How I Help You Find Your Voice
For a long time, I watched people hold back messages that could have helped someone else simply because they were afraid to speak. I saw talented, thoughtful, mission-driven people stay quiet not because they lacked value, but because they lacked confidence.
When I began teaching public speaking at the college level, I quickly noticed a pattern. So many students walked into the room believing they were not speakers, and many of them were convinced confidence was something other people were born with.
But over and over again, I watched transformation happen. With support, practice, and the right guidance, those same students began to find their voice and realize they had something meaningful to say.
That experience shaped the way I see public speaking. I came to believe that speaking is not about becoming louder, more polished, or more performative than everyone else. It is about becoming more fully yourself while learning how to communicate in a way that serves others.
As the years went on, I knew I wanted to take that work beyond the classroom. I wanted to help entrepreneurs, nonprofit leaders, professionals, authors, and aspiring speakers use their voice to grow their impact, expand their visibility, and stop letting fear make their decisions.
So I built spaces where new and nervous speakers could grow in a supportive way. Through coaching, training, community, and speaking opportunities, I now help people move from uncomfortable and uncertain to comfortable, confident, and eventually crushing it from the stage.
What matters most to me is creating an environment where people feel safe enough to begin and supported enough to keep going. I know that every confident speaker was once a beginner, and I never want someone to believe they have to be perfect before they start.
Today, I get to help good people share messages that matter. And every time I see someone speak with more courage, clarity, and conviction than they thought possible, I am reminded why this work matters so much.