Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 19 February 2026
📘 Source: The Witness

Your presentation is solid. Your message is clear. You’re ready to impress… until the nerves hit and your fear of public speaking threatens to steal the spotlight.

Don’t panic. With these seven simple tips (and a little practice), you’ll calm your nerves, own the room, and deliver a presentation that truly wows your audience. Speak clearly so your audience actually gets your message.

Slow down, pronounce your words properly, and ditch the mumbling. Anxiety often leads to tightness in the throat and neck which can negatively affect tone and pitch. Overcoming public speaking anxiety can also make a huge difference in the way your words come out and are received by your audience.

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Your body has its own way of talking, so make sure it’s backing up what you’re saying. Standing tall shows confidence while slouching can give off “I’d rather be anywhere else” vibes. Here are two presentation techniques to improve your body language: Using your eyes is the secret to engaging your audience.

If a person is looking everywhere but at you when you are at the podium, they’re most likely not listening to you. You’re connecting with them. But do not stare them down; rather casually, shift your gaze as naturally as possible around the room.

One of the most important speech preparation tips is to practice timing. There is no race. If you speak too fast, no one is going to understand you.

If you talk too slowly, you will lose your audience’s attention. You have to strike a balance. Pretend you’re having a relaxed conversation, but pause at important points and pick up the pace when things get lighter to keep the energy up.

Raising your voice a bit when you want to stress an important point can grab their attention while speaking more softly can pull people in and make them focus. Switching it up like this keeps your speech lively and helps keep everyone engaged. Your audience must feel involved.

It will keep them glued to your every word. Get them thinking by asking rhetorical questions, break the ice with a light, appropriate joke and try to make your presentation as interactive as possible. If your audience asks questions, it means people are paying attention.

Think your responses through before answering. If you don’t understand the question, ask them to rephrase it. Also, you don’t need to know the answer to every question.

You can say that you’ll look it up. Don’t get flustered. Be honest and remain calm.

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by The Witness • February 19, 2026

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