
PresentBetter Master Class Video Series: Improving your on camera presence
10+ Years, 500+ Workshops & 10,000+ Researchers Trained

Lights, Camera, (in)Action
Unfortunately that's what happens too often when we replace a class or conference audience with a professional camera and bright lights. It's not that you don't know how to present effectively, it's jsut that you are unsure how to do it without an audience.
This video series is designed to fix that. I co-produced it with McGill Telestudio with support from the McGill Office of Sustainability, both former clients. The intended audience is university professors working in the professionl studio at McGill, but anyone wanting to get better being on camera will find benefit here.
The series is entirley video-based. I've made some short remarks to keep you pointed in the right direction, but really any direction will do. Watch one, watch them all, you'll learn some of the things I teach in programs with researchers all over the world, and you can do it at your own pace, according to your interest in your own time.
Normally this is a paid program, but becasue McGill covered the production costs, I'm shaaring it here as a special thank you to all the people who have supproted mky work so far and to some new ones who may be experiencing my work for the first time.
We grow strongest when we grow together.
Let's get started
Andy / Andrew / Dr. Churchill
(I repsond to all 3)
Intro

Let's get 1 thing straight:
Being in video is hard:
Bright lights +
now audience =
hard to really be me.
You need 2 things
tips and tricks
mindset shifts
This series covers both. Have fun, don't ever hesitate to reach out if you have questions or just want to chat. Here's the link for a choice of either.
And in case you want to have some fun before we get started, here's a backstage tour of where this series is shot.
It's McGill University's TeleStudio where professors can create world class recordings or virtually participate in conferences around the world without ever leaving campus.
PART 1: The mindset shift needed when we move to being on camera without an audience

What is it we hope will happen for our audience when we are speaking? The answer is simple: fully listen and engage with the ideas we are sharing. This full listening, this full engagement is when learning happens because the audience is not only both listening and thinking about what is being said, but you are creating a shared moment that also includes feeling and being present with what is being shared. These shared moments are the high points of presentations and classroom teaching. And for this to happen, the speaker needs to be fully present, which is hard on camera with no audience. This video shares 3 tricks to help you get there.