Simple techniques to conquering your virtual stage fright
If you get butterflies in your stomach the moment you find out you're going to be on camera and hosting a virtual event, then you are not alone.
Virtual stage fright is no different to real stage fright. It has the same debilitating symptoms.
You just freeze up when the camera is turned on and all eyes are on you.
Your internal monologue tells you that you're not good enough to be in the spotlight and have everyone listen to you.
Tatiana Rodriguez is no stranger to virtual stage fright. The first time she had to host a virtual class, she had all the classic symptoms: nerves that wouldn't subside, a fear of how others would judge her appearance on camera, a worry that technology would fail, and a voice that was stuck in her throat.
But Tatiana didn't have a choice, she had to present on the virtual stage, so she had to find little ways to manage her fears.
If you want to become more confident, clear, and calm when you're hosting virtual events, then this workshop is for you.
If you're suffering from...
Lack of confidence talking in front of a group
Lack of self esteem at appearing on camera
An imposter syndrome mindset
A worry that you don't have the technical skills to present and manage the technology
A fear that all the technology will fail and everything will go wrong
You need to join this workshop and listen and learn from what Tatiana has to say about how she overcame her stage fright gremlins.
When you join this session, you're going to learn:
The micro-steps that you can take before your event to feel more confident
How to adjust and silence your inner critic to let your inner champion speak-up
The voice and body-language skills that can upgrade your on-camera presence
Scenario planning and troubleshooting technology fails that keep you calm when things go wrong
Attendees to this session will also get a free copy of Tatiana's virtual event checklist which includes everything you need to do before and during the event to ensure it runs smoothly.
The session will be recorded, but attendees will be able to ask Tatiana questions and get advice on areas that's holding them back when it comes to virtual stage fright.