So how did you do? Did you succeed at improving not on everything, but just that one area you're trying to do? Now, in my experience, about 95% of my clients, when they focus on one thing, they actually do improve that one thing. Or they minimize that one problem. They were trying to minimize the people who don't quite often because they were trying to do three or four things at once. Here's the thing.
If you were able to practice it, analyze the problem, try again and reduce that problem. You now have, essentially an editing solution to make your on camera, on video presentations. Great. If you're writing a memo or an email and you see a spelling error, you hit it through spellcheck, you go through refine it, you make it better. It's exactly the same thing. When you're speaking on a video camera, you can refine it and make it better you If you were able to spot something you didn't like and make an improvement, you now have a system so that you can make your on camera presentations great.
And you don't have to fly me to come spend two days with you, you can do it yourself, you have the power to do it yourself. The whole key is you have to analyze every single thing about how you're speaking on camera, how you're moving, how you sound, you've got to really learn the discipline of looking at each item in isolation and grading yourself. Specifically, one element at a time, not on every single thing in the big picture. Oh, I liked it. I didn't like it. So that's the key.
So if you did make an improvement on the one thing you didn't like congratulations. Now I need you to look at that list. Again. Let's look at something else on the list. Let's continue to make progress where you didn't the last one. I need you to practice on video again.
This time try to remove one more thing that you don't like. Try to add something that you do like do that right now.