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- 7 Simple Delivery Shifts That Make You Easier to Watch
Half the Secret to Great Vocal Delivery is Avoiding These Common Mistakes It's been said many times, but it's really true: From time to time, we all get in our own way. We're terribly self-critical. We want to get it "right." And in our pursuit of being good on camera, we end up recording the same d*mn video over and over again... ...which totally defeats the purpose. If you've ever been there - and I have! - you know that it only progressively get worse and worse. Yup, by the 27th time, it's pretty stale and you're just about ready to throw the camera halfway across the room. It's time to stop. Not because take #2 was the best (and it probably was), but because all you've really achieved was to psych yourself out. News flash: You're coming across as tired. Stressed. Forced in videos 3-27. Quit trying so hard! And I'm saying this to myself, too, because I fall in the same trap from time to time. The truth is: polish, platforms, and tools aren’t the deciding factor anymore. Authentic, realistic, human energy is. You don't have to be perfect. But you CAN be confident, natural, and credible — without performing. How about some sure-fire ways to improve your delivery? Bonus: they work just as well in person as they do on camera! Clarity beats performance. Every time. “By take #27, you’re not improving. You’re unraveling.” 1. Slow the thinking, not just the talking Most people try to “slow down” by speaking more slowly. Sorry, that rarely fixes the problem. If your mind is racing ahead of your words, your delivery will still feel rushed, even at a slower speech rate. Here's what you should do. Let's call it "the shift": Complete one thought before starting the next Let ideas finish instead of stacking This creates natural pacing without forcing an unnatural cadence. It's a more relaxed way of speaking, too, that is far more engaging to the viewer. 2. Stop tightening your voice to sound professional Many professionals unconsciously narrow their voice on camera. They hold tension to sound controlled and polished. Unfortunately, tension reads as strain, not credibility. And it's rough on your voice, especially when you overdo it. Try this instead. The shift: Allow your voice to stay fuller and more relaxed Speak as if you’re explaining something to one intelligent person This increases warmth, clarity, and authority simultaneously. It'll draw your viewers in, too. 3. Let pauses do the real work Pauses feel dangerous when you’re recording. They sound MUCH longer to us than they really are, and we feel a real need to fill up the emptiness. You may even worry that those pauses sound awkward and that your viewers will lose attention and wander off to watch a cat video or something. Not so! To the viewer, pauses feel intentional. They signal: confidence clarity leadership In other words, a serious, experienced speaker formulating thoughts in the moment. It feel real and very human, both to the speaker ahd to those watching. Simultaneouly, the pause lets you collect your thoughts and structure your next words: Stop filling space automatically Let silence land after key ideas Bonus: they give you a mini-break, which cues your body to relax a bit and moderate your pace. 4. Separate thinking from speaking Multi-tasking has its limits! I try to keep multi-tasking to simple things, like folding laundry or cooking dinner while listening a podcast. (Don't I sound so domestic?!) Talking about one point whie your mind races ahead to prepare the next one creates: filler words ("um" or "you know") rushed phrasing flat delivery You end up looking unprepared and flustered - or just plain boring. The shift in thinking here is to... Pause to think Then speak This simple separation makes delivery sound conversational and grounded... and so much more interesting. 5. Stop performing confidence You're not fooling anybody. Confidence is not something you layer on. That just looks like a performance, like someone trying too hard... and it's not convincing. Please don't do the following; these come across as bravado, not true confidence: over-project exaggerate energy monitor yourself constantly Confidence appears when you remove interference. Stop trying so hard to be taken seriously and just: Focus on being understood Let clarity replace effort Calm authority emerges naturally... and people lean in. 6. Speak to one person, not an audience The camera triggers broadcasting behavior. If you're reading a script (please don't do that! We can tell.), your voice changes to "presentation" or broadcast mode. You audience feels like you're preaching to them. Formal, distanced, less relatable. The camera is truly more of a conversation you're having with each person watching you. It feel personal, so do this instead: Picture one specific listener Speak as if you’re in conversation This dramatically increases connection and watch time, not to mention trust and the feeling that you actually care about the person watching you. 7. Trust clarity more than personality You don’t need to be bigger, funnier, or more animated. You just need to be clear. And keep it simple, down to the essentials. What do we, your listener or viewer, need to know? Fewer words, said plainly, land better and are easier to remember than long-winded details Trust the idea and let it do the work Clarity carries more weight than embellishment. And in much less time, too, which helps keep short attention spans on your content. The Benefits to YOU When you stop trying so hard and follow these seven basic principles, you're going to realize a few things: Recording becomes easier You need fewer takes You'll be happier — and less harsh on yourself Analytics bear this out: you'll see a stronger viewer response Why? It's not because you became someone else. It's because you removed all sorts of friction - you relaxed a bit. Slowed down. Focused on speaking clearly and plainly, and TO the audience than AT them. Going on camera? A final thought Delivery isn’t a personality trait. It ’s a skill. And in 2026, it’s the skill that quietly determines whether people stay, trust, and take the next step. Most importantly, it can be learned. I offer masterclasses throughout the year on this very subject. If you want a heads-up as to the next one, comment below or drop me an email . I also speak on this subject at other people's events, like this one . Group workshops? Most definitely. Just let me know what you need . The Prosperity Mindset Summit What are the mindset patterns that quietly shape how money flows into (or away from) your life? Every talk delivers clear, actionable ideas you can apply immediately. No hype. No pressure. Just real value. An On Demand Audio Experience March 1st - 20th, 2026 Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- Why Your Videos Aren't Performing the Way They Should
The skill every video trend assumes you have... and why most people don’t If you’ve read the list of video trends for 2026, you already know the headlines. Short-form habits matter. AI is everywhere. Trust is built faster than ever. Calm authority outperforms hype. And yet… Many smart, capable people still feel uncomfortable on camera.They know what they’re supposed to do — but not why it still feels awkward, forced, or ineffective. I see this every week with clients who swear video “just isn’t their thing” — even though they’re articulate, credible, and successful everywhere else. That disconnect isn’t about strategy. It’s about delivery . Delivery is the difference between being seen and being trusted. Speaker thinks he's hot stuff. His audience? Not so much.... Knowing the video trends doesn’t make you easier to watch Most trend conversations focus on external shifts : platforms formats tools audience behavior What they don’t talk about is the internal experience of the person on camera. Because that’s harder to quantify. But here’s what I see consistently: People aren’t struggling because they don’t understand video. They’re struggling because they’re managing themselves too hard while recording . That internal tension shows up immediately. “People don’t connect to perfect videos. They connect to people.” - Laura Doman What viewers are actually responding to When a video works, it’s rarely because the speaker nailed a hook or followed a perfect structure. It works because: the pacing feels natural the voice sounds grounded the speaker seems comfortable being seen the delivery doesn’t demand effort from the viewer In other words, it feels easy to stay. That ease doesn’t come from talent or personality. It comes from delivery choices — often unconscious