Why does energy matter in UGC?
Energy is the first trust signal viewers feel. If you sound flat or hesitant, they’ll scroll before your point lands.
The fix isn’t gear or theatrics—it’s a quick pre-record reset you can run in under a minute.
What’s the 60-second reset routine?
Run these five moves before you hit record:
Posture check: Sit or stand tall, shoulders back, chest open. Slouching makes you look and feel unsure; aligned posture instantly reads confident.
Breath reset: Inhale, exhale, pause. A single deep breath settles nerves and slows rushed delivery.
First-line hook: Don’t script the whole video—just your opener. Write one clean sentence that says what this clip is about and why it matters. Starting strong prevents fumbling.
Smile prime: Right before recording, smile. It sounds simple, but it lifts your energy and warmth on camera.
Power through your take...then limit your rerecords: Cap yourself at three retakes max. It keeps you out of perfection traps and preserves natural energy. Viewers aren’t dissecting every “um”—you are.
Why is the three-take rule critical for UGC?
Authenticity beats polish in short, social-native content.
After three tries, energy drops and stiffness creeps in. A hard cap forces you to ship the best of your natural delivery instead of chasing a flawless take no one needs.
How do I apply this in the next five minutes?
Write your hook: “In 60 seconds, I’ll show you how to boost on-camera energy so people keep watching.”
Run the reset: posture → breath → smile.
Record 3 takes max: pick the most natural one and post.
What mistakes kill on-camera energy (and quick fixes)?
Slouching out of frame → Stack books under your laptop or stand. Recheck posture.
Rushing your first sentence → Anxious or impatient energy attracts no one. Breathe once, read your hook, then hit record.
Over-scripting → Keep only bullet points plus the first line. Your personality fills the rest.
Endless re-takes → Set a timer for two minutes. When it dings, choose a take and move on.
Energy is a skill, not a personality trait. With posture, breath, a locked hook, a smile, and a strict three-take limit, you can turn low-energy moments into confident, watchable UGC—consistently and fast.