Trusting your innate ability to communicate creates confidence
Do you struggle speaking up?
Does unspoken anxiety make you over-think and over-prepare to hide how much you’re struggling?
Maybe you have debilitating nerves that pop up when you’re put on the spot to speak off-the-cuff about a project you’re working on.
Maybe you’ve received intangible feedback that you need more confidence or executive presence (which only makes it harder to be confident or present) and now you’re watching yourself instead of focusing on what you want to say.
Or maybe you’re in an oppressive workplace where you’re being talked over or can’t get a word in without interrupting and want to maintain your power.
Believing there’s something wrong with the way you communicate creates unconscious patterns like overworking, over-thinking, and over-preparing. This can lead to missed opportunities for career growth, miscommunication and misunderstanding, and burnout.
Unconscious patterns lead to unconscious anxiety and unconscious communication.
I’ve spent ten years helping thousands of brilliant, analytical people stop over-working and trust their voices, reclaim their confidence, and speak with ease.
My framework combines tools from neuropsychology, breathwork, and storytelling to use in your upcoming meetings, presentations, interviews, and conversations.
This work is about prioritizing comfort over how you’re being perceived.
Because I believe you communicate perfectly well when you’re comfortable. And comfort is necessary to speak with confidence.
Let’s make the unconscious conscious.
I’m Lee Bonvissuto. I’m here to help you trust your innate ability to express yourself.
I support brilliant, analytical people. We think a lot. If you’re like me, you may even think about thinking or get anxious about anxiety (it’s the worst, isn’t it?).
I work with technical people who think quickly and know the depths of detail that goes into their work (and struggle to be concise or clear).
I work with people whose voices have been systemically silenced and find themselves having to work harder to communicate.
Visit www.presentvoices.com to find out how.