Dyane Neiman
“It was fun collaborating with you. Without a doubt you helped us all remember that inside our scientific personas there is another persona - us.”
Norm Mazer, Roche · Pharma Research and Early Development (pRED) M.D., Ph.D. (Physics)
“Dyane is a dynamic and engaging speaker with a great eye and ear for detail. She has a way of pinpointing a speaker's strengths and giving just the right tip to bring you further. Besides, learning with Dyane is fun!”
Khushi Pasquale, award-winning public speaker, founder of Center Berlin Toastmasters Club, senior leadership roles for Toastmaster International Organization
American born, NYC-Bred, Berlin-based communications trainer and business owner MOVING-SPEAKER since 2011.
Dyane started without words, working as a choreographer, performer, and director; the recipient of 3 consecutive awards for her "outstanding achievement" in the field of theater.
For 13 years, she has been training & coaching purpose-driven leaders, entrepreneurs, scientists, women from around the world to discover the power of their voice, wisdom, and stories to move people to action.
Clients include Helmholtz Deutscher Forschungszentren e.V., EUSEA-European Science Engagement Association, UN Women, Global Women’s Network for the Energy Transition, Bayer Pharma, ROCHE pRED awards, Ernst Schering Stiftung Science award, Berlin Science Week, Falling Walls Foundation, Creative Bureaucracy Festival, Sibersalz Science & Media Festival, TEDx, among others.
She is the co-founder of Female Speaking Berlin: empowering women through the art of public speaking.
In 2015, she founded and continues to direct Berlin’s popular open stage for true, personal stories THE bEAR. Dyane has produced over 800 stories for businesses, organizations, and the Berlin community.
Her latest project is the True Stories Berlin podcast, you can find it wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.
“Whereas most presentations are informative,
an effective presentation is transformative.
It succeeds in making the listener feel, think, and act differently.”