ones. The hidden friction most people don’t notice Here’s what creates friction on camera (even when the content is solid): rushing because you’re trying to “get it right” over-monitoring your words while speaking tightening your voice to sound professional performing confidence instead of settling into it None of this looks dramatic. But the camera amplifies it. And viewers feel it long before they can articulate it. Why delivery is the bottleneck now As video becomes more common, baseline quality rises . That means: decent lighting is expected clear audio is expected coherent messaging is expected What’s no longer average — and therefore noticeable — is ease . Ease on camera has become the differentiator. Not because it’s flashy, but because it signals: confidence without force clarity without pressure authority without posturing This is also why AI doesn’t solve the problem AI can: clean up your edit shorten your clip generate captions help structure ideas What it can’t do is reduce the internal strain of being on camera. It can’t help you: slow down when you’re rushing release vocal tension trust pauses stay connected while thinking Those are delivery skills — and they’re human ones. Yes, great videos CAN make you money! What actually changes when delivery improves When someone stops managing themselves on camera and starts communicating , a few things happen almost immediately: recording feels easier videos take fewer takes ideas land more clearly viewers stay longer trust builds faster Not because the content changed — but because the experience did. This is the work beneath the trends The video trends of 2026 describe what’s changing in the landscape. Delivery determines whether you can actually use those trends — or whether they stay theoretical. That’s why delivery isn’t an add-on skill.It ’s the operating system. And it’s learnable. Want the trend context? If you haven’t read it yet, the original article outlines the broader shifts shaping video this year: 👉 Top 15 Video Trends for 2026 If you want applying these trends, or if you're unsure why your own videos are getting the traction you expected, let's take a closer together. Book a "Lights, Camera, Clients" On Camera Audit , and I'll show you exactly where your delivery is costing you clients and how to fix it. Exciting Events Going On Now! The Soul Spark Summit Pre-recorded segments to watch on your own schedule. Available January 27 - February 2 This Summit is intended for successful women who are feeling burned-out and exhausted - and looking for change. In my video interview, host Olga Alexeeva and I talk about changing course and reinventing yourself (or your career) later in life. And how to do it well, so that you achieve a happier and healthier work-life balance. ✨ Register here - and be inspired. ✨ Grand Connection's Winter Grand Giveaway Complimentary products and services from 26 top coaches, consultants, and service providers. Now through January 31 ✨ Access the Grand Giveaway ✨ The Grand Connection is a virtual networking organization where you'll find referrals, gain visibility, learn new skills, save time and money, and reach new audiences through collaboration. Be my guest for three upcoming events of your choosing! Get your guest pass here and come to network and learn. Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- Top 15 Video Trends in 2026
Why speaking delivery, human presence, and smart use of AI - not polish or platforms - determine whether your videos convert. Video is no longer optional for business visibility. But in 2026, simply making videos isn’t enough. Entrepreneurs, executives, and service providers are showing up on camera more than ever, and they’re asking the same question: “Why isn’t this bringing me leads?” The answer isn’t better lighting. It isn’t chasing every new platform feature. And it definitely isn’t more content for content’s sake. The biggest video trends of 2026 point to something far more human: People don’t connect to perfect videos. They connect to people. Key Takeaways (read this first) Video that generates leads in 2026 prioritizes human connection over polish Speaking delivery now matters more than production quality Short-form viewing behavior is shaping all platforms Trust is built faster—and lost faster—on camera AI works best as a support tool, not a replacement for your presence Why Speaking Delivery Is the Foundation in Every 2026 Video Trend Nearly every video trend shaping 2026 points to the same underlying skill: how you speak on camera . This isn’t about scripts, platforms, or performance tricks. It’s about delivery: pace, presence, vocal variety, and how comfortable you are being seen and heard through the lens. That’s where I specialize. I work with entrepreneurs and executives who know what they want to say , but struggle with how it lands on camera. By borrowing proven techniques from acting and performance training, I help people speak naturally, confidently, and credibly on video, without sounding rehearsed, stiff, or “performative.” The trends below don’t require you to become a content creator. They require you to become more effective in how you show up when the camera is on . The Top Video Trends for 2026 1. Attention Is Decided in the First 2–3 Seconds Viewers decide instantly whether to stay or scroll. Not because they’re shallow, but because they’re overloaded. Clear intent, grounded presence, and confident pacing now outperform flashy intros or overproduced hooks. 2. Speaking Delivery Is the Real Differentiator In a sea of similar messaging, delivery is what separates watchable from skippable. Viewers respond to: Natural rhythm Strategic pauses Conversational tone Flat delivery = skipped video.This is why delivery, not content volume or production quality, is now the strongest lever for improving video results. "Authenticity sells more — way more." - Forbes 3. Authenticity Is No Longer Optional Audiences can spot “performed authenticity” instantly. What works: Comfort being seen Emotional presence Ease in your body and voice Authenticity isn’t oversharing. It’s not hiding behind polish . 4. Calm Authority Outperforms High Energy The loudest voice no longer wins. In a noisy digital environment, calm confidence reads as credibility , especially for executives and service providers. Measured pace beats manic enthusiasm every time. 5. Short-Form Behavior Is Shaping All Video Even on platforms like LinkedIn and YouTube, viewers now expect: Immediate clarity Tight structure Direct relevance Short-form habits have changed how people watch everything. “Trust is the currency of modern marketing — and video is the language that earns it.” - Ntooitive 6. Video Is the New First Sales Conversation Your video often speaks before you do. Viewers are deciding: Do I trust this person? Do they feel credible? Do I want to talk to them? Long before they ever click “Book a Call.” 7. Presence Beats Personality You don’t need to be loud, big, or charismatic. You need to be: Present Connected Grounded in your message Presence is a learnable skill, and it’s one of the most overlooked aspects of business video. 8. Thought Leadership Is Going Visual Written authority still matters… but video accelerates trust faster. Business leaders are using video to clarify ideas, demonstrate confidence, and establish authority quickly, often before a prospect ever reads a word. “Authentic videos resonate more deeply with audiences, fostering trust and engagement.” - Mango Media 9. Conversational Beats Scripted Over-scripted videos feel stiff.Under-prepared videos feel rambling. The sweet spot: Clear structure Conversational delivery A strong through-line This is where delivery training makes the difference between sounding prepared and sounding natural. 10. Vertical Video Is the Default EVERYWHERE People watch video on phones first: Social feeds Landing pages Embedded emails Vertical framing now feels more personal and more modern, even off social platforms. “People remember 95% of a message delivered by video compared to 10% from text.” - Teleprompter.com 11. Trust Is Built Faster Than Ever (or not at all) Viewers read your: Nervous system Comfort level Confidence Often before they evaluate your credentials. People decide whether to trust you based on how you speak, not what you say. 12. AI Is Raising the Value of Being Human As AI-generated video becomes common, human nuance becomes the differentiator. AI can’t replicate: Emotional intelligence Subtle timing Genuine presence 13. Availability Beats Perfection The most effective business videos in 2026 are: Clear Consistent Human Not flawless. “Using video in your content marketing strategy can help humanize your brand, build trust, boost brand recognition and generate more sales leads.” - Business.com 14. Video Is Now an Authority Signal Showing up on camera signals leadership, confidence, and willingness to be visible. Silence increasingly signals uncertainty. 