A few things we shipped this spring that are worth knowing about.
A free coaching log, built for ICF
To earn an ICF credential, you need documented coaching hours. A lot of them. And most coaches track those hours in a spreadsheet they built themselves, or in whatever format their training program handed them.
We built a coaching log into CredentialPrep and made it free. You can log individual sessions, log across a date range, or import directly from an ICF coaching log spreadsheet. Sessions are organized by client so you can see your hours at a glance. No subscription needed.
It is not glamorous. But it is something almost every ICF candidate needs and nobody else seems to have built into a credentialing prep tool.
Twice as many practice questions
The ACC question bank now has 200 questions. The PCC bank has 100. Both doubled.
More questions means more variety, more edge cases, and less chance of cycling through the same scenarios twice in one sitting. It also means the practice set is wide enough to cover the full range of the competency framework without repetition becoming a crutch.
We also rewrote the answer explanations to make them clearer. Each explanation now walks through all four options and explains why the best answer is the best, why the worst answer is the worst, and what makes the middle options tricky. The goal is that you understand the ICF reasoning, not just memorize which letter to pick.
More honest feedback on your sessions
When you submit a coaching transcript for evaluation, the feedback now reflects what is actually there rather than rounding everything to pass or fail.
A session can show strong evidence on a competency, emerging evidence, or a clear gap. Each marker gets scored separately. That means the report you get back is specific enough to tell you where to focus, instead of giving you a vague overall verdict that does not tell you much.
This is how real ICF assessors think about sessions. The feedback should match.
Everything else
We fixed the mobile layout, rebuilt the onboarding tour so it actually shows what the product does, and resolved a handful of issues that had been on the list for too long.
If you tried CredentialPrep a few months ago and it felt rough around the edges, it is worth another look.
[See what's in the free plan]


