Take It Easy: Keeping your cool on stage isn’t just about avoiding embarrassment – it’s about maintaining the trust and respect of your audience. When something unexpected happens, your reaction defines you more … Read More
That Feedback Hurts
Few experiences unsettle a speaker more than blunt feedback. After a presentation, comments arrive—some encouraging, others unexpectedly sharp. Even when well-intended, certain remarks sting. The instinctive response is often defensive. … Read More
Does Your Accent Matter
Public speakers come from many backgrounds, and not all of them speak English as a first language. As a result, English can sound very different depending on where a speaker … Read More
Hear Less, Listen More
At first glance, hearing and listening seem interchangeable. Sound reaches the ear, words are registered and conversation moves on. Yet for speakers and evaluators, the distinction matters deeply. Hearing happens … Read More
What A Boring Trainer
Training sessions are often welcomed as a break from routine. Employees step away from their desks expecting something useful, perhaps even refreshing. Yet it does not take long for disappointment … Read More
Too Much Information
At first, the presentation felt promising. The speaker was articulate, confident and clearly knowledgeable. Facts flowed freely. Statistics followed statistics. Gradually, something shifted. Attention thinned. Faces tightened. What had started … Read More
The Power of Music
Music shapes emotion quietly and efficiently. A few notes can soften tension, heighten anticipation or create calm before a single word is spoken. In a speaking context, this influence becomes … Read More
Taking The First Step
For many people, public speaking feels unnatural. It triggers hesitation, discomfort, and a strong urge to stay invisible. Avoidance becomes a quiet habit, reinforced by past experiences, self-doubt or fear … Read More
No Need To Apologise
How a speaker sees themselves quietly shapes how they are received. Long before an audience forms an opinion, the speaker has already formed one internally. Those who regard themselves as … Read More
Handle Your Own Introduction
The moment arrives quietly, then all at once. The anticipation you have carried through days of preparation peaks as the master of ceremonies begins the introduction. Your name is announced. … Read More
Meet Your New Friend
When speaking to a large audience, amplification becomes essential. The microphone steps in as a quiet partner, extending reach without demanding extra effort from the voice. Used properly, it protects … Read More