15. The Camera Rewards Those Who Understand It The camera amplifies truth. When you understand how to work with it, rather than perform at it, your message lands with less effort and more impact. How AI Fits In (as a tool, not a replacement) AI is transforming video in 2026, but not by replacing people. AI can support your workflow - but it can’t fix delivery, presence, or connection. Those still come from the human on camera. What AI Is Best For Drafting scripts or talking-point outlines Trimming, captioning, and formatting Repurposing long videos into short clips Audio cleanup and accessibility What AI Should Not Replace Your on-camera presence Your delivery Your authority Your emotional connection AI assists. You still lead. Recommended Tools for Easy, Inexpensive Video Creation AI-Assisted Editing & Repurposing Descript – Edit video by editing text Opus Clip – Turn long videos into short-form content Pictory – Repurpose scripts or long videos quickly Canva Video – Simple editing with AI support AI Video Generators (Use Strategically) Best for concept visuals, B-roll, or internal content. Not as your primary business voice: Sora – Text-to-video for visual concepts and prototypes Runway – Generative video plus traditional editing Pika Labs – Short-form visual generation Veo – Cinematic AI video generation Best practice: Let AI support your message, not replace your face, voice, or authority. Beginner-Friendly, Non-AI (or Light-AI) Tools CapCut – Fast, intuitive editing Veed.io – Simple web-based editor DaVinci Resolve – Professional editing with optional AI features A Smart 2026 Video Workflow (Human-First) Use AI to outline ideas or scripts Record yourself on camera (your phone is enough) Use AI to trim, caption, and format Repurpose across platforms Let your delivery do the heavy lifting What This Means for Your Business If your videos aren’t generating leads, the issue is rarely: Your camera Your lighting Your platform More often, it’s speaking delivery, presence, and connection . Video works when people feel you, not when they’re impressed by you. Ready to Improve How You Come Across on Camera? If you’re using video but not seeing results - or avoiding it because it feels awkward, stiff, or ineffective - the issue is rarely technical. It’s almost always speaking delivery . I specialize in helping entrepreneurs and executives speak with ease, authority, and authenticity on camera so their videos feel natural, credible, and worth watching. 👉 Book a consult call and let’s make sure your delivery matches the value of what you’re saying. I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- Why Availability Beats Perfection (Every Time)
Because decisions don’t wait for flawless. Let’s get this out of the way right now: Perfection is not the thing that gets you hired. Sure, it’s impressive. Sure, it looks responsible. And yes—it takes time to get there. But more often than not, perfection is an idealized goal , not a real-world requirement. Availability, on the other hand? That’s currency. Especially in a fast-moving world where timelines shrink, budgets expire, and decisions need to be made now . Perfection impresses. Availability gets chosen. Why Availability Beats Perfection in Real Life Speed is in demand—as long as it’s not sloppy. And availability plus a quick response time? That’s the real power couple. This is especially true during the holidays. Not every business can shut down for two weeks at the end of the year. And plenty of organizations have budgets that must be spent by December 31—or the money simply disappears. That spells opportunity for those of us willing to keep an OPEN sign on our virtual doors. Even during the holidays. “Perfection impresses. Availability gets chosen.” What Actually Gets Chosen (When Time Is Tight) In real life—especially when deadlines loom—people aren’t choosing perfect . They’re choosing: Responsive Reliable Clear Easy to work with In other words: available . Especially when they need something done right away . Over the holidays, I was reminded of this in a rather profitable way. When Fewer People Are Working, Being Available Matters More The week of Christmas, I booked a voiceover job for a 20-minute training video. It didn’t come from nowhere. I had already told my clients and prospects that I’d be available through the holidays and could accommodate rush jobs if needed. I wasn’t traveling. My recording studio is in my home. And honestly? I enjoy a break from all the cooking—and the cleanup! So while many voice actors hung up their mics until January, I made myself an available resource. Yup, that's me, hard at work in my voiceover booth - and actually having a very good time! Availability paid off again when an unexpected (and frankly unusual) flood of on-camera auditions landed in my inbox right after Christmas and through New Year’s Day. December is usually quiet—but sometimes schedules get turned upside down. Two commercial auditions arrived with tight turnarounds. I submitted both—well within deadline. Then six more landed late. Very “can you get this in quickly?” energy. Eight auditions. Over the holidays. I didn’t wait to make them perfect. I made them ready . (And let’s be honest—trying to be perfect in this business often leads to stiff, uninspired performances. Casting doesn’t want perfection. They want real, human, authentically-you. Imperfections included.) The result? I was cast in two commercials … …and just got a callback for a third . Not because I was flawless. Because I was available and responsive. Why Availability Is Reassuring (and Magnetic) Availability isn’t just about being around when others aren’t. It’s about making other people’s lives easier. It quietly communicates: Competence Reliability Confidence Long before perfection ever enters the room. And this isn’t just true in voiceover, film, or TV. During the holidays, I also stayed in conversation with people who—like me—were still present. Open. Reachable. Those conversations turned into: Speaking gigs booked for January Potential collaborations New partnerships No theatrics. No pressure.Just presence. This Is Not About Hustling (Please Read This Part) Let me be very clear. This is not about grinding through the holidays. It’s not about never resting. And it’s definitely not about being “on” all the time. That’s exhausting. This is about choice . It’s about noticing when the room gets quieter—and deciding whether being available serves you in that moment. It’s also about communicating what you can do for others , rather than constantly talking about yourself. A Shameless Truth (Because of Course There Is One) You don’t need to be perfect to be chosen. You don’t need to feel fearless to say yes. You don’t need to have everything figured out to be bookable. You just need to show up. And more often than not? That’s the entire difference. Upcoming Event Media Mastery intensive: The Experts Panel Thursday, January 15 at 2 pm EST The full program runs January 13-15, 2026 Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- How to Look Great in Holiday Photos (Without Trying So Hard)
Actor-approved tips to look present, confident, and genuinely you - on camera and off It’s that time of year: Holiday parties. Family gatherings. Festive chaos. And - whether you like it or not - photos. Lots of them. Somewhere between Thanksgiving and New Year’s, you will end up in at least one picture that lives on social media forever. Or at least long enough for someone to tag you before you’ve had coffee. Before you tense up, suck in, or mentally rehearse your “good smile,” take a cue from little kids. (And no, I’m not talking about the ones caught mid–nose-pick or tongue-out rebellion.) I’m talking about how kids are fully present . You can see what they’re thinking. You feel their personality. There’s no self-conscious posing—just pure, unfiltered being . That’s why they’re so fun to look at. And here’s the good news: you don’t need to be a kid - or a model - to photograph well. You just need a little presence, some intention, and a few actor-approved tricks. “People don’t want perfection. They want you .” Instead of Worrying About How You Look… Do This 1. Think a Happy Thought (Yes, Really) If a camera suddenly appears while you’re mid-conversation or reaching for another cookie, don’t panic. Think about: A joke you just laughed at A moment you enjoyed at the party A favorite bite, song, or conversation That memory shows up instantly—in your face, your eyes, your energy. Give the photographer what they want and they’ll move on faster. Win-win. 2. Look at the Camera Like a Human, Not a Deer You don’t need to stare it down. Just know that someone - later - will be looking at that photo. Let it feel like a brief moment of connection: "Oh, hi. Nice to see you.” That’s it. 3. Smile Like You Mean It (Not Like You’re Auditioning) Most people just want to see happiness . And a public service announcement: Attempts to look “sexy” in holiday photos often age… poorly. Duck face? No. Please. Never. Ugh. If you don’t love a big toothy grin, that’s fine. A relaxed, closed-mouth smile with warmth behind it works beautifully. Let it reach your eyes. 4. Smile With Your Eyes An empty grin paired with bored or disconnected eyes reads as fake every time. Real photos come from real engagement. Even a subtle shift - softening your eyes, lifting your cheeks - makes a massive difference. 