There’s no shortage of communication training out there.
Most of it focuses on confidence, presence, or finding the “right” words. And while that can be helpful, it usually falls apart the moment the conversation gets uncomfortable; when emotions rise, resistance shows up, or the stakes suddenly feel real.
That’s where my background matters.
For 15 years, I've practiced as a trial lawyer in two male-dominated industries (law and construction). I learned how to prepare for high-stakes conversations where the outcome mattered, the tone mattered, and the delivery mattered.
That experience fundamentally changes how I teach.
Now I teach women how to lead those same kinds of conversations with confidence, clarity, and control.
I don’t approach communication as performance.
I approach it as strategy.
I teach you how to prepare for conversations the way lawyers prepare for court: by thinking through what matters, anticipating resistance, and deciding, in advance, how you want to show up when the pressure hits.
That’s why Make Your Case doesn’t rely on scripts or personality fixes. It builds judgment. It gives you a way to think clearly before you speak, so you don’t lose your footing in the moment.
It’s also why I’m comfortable leading rooms where the questions are real, the dynamics are complex, and the audience isn’t looking for platitudes. I know how to hold the room, adapt in real time, and keep the conversation grounded. Because I’ve spent my career doing exactly that.
If you’re looking for a communication workshop that goes beyond surface-level confidence and actually holds up when conversations get hard, that’s where I come in.