A good talk doesn't just inform. It holds a room.
Whether you're presenting at a conference, leading a panel, or giving a commencement address, the difference between a presentation people endure and one they remember comes down to structure, story, and saying exactly what needs to be said.
I work with founders, educators, and leaders who have something to say but need help saying it well. Not in someone else's voice. In yours. Structured so it lands.
We start by figuring out what you're really saying. Not the topic, the point. The thing you want people to walk away thinking about. Once we have that, everything else falls into place.
I write the talk with a clear arc: opening that grabs, middle that moves, ending that sticks. We think about pacing, where to pause, where to punch, and how to bring it home.
You practice. I listen. We adjust. The goal is a talk you can deliver with confidence because you know exactly where you're going and why.
Keynotes vary widely in scope. A 10-minute conference talk is different from a 45-minute TEDx. Let's talk about your event, your audience, and what you're trying to accomplish.