How to Be Confident in Your Next Work Presentation

1–2 minutes

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I used to hate giving presentations at work.

Not because I was terrible at them—but because I never felt in control.
I’d tweak the slides endlessly, rehearse lines in my head, and still walk into the room feeling unsure. My voice would tighten. I’d rush through the first few slides. And then leave wondering if anyone had actually understood what I was trying to say.

It wasn’t a disaster. But it wasn’t good either.
And the worst part? I thought that was as good as I’d ever be.

Over time, I realised something that changed everything:
The people who look calm and credible in front of a room… often feel the same nerves. They’ve just found a better way to prepare.

They’re not necessarily charismatic or fearless.
But they have something else—structure, tools, and practice.

That’s what this new video is about.

It’s a practical walkthrough of the approach I use now—an approach that’s helped me go from “just get through it” to actually connecting with the room.

Here’s a quick preview of what I cover:

  • Why you don’t need to be perfect—just useful
  • How to structure your message so it actually lands
  • How practicing out loud helps
  • How to end in a way that turns your presentation from talk into real action
  • And how to gain confidence by not chasing approval and starting to focus on value

This isn’t about turning you into a TED Talk speaker.
It’s about helping you feel in control—so you can be calm, credible, and clear when it matters.

So if you’ve got a team update, proposal, or senior leadership presentation coming up – give it a try.

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