Thinking About an MC Training Course But Not Sure You're Good Enough? What My Students Told Me
- Amanda Fok

- Apr 5
- 2 min read

No experience, introverted, not a natural speaker — how did they all manage to do it after the MC Training Course?
Every so often, I receive enquiries that go something like this:
"Amanda, I've never been on stage before. Would an MC training course be too difficult for me?"
"I'm quite introverted and not very confident when I speak. Is that okay?"
"My Cantonese pronunciation isn't great — am I even suitable?"
I've heard these questions more than ten thousand times. Many people's first impression of an MC training course is that it's designed for naturally gifted speakers. But over the past twenty years, I've trained more than 10,000 students — and the overwhelming majority walked into class carrying exactly the same doubts.

"Before class started, I thought I'd definitely be the worst one"
In almost every intake, someone says to me on the first day: "I'm probably the weakest person here."
And yet, every single intake, someone says this.
The truth is, you don't need to be a natural-born communicator to learn MC skills. Vocal projection, stage presence, pacing, handling the unexpected — every one of these can be trained. Being introverted or extroverted is simply a personality trait, not a barrier.
According to neuroscience, the nervousness you feel before stepping on stage is a completely normal physiological response — it doesn't mean you're not capable. Learning to understand and work with that response is where real growth begins. That's why I incorporate neuroscience and NLP principles into my MC training course — to help students of every personality type find the communication style that works best for them.

"I didn't just learn how to be an MC"
Most students sign up with one goal: to learn MC skills. But after completing the course, they often tell me the experience gave them far more than that.
One student said she finally felt confident enough to speak up in meetings.
Another said job interviews no longer made him freeze up and forget what he wanted to say.
Someone else told me that even conversations with family had become easier and more natural.
This is because at the heart of MC training is something far more universal: building communication skills and genuine self-confidence — two things that are useful in every area of life.

"I wish I'd come sooner"
This is the line I hear most often at graduation.
Not "the course was too hard." Not "I didn't learn much." Just: "I wish I'd come sooner."
I've thought a lot about why so many people wait so long before taking the first step. The answer is almost always the same: they underestimated themselves.
If you're currently on the fence about joining an MC training course, perhaps that's the answer you've been looking for.

Is this right for you? Ask yourself three questions:
Have you ever thought about how different things might be if you could express yourself more confidently in front of others?
Have you ever held yourself back from something because you were too nervous or lacked confidence?
Are you willing to make a genuine effort to change?
If the answer to all three is yes, MC training is worth taking seriously.




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