5. Let Your Body Language Do the Heavy Lifting You may not get your “best side” in a group shot. That’s okay. Borrow a few tricks from actors and lifestyle models: Posture & Body Lines Stand tall: Straight spine, shoulders relaxed, chest open Create angles: Shift weight, pop one knee, turn slightly ¾ to camera Elongate: Think ballet or yoga - long lines, not stiffness Avoid freezing: Don’t lock up. Find gentle movement and flow Hands & Face Relax your hands: Soft fingers - no fists Use angles: Turn your head slightly; don’t lock it straight-on Subtle expressions: Small shifts read powerfully on camera Add Realism Staged candids: Hold a glass, lean against something, pretend to walk Movement helps: Music loosens everything Find a base: One flattering stance, then play with hands and upper body The Mindset That Makes Everything Work When You Want to Look Great in Holiday Photos Who doesn't want to look great in holiday photos? Especially years from now when you and your kids (or grandkids) are looking back on family memories? Just keep these three things top of mind: Confidence: Comfort shows up visually Presence: Be where you are Storytelling: Even a single photo tells a story - choose a good one Final Thought The best holiday photos aren’t about perfect angles or flawless smiles. They’re about looking like someone people want to be around . So relax. Enjoy yourself. Be present. And let the camera catch that version of you. Want to add talking on camera so it looks - and sounds - effortless? Engaging? Memorable? I can help you with that, too, 'natch. You know the drill. Just reach out and we'll make the camera your playground. Upcoming Events Hanukkah starts evening of December 14 Christmas December 25 Kwanzaa starts December 26 New Year's Eve & Day December 31 - January 1 Enjoy!! Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- Why Smart, Successful People Still Freeze on Camera
The mindset shift that finally makes video feel natural and confident You hit record. You say the words. And then you watch it back and immediately think: “Ugh. I don’t look right.”“Why do I sound like that?”“This is terrible.” If that sounds familiar, you’re not alone. And you’re not broken. Even professional actors run that same conversation in their heads when self-taping auditions for film, TV, and commercials. I experienced this exact thing today while preparing a commercial audition. Normally, I can knock out an audition in one or two takes. Try too often, though, and it’ll start to look over-rehearsed and stale. Today? Aarrghh. Nothing worked. Every version looked forced. Unnatural. Like something I’d change the channel to avoid watching. And the technical setup was fine. The real problem? 👉 My mindset. Your MINDSET - not your appearance - is what makes or breaks your on-camera confidence. Your audience cares far more about your message than your perceived imperfections. When Your Head Gets in the Way of the Camera The role called for a laid-back, younger woman from the Deep South. Now, if you look at me or hear me speak, you’d probably guess New York. (Nope, I’m actually a native Clevelander.) I’m also far more Energizer Bunny than “cool and laid-back.” OK, I live in the South. Yes, I have mellow moments. But it’s a safe bet that no one is confusing me with a true Southern belle. 😉 So what happened? Before I even began, the narrative in my head was “I’m wrong for this role.” And once that thought lodged in my brain, everything looked stiff. Forced. Overthought. My delivery was trying to fit instead of simply be. I was sabotaging myself with that belief. Then something interesting happened. I stopped analyzing. I stopped trying to match “what they probably want.” (Casting often doesn't know what they want, either. It's often "we'll know it when we see it." Bottom line: I stopped judging myself. I just… did the role. And BOOM! suddenly, the audition worked. Well, nothing Oscar-worthy, but definitely better than it had before. Whether casting loves it or not is out of my control. But what is in my control is this: they received a strong, professional audition from a confident communicator. And who knows? It wouldn’t be the first time an actor sent in an audition that they privately thought wasn’t one of their best effort, only for it to book the role. This Is Exactly What’s Happening to You on Video, Too My point is this: If you struggle on camera for your business - whether it’s for social media, marketing videos, webinars, or Zoom presentations - the issue usually isn’t your lighting, your camera, or your script. It’s what’s happening between your ears. My guess is that you’re thinking about: How you look How you sound Whether you’re “good enough” Whether people will judge you Whether you belong on camera at ALL And the moment your attention shifts inward to self-judgment, your presence collapses. Psst! Here’s the truth most people need to hear: Your audience cares far more about your message than your perceived imperfections. Whether you’re selling hotel rooms, financial services, coaching programs, or consulting expertise - people are The 3 Most Important Things to Do Before You Hit “Record” If you want to look more confident, natural, and charismatic on camera, start here: 1. Focus on the Value You’re Delivering Stop making the video about you. Make it about what your audience needs in that moment. What problem are you helping them solve? What insight are you sharing? What result do you want them to walk away with? Your intention shows up on camera more than you realize. 2. Silence the Inner Critic That voice that says you’re too old, not interesting, not qualified, not “camera-ready”?That’s not intuition. That’s fear. And fear is the fastest way to flatten your energy and sabotage your delivery. 3. Relax and Let Your Personality Lead You don’t need a “video persona.” You need permission to be yourself. When you relax—even just a little—your natural warmth, humor, authority, and authenticity come through. And that’s what people actually respond to. Why Mindset Is the Foundation of On-Camera Confidence I work with high-level professionals, entrepreneurs, and business owners every day who are brilliant in real conversations… and freeze the second a camera comes on. Not because they lack skill. Because they’ve never been taught how to: Shift out of self-consciousness Build confidence under pressure Use the camera as a tool instead of a threat Communicate with presence in a digital space That’s where my dual background comes in - as a working actor who lives on camera, and as a coach who understands the real-world pressure of showing up on video to grow a business. I’ve been where you are. And I know how to get you past it. If This Hit Home, Let’s Talk If you’re tired of: Avoiding video Re-recording endlessly Feeling stiff, awkward, or “off” Knowing you could show up better—but not knowing how Then this is your invitation. I offer a free 1:1 strategy session where we: Identify exactly what’s blocking your on-camera confidence Clarify your communication goals And determine the fastest, most effective way for you to show up with clarity, comfort, and charisma on camera There’s no pressure. Just insight, strategy, and real direction. 👉 Click here to schedule your free 1:1 on-camera confidence strategy session. Because when your mindset shifts, everything on camera changes. And you deserve to be seen as the confident, credible professional you already are. This can be the year you stop “trying” to be good on camera - and start being great. Ready to begin? Let’s talk. Upcoming Event Lights! Camera! Sponsors! December 11, 2025 3 pm EST / noon PST Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- Turning Networking Into Collaborations - and Clients!
