Building performance

There are thousands of reasons why people feel discomfort when speaking in public. The most common is an acute awareness that they are not being effective and that they are failing to engage with their audience - to the point of losing them. That has to be reversed.

Simply getting someone to speak faster or slower or louder doesn’t help, because it doesn’t lead to any greater understanding of what is happening between the brain and the voice and how it affects the communication of ideas. Short term fixes tend to distort over time into bad habits; we want to bring about lasting improvement.

What makes that change is guiding the speaker to experience what it feels like to communicate effectively. Once they experience that effectiveness, they understand what is making the difference. And because they understand it, they are able to repeat it.

1 | 2