Some talks give people information.

The best ones change the way they listen.

You can feel it in the room.

People stop checking their phones.
The noise drops.
Attention becomes sharper.

Not because the speaker is louder.
Not because the slides are impressive.

Because something in the room starts to feel real.

A strong keynote does more than deliver ideas.

It gives people a way to see themselves, their work and their conversations differently.

That is where Roxana's work lives:

where clarity meets presence,
where stories make ideas human,
and where the room starts paying attention for real.

Most presentations fail in the same place.

Not in the content.

In the delivery.

Because people don't disconnect when information is too simple.

They disconnect when it feels overloaded, distant or overly rehearsed.

Too many slides.
Too many words.
Too much trying to sound impressive.

And not enough presence.

The strongest speakers make complex ideas feel human, clear and easy to follow.

What people actually respond to

Clarity

When people don't have to work hard to follow you.

Presence

When someone feels fully in the room — not performing at the room.

Connection

When the audience feels included instead of talked at.

Because people rarely remember every slide.

They remember the moments that felt real.

People rarely remember every slide.
They remember how the room felt.

You can feel it during a strong keynote.

People stop checking their phones.
The room becomes quieter.
Something shifts in the attention.

Because the audience no longer feels like they're sitting through a presentation.

They feel included in something.

A real thought.
A real story.
A real moment of recognition.

That's usually what stays with people after the event ends.

Not the perfect sentence.
Not the clever framework.
Not the polished performance.

The moments that stay are usually the human ones.

A pause.
A change in perspective.
A sentence that suddenly feels personal.

That's why Roxana's keynote style focuses less on "performing on stage" and more on creating genuine connection inside the room.

Because when people feel connected,
they listen differently.

Before people remember the message,
they feel the energy in the room.

You can usually sense it within minutes.

The audience either leans in —
or they don't.

Because people feel the room before they fully process the words.

People listen differently when someone feels real.
Grounded.
Present.
Human.

That's why Roxana's background across acting, moderation and communication training changes the dynamic of the room itself.

Not by "performing."

But by understanding rhythm, tension, attention, silence, emotion —
and how people actually respond in live moments.

The goal is never to impress the audience.

It's to make people feel involved in something honest enough to stay with them after the event ends.

Trusted by teams and organizations including

Siemens Energy
EY
Vodafone
OMV
Orange
Engie
NN
Zentiva
Siemens Energy
EY
Vodafone
OMV
Orange
Engie
NN
Zentiva

What people often say afterwards

"She brought clarity and calm energy into the room immediately."

"The audience stayed engaged because the talk felt real."

"A rare balance between structure, warmth and presence."

Podcast

Conversations about communication, presence and human connection.

Reflections and conversations about communication, public speaking, difficult conversations, attention, confidence and what makes people truly listen.

If you want people to leave the room
feeling something real:

For conferences, leadership events, company offsites and international forums.