Mary E. 
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Mary E. Rauch

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"Mary Rauch helps speakers address their job confidence"
By Tom Walker

Mary E. Rauch

    Fear of public speaking, or "speech fright," is the most prevalent phobia in today's business world. Mary E. Rauch, a former victim of the phobia, makes it her business to help individuals and groups overcome speech fright - and bolster their self-confidence and self-esteem in the bargain.
   Rauch, a former university instructor, is founder and owner of Mary E. Rauch Communications Co. She is the company.
   "I work alone," she says. "I do everything from cold calling and marketing to presentations, training and invoicing. I don't advertise. Word of mouth and referrals bring me all the business I can handle."
   Individuals receive one-on-one training from Rauch for such problems as speech fright and social communication anxiety. But the lion's share of Rauch's business consists of seminars and class instruction on the delivery of formal business presentations and the resolution of internal/external communication problems & processes.

   Clients include local, regional and national companies and agencies; professional associations; school districts; political candidates; and powerful CEOs secretly afraid to get up and speak before a group.
   In the political arena, Rauch was media coach for Mariá Berriozábal in her mayoral campaign and with Howard Peak in his successful campaign for mayor.
   "I am currently helping a couple of people in their run for district judges," Rauch adds.
   This side of her profession has to do with more than public speaking and speechifying.
   Says Rauch: "I help candidates come across in a confident, forceful, committed way when they deal with the media. The political style of the "'80s"", which emphasized image, has been replaced by today's emphasis on substance and authenticity."
   According to Rauch, the electorate is now suspicious of charismatic "charmers" and "image exploiters."
   "People want to know what you are, not what you'd like to be," says Rauch. "Whoever my client is, I want him or her to project the message 'What you see and what you hear is me.'"
   Before starting her company in 1988, Rauch taught for 21 years on the university level, including 12 years at UTSA.

Business people must learn to organize, prepare and rehearse their 
presentations until they seem relaxed, second-nature and conversational

   Does she miss teaching?
   "I'm still teaching," she replies. "It's in my blood. Only now I'm teaching small groups of highly motivated people who know exactly what they want."
   Rauch herself developed speech fright at age 16.
   "But only when I sang," she qualifies. "I took voice lessons and used to sing at weddings. I'd get physically ill. I had to stop."
   She took up singing again at 40 - without fear - and has since sung in San Antonio Little Theater productions.

   To deal with speech fright, Rauch explains, she first makes the subject understand that it's physical - a neurological reaction caused by a rush of adrenaline.
   Next, says Rauch, the subject must understand that the fear is also experiential - a response conditioned by past experience.
   The third step involves techniques that slow down one's physical system.
   "We work on breathing," Rauch says. "And, slowly, we do a lot of little things until the subject is able to face the video camera. Video cameras are important for visualization: they allow us to see ourselves as others see us."

   In the process, speakers learn to improve their posture, physical balance, gestures, and eye contact.

   Still, she insists, the main problem with professional business presentations is not speech fright, but inadequate preparation.
   "Business people must learn to organize, prepare and rehearse their presentations until they seem relaxed, second-nature and conversational," Rauch says, "They must learn not to fight the material.
   Unfortunately, most professionals prepare for a presentation in their car on the way to the presentation site."
   Business is good for Mary Rauch, and getting better all the time.    She plans to continue doing what she does indefinitely.
   "It's an interesting road," Rauch says. "I don't know where it's taking me, but I'm going to stay on it."



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