Your on-camera presence can open doors to partnerships and sponsorships. I know, I know… I say this a LOT: Showing up confidently - on camera, in person, or on Zoom - is a business superpower. But it’s true! Oh, it’s not the over-polished kind. That’s performance, which is quite different than the real thing, which is showing up: Natural Warm Self-assured Authentically you When you present your genuine, human self - especially in virtual networking spaces where most people are less comfortable about being themselves - connections turn into opportunities you never saw coming. That’s exactly what happened with sponsorship expert Arline Warwick. Confidence creates visibility... and visibility creates opportunity. How a Grand Connection Turned Into a Grand Collaboration Arline and I met through Grand Connection , a virtual networking organization filled with entrepreneurs, creatives, and experts who show up consistently and generously. Back in September, she taught a session on how to find and secure corporate sponsorships, which I found rather interesting. I reached out afterwards to learn more and discovered that many of her clients struggle with what to say to potential sponsors and how to present themselves with confidence. My first thought? This is exactly what I coach people on. And just like that, a collaboration began. “People don’t buy what you do; they buy why you do it.” — Simon Sinek Why Authentic Presence Opens Doors Here’s a truth: People can feel your energy through a screen. Really. When you show up grounded, present, and genuinely engaged, people notice. They remember you. And they start thinking, “ Hmm… we should do something together.” Arline saw how I communicate on camera. I saw her brilliance in sponsorship strategy. And we realized that our audiences needed both of our strengths: Her: how to confidently approach sponsors Me: how to communicate with clarity, credibility, and executive presence That’s how our masterclass was born. And you can join us on Thursday, December 11 at 3pm EST / noon PST … and receive a couple of free gifts for attending. Introducing: “Lights! Camera! Sponsors!” This free masterclass is designed to help you get sponsored - and get seen. Whether you’re an entrepreneur, speaker, coach, nonprofit leader, or corporate professional, sponsorships can fund: Events Projects Programs Community initiatives Even internal corporate ideas And they also: Boost your visibility Position you as a leader Expand your network Attract new clients Open doors that don’t exist until you knock Pair that with strong on-camera and in-person presence, and suddenly you’re not just asking for sponsorships - you’re earning them. Because Confidence + Opportunity = Visibility Sponsors want to support people who communicate clearly and show up with credibility. That’s where executive presence matters. And people want to collaborate with those who show up as themselves: consistently, confidently, and ready to contribute. Your next client, sponsor, or partner could easily be sitting in your next Zoom room. Join Us! "Lights! Camera! Sponsors! "will show you how to: Find the right sponsors Craft a compelling ask Communicate with confidence Show up with executive presence Create lasting visibility and opportunities And as a thank you for attending, Arline and I each have a free gift for you related to our specialties. You won’t want to miss them! There’s a third bonus, too. Want to Meet Great Collaborators Too? If you’d like to experience the kind of high-quality networking that sparked this collaboration, you can try out Grand Connection for free. I can get you a few guest passes so you can see the value for yourself. Here's the scoop . Who knows? Your next partnership, project, or breakthrough may begin at one of their upcoming events. ✨ Upcoming Event ✨ Lights! Camera! Sponsors! Thursday, December 11 3 pm EST / noon PST Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- Human Connection: Stuff You Can Do That AI Can’t
Real connection still needs a human heart. Ever feel like throwing in the towel when it comes to AI? You’re not alone if you feel like the world’s obsessed with AI-generated, well, everything: creative writing, music, marketing plans, videos, and presentations (and more). It is. You wonder, “Do audiences even need a real human anymore?” Short answer? Yes. More than ever. Because no matter how advanced AI becomes, it still can’t replicate the core ingredient of powerful communication: human connection. And if you’re someone who speaks on camera, leads meetings, gives presentations, or shows up on Zoom with clients, your humanity is your competitive advantage. Really, your humanity – flaws, verbal gaffes, and all - is your ultimate “executive presence on camera” superpower. Hard to believe, but it’s true. “Communication is merely an exchange of information, but connection is an exchange of our humanity.” — Sean Stephenson Ever have to give a presentation when the technology goes out? Maybe it was a power shortage or a computer that decided to give up the ghost at the worst possible time. It’s happened to me. The connections I had brought with me refused to work with the tech in the room and nothing was going to fix it in time. So I said, “screw it!” and gave the presentation without any visual aids. Just me talking, finding humor in the situation, and interacting with the audience in a way that I wouldn’t have done otherwise. The audience loved it. And my talk was so much more impactful because I knew what I was talking about (that really helps!) and just let loose with honest-to-goodness human communications. So let’s break down the very real, very irreplaceable abilities only a human communicator brings to the table — and why they matter for visibility, leadership, and business growth. Here are my top 6 things that you, human being, do far far better than I. And in my opinion, always will. AI creates content. Humans create trust. Trust wins. People crave the human element more than the perfect message. 1. Emotional Intelligence: The Human Signal AI Can’t Fake AI can mimic tone.It can approximate warmth.It can run a “friendly” filter over its output. But it can’t actually feel anything . Humans communicate in a way that builds trust, empathy, and psychological safety.We connect with lived experience, not pre-trained data. And people can tell the difference. This is why human-centered communication outperforms AI-generated content in: · sales videos · leadership messaging · brand storytelling · high-stakes presentations · virtual meetings where nuance matters You see, audiences don’t just hear you. They sense you. They feel that connection. And that subtle emotional resonance is uniquely, undeniably human. 2. Real-Time Adaptability: You Can Read the Room; AI Can’t Great presenters don’t just deliver information. They respond to real people in real time. And equipment that doesn’t work as it should! We improvise, sometimes in unexpected or humorous ways. We humans instinctively notice: · energy shifts · hesitation · confusion · excitement · micro-expressions · unspoken tension AI avatars can’t do that — not authentically and not dynamically. They’re programmed to do their job, follow predetermined pathways, and dogmatically plod on… until someone pulls the proverbial plug. Our ability to pivot — change pace, add clarity, shift tone, crack a joke, or toss the script entirely — is a strategic advantage that drives engagement and human-to-human retention. And that’s reacting to someone because we’re engaging on some level of connection with our audience. 3. Creativity & Original Judgment: The “You” Factor AI creates from patterns. Humans create from perspective. Your original voice, your quirky analogies, your imagination, your lived experience — these are the raw ingredients that build a compelling personal brand. AI can summarize. AI can replicate. AI can assemble. But you can originate. And originality is what gets you remembered, rebooked, and referred. Especially when you introduce your unique stories and sense of humor. That’s what helps to brand you, too! This leads into my next point.... 