how to stop talking so fast when you present
12 july 2026 · 6 min read
if there's one habit that gives nerves away, it's speed. the moment the pressure's on, most of us talk faster — words tumbling out, sentences running together, no room to breathe. the good news: pace is one of the most trainable parts of how you come across.
rushing doesn't just sound anxious — it makes you harder to follow. your audience needs beats to absorb what you've said, and when you remove them, even a strong point lands soft. slowing down is the single highest-leverage change most speakers can make, and it costs you nothing but a little discomfort at first.
why you speed up under pressure
it's not a character flaw; it's chemistry. adrenaline quickens everything — your heartbeat, your breathing, your speech. add the fear of silence (those pauses feel like an eternity from the inside) and you get a rush to fill every gap. the trap is that fast talking feeds the nerves back: shallow, hurried breathing keeps the adrenaline high, which keeps you racing.
why slowing down works
- you're easier to understand — pace gives listeners time to process, so more of your message actually lands.
- you sound more certain — measured speech reads as "i've got this"; speed reads as "get me out of here."
- you buy thinking time — a pause is where your next sentence forms. rush, and you talk yourself into corners.
1. treat full stops as breaths
the simplest fix: at the end of a sentence, actually stop and take a small breath before the next one. it feels unnaturally long to you and completely normal to everyone listening. those micro-pauses are what separate presenting from gabbling.
2. slow your first thirty seconds on purpose
the opening is where nerves peak and pace runs away. deliberately take your first minute slower than feels comfortable — a calm, unhurried open sets the tempo for the whole thing, and settles your own breathing while it does.
3. mark your notes for pauses
if you speak from notes or slides, write the pauses in. a simple / for a short beat and // for a longer one turns "don't rush" from a vague intention into something you can actually see and follow.
4. use breath to set the tempo
pace and breath are linked: breathe from your belly rather than your chest, and your speech naturally slows to match. one slow breath before you start, and a habit of breathing at your punctuation, does more for your pace than consciously trying to "talk slower" ever will.
5. measure it — don't guess
here's the catch: you can't feel your own pace accurately, because from the inside the rushed version feels normal. the only reliable way to know is to record yourself and watch it back.
- record a two-minute answer or section on your phone.
- count roughly how many words you got through — a comfortable conversational pace is around 130–150 words a minute; much past that and you're probably rushing.
- re-record the same passage aiming only to add pauses at the full stops, and compare how much calmer it sounds.
a simple weekly loop
you don't need hours — you need reps with feedback:
- day 1 — record a baseline. note where you speed up (usually the open, and any moment you're unsure).
- day 3 — re-record focusing only on pausing at full stops.
- day 5 — a full run-through, then check whether the pauses held under pressure.
see it, name it, change one thing, repeat. slowing down isn't about dragging — it's about giving your words, and yourself, room to breathe.
acespeak scores your pace and pauses (and your body language) from a short clip, so you can see exactly where you're rushing and fix it before it counts. join the waitlist. related: how to sound more confident when you speak and how to stop being nervous before a presentation.