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Are You a Needy Presenter?

“We should focus on this, right?”
“This makes sense, right?”

It’s subtle.

Most people don’t even notice they’re doing it.

But it changes everything.

Why It Undermines You

Every time you add “right?” to the end of a sentence, you shift your role.

From:

  • Someone with a point of view

To:

  • Someone asking for permission

And your audience feels it.

Not consciously. But they register it.

Instead of thinking, “That’s clear.”
They start thinking, “Wait… am I supposed to validate this?”

That’s not the job they signed up for.

They didn’t come to reassure you.
They came for clarity. Direction. A point of view.

When It Shows Up (and Why)

This habit usually isn’t random. It shows up at predictable moments:

  1. At the Beginning → Nerves

You’re getting started and there’s a small voice in your head:

“Is this good enough?”
“Am I landing this?”

So you soften the statement:

“Today we’re going to focus on three priorities… right?”

It’s a way of checking the room.

  1. Midway Through → Doubt

You feel the energy dip.
Someone looks down at their phone.
You’re not sure you’ve fully landed the point.

So you try to pull them back:

“This is where we need to focus… right?”

It feels like engagement.

It’s actually uncertainty.

  1. At the End → Lack of Ownership

You’ve made your recommendation… but you don’t fully stand behind it.

So instead of closing strong, you soften:

“So we should move forward with this… right?”

And now your conclusion sounds optional.

Why It Doesn’t Work

Here’s the irony:

You use “right?” to bring people with you.

But it often does the opposite.

It:

  • Weakens your authority
  • Interrupts your flow
  • Signals hesitation

And most importantly—it makes your audience do extra work.

They have to decide if they agree… instead of simply understanding your point.

What to Do Instead

Replace validation with direction.

Instead of asking the audience to confirm, guide them to meaning.

Swap This:

  • “Does that make sense?”
  • “We should focus here, right?”

For This:

  • “Here’s why this matters…”
  • “What this means for you is…”
  • “The key takeaway is…”
  • “Here’s where I want you to focus…”

Feel the shift?

You’re no longer asking.
You’re leading.

A Simple Fix You Can Use Mid-Presentation

If you catch yourself about to say “right?”:

Don’t try to fix the whole sentence.

Just do this:

Pause.
Drop the tag.
Finish the thought.

For example:

“We need to prioritize client retention—”
(pause)
“—because it directly impacts revenue growth over the next two quarters.”

Same idea. Completely different impact.

A Quick Practice Exercise

Record yourself presenting (even for 2–3 minutes).

Listen back and count:

  • How many times you say “right?”
  • Where it shows up

Then ask:

  • Was I checking for approval… or delivering a point?

Awareness alone will start to shift it.

The Real Shift

This isn’t about eliminating a word.

It’s about changing your mindset.

From:

  • “I hope this is landing…”

To:

  • “This is what I want you to take away.”

Before Your Next Presentation

Listen for it.

If you hear yourself asking for validation…

pause.

Finish the thought.

Stand in the idea.

Because your audience doesn’t need you to be perfect.

But they do need you to be clear.

And clear sounds a lot more like:

“This is what matters.”

Than:

“…right?”

 

 

You’ll improve. You’ll feel
different. You’ll enjoy it.

And you’ll finally enjoy presenting in a way
that feels natural, confident, and true to you.

vineta Ready to feel
confident on stage?

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