4. Strategic Storytelling: Humans Make People Care Facts inform. Stories persuade. Humans understand narrative psychology and enjoy following “the hero’s journey.” The rising tension, emotional stakes, character arcs, and catharsis — these are the things that make your message land and linger long after you finish talking. Story-driven communication is far more effective than any AI-driven script. It stokes the imagination, fuels emotion, and brings the listener into the story itself. How often have you thought: Eh, this program isn’t for me, only to change your mind later when the speaker mentions someone whose situation mirrors your own and you begin to consider new possibilities for yourself? Back in early 2022, I was a speaker at VO Atlanta, the largest voiceover conference in the world. My topic was motivational in nature, based on my experience of reinventing myself years earlier from a corporate gal to a film/TV and voice actor. The message was that it’s never too late to make a career shift, especially when you can transfer your existing skills to a wholly new industry and use them in a different way. Several people afterwards told me how the speech resonated with them, but what really struck home happened several months later. I received an email from a woman who said she’d been feeling lost in her career, was thinking of making a change, but was fearful of jumping in prematurely. She said she couldn’t get some of my personal stories out of her head and had decided that it too was “now or never” for her. She went all out in that new venture and three months later, was delighted that she had. We ended up speaking over the phone for quite some time about it and ended up becoming good friends. A win for both of us! How that for proof that while AI can mimic story structure, it can’t live one? 5. Ethical Judgment & Leadership: AI Has No Moral Compass This one has quite a few people worried! Blockbuster sci-fi movies revolve around themes of computers in control of all of us, with no options for compassion or even real freedom. The Terminator or The Matrix, anyone? Human executives and entrepreneurs are making thousands of decisions every day that affect their customers, their employees, and even society at large. We’re talking ethical considerations, interpersonal dynamics, and conflict navigation, to name a few. AI, though, has no conscience , no sense of responsibility, no implicit moral framework.Even if we were to give it one (and whose conscience would it be?!), AI really can’t evaluate emotional impact or long-term implications. Human leaders, on the other hand, do that instinctively. Your presence sets the tone in ways AI never can. A great leader inspires. Others bring character or personality to their brand. And despite the priority of “bottom line” profitability, most leaders of businesses are not sociopaths who deliberately intend to harm the communities and nations they serve. 6. Leadership & Inspiration: Presence Is a Human Skill People don’t follow avatars. They follow humans with: · vision · emotional credibility · lived experience · presence · integrity Inspiration requires energy — real, embodied, human energy. Your audience, clients, and team aren’t motivated by data. They’re motivated by the human delivering it. That’s what leadership is. A visionary who inspires others. A charismatic figure who embodies others’ aspirations. A commanding presence with a clear mission who guides others towards it. I certainly hope we don’t fall into the trap of blindly following an AI image that promises, but has no substance, no real experience – or real anything! - to back it up. The Bottom Line AI is a powerful tool . But it is not a replacement for human-led communication. In the age of algorithms, automation, and AI-driven content, your humanity is your differentiator. Your empathy is your advantage.Your presence is your currency. So the next time you speak on camera, step into a Zoom room, or present to a client, remember: AI can deliver information, but only YOU can deliver connection. Upcoming Events The Shameless Hussy's Guide to On Camera Confidence Thursday, November 20 3 pm EST / noon PST Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- Visibility is the New Currency
3 Secrets to Confident, Authentic Self-Promotion When you open a session called The Shameless Hussy’s Guide to Self-Promotion, you’d better deliver something unexpected. So I started by handing out mini Hershey bars — yes, the leftover Halloween stash. Because let’s face it: there’s no shame in enjoying chocolate. The room relaxed instantly. People laughed. And that little square of sweetness turned into the perfect metaphor for what came next. I told them, “Being shameless isn’t about arrogance. It’s about authenticity. It’s about being bold, dynamic, and unapologetically yourself — in how you show up, speak up, and promote your work.” That message hit home. Because so many voice actors, creatives, and entrepreneurs are brilliant at what they do… but feel icky about telling people about it. They’ve been taught that marketing themselves is somehow “too much,” that talking about their work is self-centered, and that real talent should “just be discovered.” Spoiler alert: that’s not how discovery works. Self-promotion isn’t about ego — it’s about access. I had the honor of leading both a general session and a breakout workshop at the Mid-Atlantic VoiceOver conference (MAVO 2025) on this very topic: how to promote yourself without feeling like you need a shower afterwards. The sessions were packed, the questions were nonstop, and the feedback confirmed what I already knew: this message is long overdue. So today, I want to share three key insights from those talks — practical takeaways that can help you build visibility and credibility without losing your authenticity (or your sense of humor). “Being shameless isn’t about arrogance — it’s about authenticity. It’s the courage to show up fully as yourself and let your brilliance be visible.” Insight #1 : Visibility Builds Credibility People can’t work with you if they don’t know you exist. Visibility is not about vanity metrics — it’s about accessibility. When you’re visible through articles, interviews, collaborations, and speaking opportunities, you make it easy for clients and partners to discover you. Every appearance, every post, and every conversation becomes a breadcrumb leading back to your expertise. The more consistently you show up, the more credible and trustworthy you appear. Yes, even before anyone meets you! Insight #2: Authenticity Beats Perfection One of the biggest mindset shifts I saw happen during my session was realizing that polish doesn’t equal professionalism. Audiences connect with humanity, not flawless branding. When you let people see your process, your personality, and your passion, you become relatable… and memorable. In one of my favorite moments, a participant said, “So it’s not about pretending to be confident; it’s about being comfortable enough to be real.” Exactly. Confidence is built, not born, and authenticity is the foundation. Insight #3: Presence Gets You Paid Ultimately, self-promotion isn’t just about exposure — it’s about positioning. When you show up with confidence, clarity, and purpose, people remember you when opportunities arise. That’s what turns one-off gigs into long-term relationships and repeat bookings. Presence is about energy and intention. You don’t have to be the loudest in the room, just the most aligned with what you offer and who you serve. These three principles — visibility, authenticity, and presence — aren’t just performance techniques; they’re professional survival skills in a world where attention is the new currency. “Authenticity is the daily practice of letting go of who we think we’re supposed to be and embracing who we are.” - Brené Brown Ready to Get a Little Shameless? If your team or organization could use a confidence boost in how they present themselves — whether that’s on camera, in meetings, or online — let’s talk. I customize Shameless Hussy’s Guide to Self-Promotion workshops for corporate teams, creatives, and entrepreneurs who want to be seen as the go-to experts in their fields — without feeling like they’re “selling.” ✨ Let’s make visibility feel natural (and even fun). Because that's what being a Shameless Hussy is all about: bold , energetic , and unapologetically visible . And yes! Men can be hussies, too. At least until I can think up something equally as on point and memorable. Suggestions welcome! The Shameless Hussy's Guide to On Camera Confidence A free 1-hour masterclass packed with practical insights. Thursday, November 20 3pm EST / noon PST Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- Be Real on Camera — Even If You’re Dead
