Bridging communication
and performance

Diane Kolin

Keynote speaker and workshop leader

Living and working in a wheelchair has taught Diane to communicate better, resulting in more effective performance in her work production as a project manager, in her teaching as an educator, and in her access to the stage as a singer.

Lack of communication leads to misunderstanding and disconnection. Simple, intentional strategies help you stay connected through accessibility, collaboration, and diversity.

Diane, a white woman with short brown hair, blue eyes, and glasses, wears a black outfit. She speaks to an audience through a micro-headset.

Speaking topics

Communication

Performance starts with communication that works for everyone. Not just messages that are delivered, but messages that are clear, adaptable, and truly received. When communication is designed with intention, it creates the conditions for people to connect, understand, and contribute at their best.

Performance

Strong performance is never accidental. Whether on stage or in the workplace, it emerges when people can fully engage with what’s being asked of them. The most powerful performances happen when the message is not only heard—but felt, understood, and shared.

Accessibility

Accessibility is not an add-on, it is a performance driver. When communication is accessible, barriers fall away and participation expands. The result: more confident contributions, stronger collaboration, and outcomes that reflect the full potential of every individual.


In both business and the arts, we celebrate high performance.

But we rarely ask: “What makes performance possible in the first place?”

Behind every strong performance — a successful project, a powerful presentation, a moving song — there is communication that works.

Not just communication that is delivered.

Communication that is accessible.

Diane in her wheelchair is dressed with black suit a black pants. She talks to an audience using a microphone.
Diane in her wheelchair wearing a blue ensemble and a green scarf, she smiles at the audience while singing, her left arm is on a black grand piano.

What is performance?

As a singer, you don’t perform *at* an audience — you perform *with* them in mind. You adjust to the space, the acoustics, the energy in the room. You make sure the message can be felt, not just heard.

In companies, the same principle applies — or should.

If communication is too fast, too complex, or too narrow in format, performance becomes uneven. Some people thrive, others are left navigating barriers that have nothing to do with their talent.

In the context of disability, this is where accessibility becomes a performance driver.

Because when communication is designed to be accessible

  • Teams align more easily
  • Individuals contribute more confidently
  • Outcomes become stronger and more consistent

Performance doesn’t come from pushing harder. It comes from making participation possible.

Accessible communication doesn’t lower the bar — it ensures more people can reach it.

Diane in her wheelchair singing in a microphone on a stage surrounded by instruments, she smiles while singing.