ANYONE can become a great communicator.
Most people have never been taught. Let us show you how.
Public Speaking Classes * Corporate Training * Personal Coaching * Keynote Speaking
Why people call us
Why we do it
What drives us to make great speakers?
To make YOU better
To give you a boost
To impact your world
To change the world
Our Work
Thousands of individuals and organizations have changed their communication with us through our public speaking classes, workshops, training, coaching, and keynote presentations. Won’t you be next?

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What we say
You can speak with Confidence, Power, and Ease!
Whether it’s making a sales presentation to close that deal, giving an effective powerpoint presentation, motivating your employees, or delivering that career-changing keynote speech, it’s all riding on your communication skills. It’s no longer a luxury to have effective speaking skills, it is essential. Effective communicators provide an enjoyable and memorable experience for the listener, eliminate distracting verbal and non-verbal content, and deliver clear messages that demand action. Few of us naturally possess the skills, passion, and discipline to transmit our ideas with such clarity, charisma, and power. But with training and practice, virtually anyone can become such a communicator. Get started with our public speaking classes, training, coaching, and keynotes.
You have what it takes. We can show you how!
Our public speaking classes, training, coaching, and keynotes will show you how to:
- Deliver your speech like a pro
- Engage your audience
- Become an effective, persuasive speaker
- Learn to enjoy public speaking
- Deliver powerful content
- Make presentations with ease
- Apply the power of storytelling
- Motivate your employees
- Use visuals (like PowerPoint) effectively
- Connect with your audience
- Gain confidence
- Answer tough questions
What our customers say
from the blog
Graciousness
People say crazy things. Some are just odd; some are marginally offensive. Especially if there is no reason to assume ill will, a pause and a gracious response is always in order. Helps to avoid those 'I wish I hand't said that' moments, since one of you is...
Content overload
Watched a marketing rah-rah session the other day. Of course, the ubiquitous PowerPoint was front and center, running the show. When it becomes obvious that the content will be driven entirely by what's on the screen, the presenter loses the ability to connect with...
A blank stare
Seen several speeches (the latest in Toastmasters today) where a previous speaker had PowerPoint slides that ended with the ubiquitous end/summary/any questions slide. No problems (well, only minor ones) with that. But the next speaker spoke without PowerPoint...