19/06/2026
The advice many professionals receive about presentation anxiety sounds logical:
๐ "Just keep doing it."
But what if the very thing you're doing is reinforcing the problem?
If every presentation is accompanied by rushing, tension, overthinking, or self-doubt, repetition doesn't automatically build confidence.
It builds familiarity with anxiety.
In this article, we explore why years of presenting don't always lead to feeling calmer under pressure โ and the three-level system that actually helps retrain your response:
โ Exposure
โ Deliberate Practice
โ Integration & Evidence Building
Because the goal isn't to eliminate nerves.
The goal is to stop nerves from controlling how you show up when it matters most.
If you've ever wondered why experience alone hasn't solved presentation anxiety, this may change how you think about practice altogether.
https://www.presentation-school.com/post/why-more-practice-doesn-t-fix-presentation-anxiety-and-what-actually-does
How to Overcome Presentation Anxiety: Why More Practice Isn't Enough
Most professionals assume experience will eliminate presentation anxiety. In reality, repetition often reinforces it. Discover the three-level framework that creates lasting confidence under pressure.
18/06/2026
You can say the right thing...
..and still lose the room.
Not because your message was weak.
Because your tone told a different story.
Many professionals spend hours preparing their content:
โ๏ธ The slides
โ๏ธ The data
โ๏ธ The talking points
Very few spend time preparing the delivery.
Yet your audience often decides whether to trust you before they fully process your words.
Your tone communicates confidence, uncertainty, warmth, tension, conviction, and credibility โ often faster than language itself.
That's why two people can deliver the exact same message and get completely different reactions.
The difference isn't always the message.
Sometimes it's the delivery system.
Swipe through to see why tone may be one of the most overlooked communication skills in leadership, presentations, and executive presence.
๐ What's one thing you notice first when someone speaks: their words, their tone, or their body language?
Leave a comment.
16/06/2026
Research suggests that acute stress can significantly reduce working memory capacity, making it harder to organise thoughts, retrieve information, and communicate clearly in real time.
That's why the professionals who stand out aren't necessarily the ones with the best English.
They're the ones who know how to stay clear when the pressure rises.
In this article, I explore:
โ Why Q&A feels harder than presentations
โ The Communication Triangle and how it affects performance
โ Simple ways to buy thinking time without sounding uncertain
โ A practical framework for answering questions with clarity and authority
Read the full article here: (https://www.presentation-school.com/post/englisch-prรคsentation-fragen-beantworten-how-to-stay-calm-and-clear-in-q-a)
What's the toughest question you've ever been asked during a presentation?
15/06/2026
Hello, Monday๐
Did you know your body doesnโt actually distinguish between stress and excitement?
They use the same hormones. The difference isnโt physical โ itโs the story your mind attaches to the sensation.
That means the pressure before a big moment can either shrink your performance or elevate it.
Reframe the signal, and you change the outcome.
What story are you telling your body today?
10/06/2026
More than 20 years of friendship.
A visit to Berlin turned me into a tourist in my own city.
We got lost, laughed, explored, and made new memories.
Grateful for friendships that stand the test of time.
08/06/2026
Hello Monday๐๐
Most people think gestures are just a presentation skill.
They're not.
They're a thinking tool.
When used deliberately, gestures help your audience process information more easily. They create visual anchors, reduce cognitive load, and make ideas easier to remember.
This is one reason why great communicators don't stand frozen behind a podium or hide their hands in their pockets.
They use movement with purpose.
Not to perform.
But to help the audience understand.
The next time you're presenting, pay attention to your hands.
Are they supporting your message or distracting from it?
๐ Is there any presentation habit you're currently working on improving this week? Let me know.
04/06/2026
You can have the right words...
The right strategy.
Even the right answer.
And still fail to land the message.
Why?
Because people don't just hear your words.
They experience your state.
Tension changes tone.
Tone changes interpretation.
Interpretation changes impact.
This is why two people can say exactly the same thing and get completely different results.
One creates trust.
The other creates resistance.
Not because of the information.
Because of the signal carrying it.
This carousel explores a principle we teach often:
State first. Message second. Impact third.
Check out my post on LinkedIn and see if you've ever experienced this in a meeting, presentation, difficult conversation, or leadership situation.
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/kunleorankan_carousel-why-information-doesnt-land-without-ugcPost-7467524306277650433-tsbk/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAABUh0r4BoSMQWfzIzkMKAnKQ18-rygCiY8U
Which slide resonates with you most?
01/06/2026
Hello, June๐
A new month is a reminder that progress is rarely made in giant leaps.
It is made in the small conversations.
The difficult decisions.
The presentations delivered despite the nerves.
The habits repeated when nobody is watching.
As we step into a new month, this is a reminder to keep showing up, keep learning, and keep moving forward โ one step at a time.
Wishing you a month filled with clarity, growth, meaningful opportunities, and moments that move you closer to your goals.
Happy New Month from The Presentation School Berlin.