Press your lips together to stop the air, then release. No vocal cord vibration.

Americans pronounce personalize as PUR-suh-nuh-lahyz (/ˈpɜrsənəˌlaɪz/). Stress falls on the first syllable — keep everything else short and quick. You'll hear it in sentences like "The algorithm was designed to personalize content recommendations".
Record yourself saying "personalize" and play it back. The mic stays on your device — nothing's uploaded.
4 syllables, 9 sounds. Tap a syllable to jump to its row, then explore each sound's mouth shape and how it's made.
The schwa before L disappears — L becomes the vowel of the syllable. Go straight from the previous consonant to a Dark L.

Start with your jaw open wide and your tongue resting low and flat. Glide the front of your tongue up toward the roof of your mouth as your jaw closes halfway.
Same position as S, but add vocal cord vibration. Feel the buzz.

Click any sentence to see the full breakdown — every link, every reduction, every flap-T.
The textbook way isn't wrong — it's just not how anyone actually says it.
Stress falls on the first syllable, not the others. Stretch PUR — keep everything else short and quick.
Don't pronounce the first syllable too fully. The unstressed syllable reduces to a schwa — the lazy "uh" sound — in casual speech.
Americans use a relaxed retroflex R — the tongue curls back rather than rolling. The R is one continuous sound with the vowel before it, not two separate sounds.