Practical guidance on structuring presentations, meetings, and everyday communication so your ideas are clear, usable, and remembered.
Most professionals don’t struggle because they lack ideas.
They struggle because their ideas are hard to follow.
Public speaking—whether in a classroom, a meeting, on Zoom, or in a hallway—is not about performance. It’s about organizing your thinking so others can understand and use it.
This work focuses on helping people structure their ideas clearly, so their message travels further and lands with intention.
What I Help With
This work is focused on content and structure, including:
Clarifying the purpose of a presentation or comment
Defining a clear thesis or central idea
Organizing content into 3–5 logical main points
Creating strong openings and meaningful conclusions
Adapting the same structure for meetings, committees, and short updates
The goal is clarity—not polish.
Outside the Scope of This Work
This work does not focus on:
Voice or performance coaching
Stage presence or delivery mechanics
Acting, projection, or presentation theatrics
Those are valuable disciplines, but they are outside the scope of this work.
Who This is For
This approach works well for:
- Students and early-career professionals
Marketers, consultants, and analysts
Leaders who want to be clearer in meetings
Anyone with strong ideas who wants people to listen longer and understand more
My Background in Speech
I have a B.A degree in speech and theatre and previously taught public speaking at the university level and have spent decades working with marketers and business leaders. Through classrooms, conferences, and committee rooms, I’ve seen the same pattern repeat: strong ideas lose impact when they aren’t clearly organized.
This work distills what consistently helps ideas land.
If you’re interested in improving how your ideas are structured and understood, feel free to reach out.