What playing a murder victim taught me about authenticity, confidence, and the power of being imperfect on video. I was on set last week filming a TV show, a murder mystery based on real-life events. I played the victim and through it all, I got to: Wear a naval uniform Segue from happy to angry to... well, dead Do some basic stunt work under the watchful eye of a stunt coordinator I especially liked the stunt work: seeing how the gun (the murder weapon) was totally inoperable, yet how to treat it like the real thing. Staggering from a gunshot and then falling facedown to the pavement. My old martial arts training from 40 years ago came in very handy! (We were always taught how to fall correctly, without spraining or breaking our wrists.) The shoot itself moved very quickly - just a few takes of each scene - but it reminded me of one thing that I thought I'd pass on to you: Perfection is not the main pursuit. Artistic expression is. What sells the story? Makes it interesting to watch? Keeps the audience guessing? Not just the facts - it's how those facts are presented that keeps viewers enthralled. How did a strong military woman became a murder victim? Especially by such an unlikely assailant? It's the raw emotion that makes viewers lean in. Not how perfectly told it was, but the messiness - the realness - of the situation brought to life. And these same guidelines reveal how YOU can be more effective speaking on camera, too. Here's the secret: The real you is far more compelling than the perfect you. Playing the abused (and murdered) wife on TVOne's Fatal Attraction, episode #1546 (aired March 2025). Behind the Scenes: When “Real” Hurts (a Little) OK, here's the basic story. I was cast as one of the leading characters of a true-to-life crime story. A mother murdered in cold blood on the driveway of her home. Ouch. Literally, there was some ouch. Most of my scenes had me on my feet moving around, but the pivotal moment - the shooting - had an extended period of freeze tag built in. For what seemed a VERY long time (but really, only about 15 to 20 minutes), I lay motionless and face-down on a cold October concrete driveway - at night - while TV police officers and detectives swarmed around my “body.” I couldn’t shiver, blink (I got around that by keeping my eyes hooded), or even twitch - just breathe shallowly enough to stay “dead.” It wasn’t glamorous, but the emotions driving that scene were real. Especially in the closing shot when everyone walked away and I truly felt extreme loneliness and invisibility being regarded as simply a body, not as a person. Hmmm, as (alive) human beings, we all need that sense of belonging and recognition. It was that feeling, and that of being mortally wounded and fading from life, that gave the scene realness and made it work. To keep it real and natural, the dialogue was partially improvised. Not just in the climactic scene, but throughout filming. Yes, there was a script, but the director wanted natural reactions and behavior - overlapping conversations, raw emotion, and the rhythm of real human speech. He wanted authenticity and real life, not polish. That’s the goal in acting - and it’s the same goal when you’re speaking naturally on camera. Playing the concerned and worried grandma of a missing toddler in Investigation Discovery's Homicide Hunter, episode #806. Perfection is not relatable. Authenticity is. And authenticity comes from the real person (you!) living a real moment, whether it's technically ideal or not. Perfection Isn’t the Point So many people approach video with the idea that they need to be flawless: perfect lighting, perfect words, perfect delivery. But that pursuit of perfection often backfires. And it wastes a lot of time trying to achieve it! You see, when everything feels rehearsed and rigid, the humanity disappears. You sound like a performer, not a person. The truth? Viewers connect with you , not your perfection. They’re drawn to your energy, your expression, your momentary pauses and laughter. Those “imperfections” are what make you relatable and real. You don't - and shouldn't - memorize your script. Know the subject well enough to speak extemporaneously, following an outline. Yes, use notes once in a while to keep you on track, but don't berate yourself because you're not word-perfect. How do you do that well and have it come across as professional? That’s exactly what I teach in my On Camera Confidence coaching - how to let go of the idea that video has to be a performance, and instead, make it a conversation, with plenty of on-camera acting and speaking techniques to show you how to pull it off fairly seamlessly. The Real Secret to On Camera Confidence The truth is, confidence doesn’t come from memorizing your lines. It comes from trusting your message. When you focus on connecting rather than performing, you free yourself to be spontaneous, expressive, and engaging. That’s when your presence shines through the lens - not because you’re perfect (and often because you're NOT!), but because you’re real. It’s the same principle directors rely on in film and television: authenticity over precision. The audience wants to feel something genuine. And that starts with you showing up - imperfectly, but sincerely - as yourself. If you're wondering... yes, it can be learned. It can be applied to business videos, too. That's what makes them the most engaging! If you’d like to learn how to bring that same natural ease and authenticity to your own videos or presentations, join me for my next virtual masterclass, The Shameless Hussy's Guide to On Camera Confidence on November 20 at 3pm EST. (Link below) You'll discover how to quiet your inner critic, speak comfortably to the camera, and create a dynamic on-screen presence that attracts your ideal audience - no acting required. And if you ask nicely, I may even tell you what it's like being killed brutally on screen, doing stunts, and working with TV murder weapons. I've done it twice already this year! 😉 Upcoming Events The Shameless Hussy's Guide to On Camera Confidence November 20 at 3pm EST / noon PST via Zoom Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- Visibility Is NOT Vanity
How to Use PR & On-Camera Confidence to Move Your Career Forward If you’re a professional who wants to stop hiding behind the scenes and start showing up - on camera, in Zoom rooms, or in client presentations - this one’s for you. You want to actually get seen , heard , and booked, right? Well, you’re in the right place, because today I’m talking about using public relations (PR) and on-camera confidence not just as “nice-to-have” skills, but as core engines for your personal brand and career momentum. Visibility isn’t vanity. It’s value delivered. Your ability to communicate with authenticity and confidence on camera builds trust, credibility, and connection faster than any press release or ad campaign ever could. K nowing how to present yourself confidently on camera and promote that presence is a game-changer. Visibility is the new professional currency “When you stop waiting to be discovered and start making yourself discoverable, the work finds you.” Why I’m Speaking at MAVO 2025 I’m honored to be a featured speaker at the 10th annual Mid-Atlantic Voiceover (MAVO) Conference , taking place November 7–9, 2025 , at the Westin Dulles Hotel in Herndon, VA. At this year’s event, I’ll be presenting two sessions: The Shameless Hussy’s Guide to Self-Promotion (General Session) Shameless in Action: Crafting Your Self-Promo Blueprint (Breakout Workshop) These sessions are built for voice actors, but the lessons translate directly to anyone who uses their voice, their face, their presence to win opportunities. Mindset, visibility, and PR - these are the building blocks for anyone who uses their voice or camera presence to grow their business or brand. Self-Promotion 101 As a working voice and on-camera actor, I’ve experienced firsthand how visibility drives opportunity. Clients have to know you're out there before they're ready to do business with you! And showing up online gives them a chance to see you in action: who you are, what you have to offer, and how you can help them solve their problem. That's how I've been invited to take a role in an indie film, voice a cartoon character, emcee a conference, moderate panel discussions, and run client workshops. So how do you get started? You don't need anything fancy. No