14/04/2026
Being an anchor is not just “talking on stage.”
It’s part journalist, part detective, part student in perpetual preparation.
You’re constantly reading the room, decoding energy, connecting dots between the brand brief, the audience mood, and the flow of the event. What looks effortless is actually hours of rehearsals, content mapping, building transitions, designing engagement moments, and preparing for the unexpected.
On stage, it becomes a real-time strategy game.
Who will respond? Who needs a nudge? When do you pause, when do you push, when do you pivot?
An anchor is always processing. Observing. Adapting. Creating moments that feel spontaneous but are deeply intentional.
For me, anchoring is also the purest form of presence.
Because when you’re on stage, you can’t afford to be anywhere else.
StagePresence