To ensure speakers look directly at the lens, influencer Roger Wakefield puts a small Mario figurine on his camera. This simple trick provides a physical target to focus on, preventing the natural tendency to look at oneself on a monitor and creating a more engaging viewer experience.

Related Insights

Your enthusiasm as a storyteller is infectious. Like Steve Jobs marveling at his own products, showing genuine excitement guides your audience on how to react, making them more likely to connect emotionally with your message and vision.

The fear of being on camera often stems from self-consciousness. Sending short, personal "video voicemails" to one person at a time shifts your focus. The act of creating a video for a specific individual forces you to visualize them, humanizing the interaction and replacing fear with a focus on connection.

To prevent guests from adopting a rehearsed, "idealized" persona, the podcast host starts recording as soon as they sit down. By eliminating formal cues like "Are you ready?", the conversation feels natural and unplanned, leading to more honest and unguarded responses that reflect the guest's true personality.

The word "presentation" permits crutches like teleprompters. Viewing a talk as a "performance" acknowledges the audience, demands rigorous preparation, and shifts the goal toward being entertaining and engaging, not just informative.

Viewer attention wanes just a few seconds into a video. To combat this, content creators should strategically insert a 'pattern interrupt'—an unexpected pop-up, a quick call to action, or a visual distraction—around the six-second mark to jolt the viewer and retain their engagement.

Most content is filmed at eye-level. To instantly stand out, radically change the camera's perspective. Filming from the floor, taping the phone to the ceiling, or capturing a subject from a great distance creates a visual pattern interrupt that makes viewers pause and pay attention.

Many professionals avoid video because they dislike watching themselves. Instead of ignoring this discomfort, lean into it. Methodically re-watching your videos is the fastest way to identify and correct awkward delivery quirks, like repetitive blinking or verbal tics. This self-analysis is a critical step to becoming a more polished presenter.

Instead of feeling intimidated by a camera lens or a potential mass audience, creators should visualize one specific person—their ideal client or a former version of themselves. This transforms the recording process into an intimate conversation, making content more authentic and relatable.

Actively trying to "be more confident" makes you self-conscious and forces you into your own head. Instead, shift your focus outward to connecting with and serving the audience. This external focus naturally projects confidence as a byproduct, without the self-surveillance.

The "authenticity" that makes video performers successful is a constructed performance of understanding an unseen audience while staring into a camera. It's a specific, under-theorized skill of transmission, not a reflection of one's true self, making the term "authentic" a misnomer for a calculated craft.