Weekly Insight #83- What Actually Changes When a Voice Sounds Confident
The Common Request
In a recent session, a client said he wanted to sound louder and more confident. That’s a common request, and it usually brings up familiar advice—stand taller, speak up, project. Those suggestions can help, but they don’t explain what actually changes in the voice.
So instead of starting with posture or mindset, we started with something more direct: what happens in the body when the sound changes.
Confidence as a Result of Use
Confidence in the voice is not something you generate first, but it can be triggered indirectly. A cue like “speak confidently” may lead someone to adjust their breath, space, or mouth opening without realizing it—similar to how a device can guide the behavior without explaining it. The sound improves, but the mechanism remains hidden.
Without that awareness, the result is difficult to reproduce on demand. What is often labeled as confidence is the outcome of how the voice is used. When those underlying adjustments are recognized, the result can be produced more consistently.
It is easy to assume the improvement came from the cue itself. In practice, the cue may have triggered several changes at once. When those changes are isolated—breath, space, mouth opening—you can test them individually and observe the result. That process allows you to reproduce the sound without depending on the original instruction.
Space and Vowel Formation
One of the first things we looked at was space—specifically, how vowels are formed. The front of the mouth, near the teeth, gives a clear reference point for the hard palate. Further back, the soft palate lifts when you yawn. That lift is not something you force; it happens on its own. But when you notice it, you begin to recognize how additional space affects the sound.
That space is shaped by a few key parts of the vocal tract: the tongue, the lips, the jaw, and the soft palate. Each vowel changes how these parts move. For example, [i] (as in “see”) and [e] (as in “say”) are often felt more forward, with the tongue closer to the teeth. [a] (as in “father”) is the most open vowel, with the jaw released and the tongue lowered. From that open position, [o] (as in “oh”) and [u] (as in “blue”) can be understood as a reshaping of that same space, primarily through lip rounding rather than a major change in tongue height. These are small adjustments you can feel and observe. When they are working together, the vowel becomes clearer and the sound carries more easily.
Using a Siren to Track Consistency Across Pitch
With more internal space, vowels tend to feel more vertical. The tone becomes more consistent, and the sound carries more easily. A simple siren exercise, starting from that yawn sensation, makes this noticeable. As the pitch moves through the lower, middle, and higher parts of the voice, the quality of the sound can remain more even rather than thinning or collapsing.
That consistency is not coming from the yawn sensation alone. As the pitch rises, there is a natural increase in breath pressure. This happens automatically when imitating a siren or calling out—more air is used as the pitch and intensity increase. In more controlled speaking or singing, that same adjustment does not always occur unless it is practiced. Learning to maintain appropriate breath pressure as the pitch changes is what allows the sound to stay continuous instead of weakening in the higher range.
Airflow and Sentence Completion
We also looked at what happens at the end of a sentence. This is where many voices lose clarity. The airflow reduces, the pitch drops, and the sound can fall into vocal fry. Vocal fry occurs when the airflow reduces and the vocal folds shift out of a fully sustained vibration. The sound becomes irregular and less continuous, often described as creaky. You can hear it most clearly at the end of a sentence when the air stops before the thought is finished. There’s nothing inherently wrong with vocal fry, but it is often harder to hear and less defined. If the goal is clarity and strength, that drop in airflow works against it.
A small adjustment changes this: continue the airflow through the last word. When the air continues, the pitch stays supported, and the sound remains audible. The difference is immediate. What is often described as “confidence” is simply the result of finishing the sentence with enough airflow to sustain the sound.
Mouth Opening and Clarity
Another simple factor is how much the mouth is actually opening. When the mouth stays more closed, the sound is reduced. When the vowel is allowed a bit more space, the sound becomes clearer and easier to hear. This is not about exaggeration; it is about allowing the sound to exit without being restricted.
You can test this immediately. Say a short phrase with the mouth more closed, then repeat it with a bit more space on the main vowel of the word—the one that carries the stress. The difference in clarity and volume is noticeable. What often feels like “speaking up” is simply allowing the sound to leave the mouth more freely.
Where Common Tips Fit
This is where common advice fits in. Standing taller, adjusting posture, or changing how you present yourself can all influence the voice. Those cues are useful as entry points. But they work because they affect space, airflow, and alignment—not because they create confidence on their own.
Without understanding what is changing, those tips remain general. With a basic understanding, they become repeatable. You can notice when the mouth is closing, when the airflow drops, or when the pitch falls off at the end of a sentence, and make a small correction.
That process—notice and adjust—is the skill. It does not require a complete overhaul. It requires attention to one or two elements at a time and the willingness to test them.
Producing the Result
A more confident sound is not something you wait to feel. It is something you can produce. When you understand what is changing in the voice, you can return to those adjustments and create the result consistently.






