Connect at a deeper level with your audience

One of the biggest traps I see life science managers fall into is believing that better English automatically leads to better results. So they obsess over “advanced” expressions, complex sentence structures, and “professional-sounding” vocabulary. They rehearse wording more than meaning and connection with people. The result? Technically correct English that would get a high score…

How to deal with difficult people in 2026

What do you think makes difficult people… difficult? For most of my clients, learning how to successfully deal with, manage, and neutralize difficult people is one of the most important skills they need to master in order to become truly effective negotiators. So, what makes difficult people difficult? Here’s the thing: Difficult people don’t win…

Aim for clarity, not sounding “clever”

Here’s 1 core thing you need to focus on if you really want to communicate clearly, confidently, and professionally in English at work in 2026: Focus on clarity, not “sounding clever”. Here’s a mistake I see constantly with life science managers and many of my clients when we first start working together: Trying too hard…

Say “NO” more often

One of the biggest challenges my clients often deal with communicating at work, in fact, is not their English, which is often just fine. It’s the challenge of saying NO to things they don’t need or truly want to do, often just to please other people. So many managers and professionals burn themselves out because they…

How to really connect emotionally with your audience

Many managers believe that “emotional connection” means speaking softly, warmly, or with some sort of cozy, heart-warming tone. They think emotional connection equals emotional performance. That’s not true, it’s not what I encourage my clients to do (and not what I do!), and it’s exactly why so many presentations fall flat. When you try too…

Don’t Fear Silence in English Negotiations — Embrace It

Silence makes many people uncomfortable. In negotiations, that discomfort becomes fear. And that fear costs you clarity, influence, and control. The moment things get quiet, many managers panic, start talking again, and often say things that they didn’t originally intend to say, often to their regret. They over-explain, weaken their position, or give away information…

How Too Much Relaxation Can Ruin Your Presentations

“Just relax before your speech.” Sounds like good advice, right? Not always. Yes, being completely overwhelmed with stress will hurt your performance. But, interestingly, being too relaxed can be just as bad—sometimes even worse! When you’re too calm… Your senses dull. Your focus slips. Your energy drops. Your performance becomes more sloppy. And your delivery…

Speak More Elegantly in English

A lot of professionals think that speaking “faster” in English makes them sound more fluent or “intelligent”. The reality is that it usually makes them sound rushed, unclear, and hard to follow. Speaking too fast doesn’t impress—it confuses. Elegant, professional communication is not about speed. It’s about clarity, control, and presence. Here are 5 things…

Master the Art of Engaging Questions

Too many public speakers think their job is just to talk. To fill the air with information, slides, strategies, and statistics – I speak from firsthand experience, having made the same mistakes myself in my career in the past. But here’s the reality: if you’re the only one talking, your audience is probably tuning out.…