massive budget or large numbers of Instagram followers. To start: just you and your camera and the intention to show up - for the right audience, in the right way, consistently. That’s where PR and on-camera confidence merge into one potent strategy: PR = your story + the platforms + the consistent presence On-Camera Confidence = your face, your voice, your message delivered with authenticity and credibility When you marry the two, you shift from hoping someone finds you, to making yourself findable . And that leads to more bookings, more trust, more clients, more influence. Three Practical PR and Visibility Moves You Can Start Today Here are three basic things you can do right now to start creating visibility online: 1. Audit Your Camera Presence Film a short, one-minute video introducing yourself and your value to a client. It doesn't have to be "perfect" - nor should it be. Shoot it either portrait (vertical) or landscape (horizontal) style; just check your lighting, framing, and tone to make sure the video is on point. Good eye contact, too? On-camera presence signals your legitimacy in a way that audio alone cannot. Ask yourself: Would I trust or hire this person? When you're being your authentic yourself, talking earnestly about your product or service, the answer is often "yes." The more you show up online, the more you'll build familiarity and trust with your intended audience - the heart of good PR. 2. Define Your Uniqe Story PR starts with knowing your narrative. What is it that you do? Who do you help? What results or benefits do they realize from working with you? Write it out in one clear, succinct sentence: “I help [who] do [what] so [why].” Then expand it into one paragraph. Use it on your LinkedIn “About” section, in your next email pitch, or as your video opening line. It tells everyone what's you're all about! 3. Pick Two Visibility Actions This Week If you're not sure of how you can become more visible, call up your buddy ChatGPT (or some other AI tool) and ask for a list of things you can do to promote your business. Here are two to get you started: DIY Action: Record a quick video tip for your audience and post it on LinkedIn or Instagram with a caption your target client will respond to. Collaborative Action: Reach out to someone in your network and propose co-creating a short video, podcast clip, or live session - something that gives you both exposure and cross-network reach. Who knows? With a new, larger audience, you may find a new opportunity within your business to pursue! Your Next Step When you get down to it, visibility isn’t about being loud - it’s about being clear. And intentional. You don't want to post just for the sake of posting. You have to show up with purpose, building a reputation as someone who communicates with authenticity and delivers genuine value. Because when your message is clear and your confidence is visible, people listen. Opportunities appear. Doors open. The right kind of visibility connects your story with the people who need to hear it most. And when you combine on-camera confidence with smart, consistent PR, you become not just known, but trusted. If being on camera still makes you feel shy, awkward, or nervous, don’t worry - you’re not alone. Most people struggle with that at first. It’s exactly what I help my clients overcome every day: learning to feel natural, confident, and charismatic in front of the lens so their expertise and personality shine through. If you want some 1:1 help, let's talk a bit about it. So take that next small step. Record a short video. Share your story. Let people see the face, hear the voice, and feel the passion behind your work. You don’t have to wait to be discovered. You just have to show up. You superstar, you. 🌟 Upcoming Events MAVO 2025 November 7-9 Herndon, VA The Shameless Hussy's Guide to On Camera Confidence Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING
- 7 Simple Practices That Build Camera Confidence Daily
Proven actor tricks to help you look confident, calm, and camera-ready every day There’s a myth that on-camera confidence is something you’re born with, that natural ease only belongs to actors, influencers, or extroverts. That’s nonsense. Camera confidence isn’t inherited; it’s trained, just like any other performance muscle. I get it — being on camera can feel unnatural. Even professional actors have to train for it. Believe me, performing for the camera is its own specialized skill. The lens sees everything. It’s a flat, two-dimensional medium where even the smallest facial movement is magnified — from a nervous blink to a half-smile that doesn’t quite land. On a huge theater screen or a big-screen TV, those tiny details can look enormous. That’s why actors spend years learning to be present and natural within that artificial frame — fully immersed in their roles and oblivious to the cameras around them. There’s no room for self-consciousness on set. The audience can sense it instantly. And trust me, nervousness or uncertainty reads louder than any line of dialogue. So when I coach clients who feel awkward on Zoom or dread hitting “record,” I tell them: you’re not alone even the pros had to learn it. The secret isn’t perfection. It’s practice. The more you do it, the less the camera feels like a threat - and the more it starts to feel like a trusted friend. Confidence grows through repetition, not perfection. To get you started, here are seven easy-to-do things you can do to develop camera confidence: "You don’t need to be perfect. You just need to show up — consistently, authentically, and a little braver each time." - Laura Doman 1️⃣ Record Yourself for 30 Seconds a Day Start every day by turning on your phone’s front camera and talking for 30 seconds. No script. No filter. Just say something. Anything. At first, it’ll feel uncomfortable. Over time, it becomes second nature. You’ll start to notice micro-improvements: better tone, eye contact, posture, and pacing. 2️⃣ Watch Without Judgment When you replay that 30-second clip, don’t critique - observe. Notice what feels natural. What gestures work? Where do you tighten up? This is about awareness, not perfection. 3️⃣ Use “Warm-Up Minutes” Before any video call, give yourself 2–3 minutes to warm up your voice and face. Loosen your jaw, roll your shoulders, take a few deep breaths, and smile. Actors do it. Broadcasters do it. Professionals who look natural on screen don’t skip this step. 4️⃣ Practice Eye Contact with the Lens Imagine someone you genuinely like sitting just behind the camera. Speak to that person. That emotional anchor transforms your delivery from stiff to sincere. 5️⃣ Do a Camera Confidence Walk-Through Before recording, rehearse your message out loud while standing up and walking around. Your energy level on camera mirrors your physical state. Get your body involved - it keeps you from sounding robotic. 6️⃣ Reframe “Mistakes” as Natural If you stumble over a word, breathe. Don’t start over. Natural speech includes pauses, restarts, and quirks - it’s what makes you real. Audiences don’t want a performance; they want connection. 7️⃣ Reflect, Don’t Judge After every video, ask yourself: • What worked well? • What can I adjust slightly next time? Confidence grows from micro-adjustments, not massive leaps. The Bottom Line Camera confidence isn’t built overnight. It’s the result of tiny, repeated acts of courage: hitting “record” even when you don’t feel ready, speaking with honesty instead of polish, and letting your true personality lead the way. You don’t need to be perfect. You just need to show up - consistently, authentically, and a little braver each time. Coach’s Tip Want feedback on your short video? Send it my way - or better yet, book a complimentary 30 minute consult where we’ll pinpoint your on-camera strengths and build your signature style. (Button below) Upcoming Events Mid-Atlantic Voiceover Conference November 7-9, 2025 Herndon, VA I'll be speaking! "The Shameless Hussy's Guide to Self-Promotion" Want to learn more? Let's talk! I'm Laura Doman, a voice & TV/film actor and video communications coach. As an actor, I create memorable characters that tell my client's stories well, from the friendly CEO to your sassy best gal pal dispensing real-world advice. As a coach, I help you become more comfortable and charismatic on camera in videos, presentations, and online appearances. VOICE OVER • ON CAMERA • CONSULTATION & COACHING











