in about four seconds in a private panel only you can see. You read it, put it in your own words, and respond. It is interview support, so you still own every answer and should follow each employer's and Google Meet's policies.
CoPilot Interview includes Ghost Mode, which is designed to keep the assistant panel off the surface you present in Google Meet, whether you choose Present a tab, a window, or your entire screen. Because each present mode shares something different, test your exact setup before the interview, understand what your operating system exposes, and follow any instruction from the interviewer to change what you are presenting.
Yes. Google Meet runs in your browser tab in Chrome, Edge, or another browser, and CoPilot Interview is a separate desktop app that captures the interview audio at the system level, so it is unaffected by which browser hosts the Meet call. It does not run inside the tab and is not a Chrome extension, so it keeps working even as you switch tabs or share your screen during the round.
No. CoPilot Interview is a standalone desktop application, not a Google Workspace Marketplace add-on and not a Chrome extension. It does not attach to your Google account or the Meet tab, which keeps your setup independent and avoids the fragility of browser extensions when you need reliability on interview day.
You can choose from nine AI models—including Groq, Google Gemini, OpenAI GPT, Anthropic Claude and xAI Grok—and switch per question. Use a fast model to keep pace when a Google Meet interviewer is moving quickly, then switch to a deeper reasoning model for a hard system-design or algorithm question.
Download CoPilot Interview, run a timed mock over Google Meet, and see how fast you can move when answers are structured for coding, system design, and behavioral follow-ups—while you stay in control of what you say and ship.