Online education exploded during the pandemic, but few have managed to maintain their students’ attention like Ángel Gómez. After more than five years conducting virtual seminars and accumulating thousands of hours in front of the camera, this 48-year-old trainer from Madrid has developed a methodology that challenges the conventions of digital education.
“I’ve worked with colleagues who did live sessions without even looking at the camera, without gesturing—like a stick talking to a screen,” recalls Gómez from his perfectly equipped studio in Madrid. “That way, you transmit nothing. People need to feel there’s a real person on the other side, not a robot reading a script.”
The Invisible Enemy: The Fatal 30 Minutes
Gómez cites a study that completely changed his teaching approach:
“It’s proven that after 30–40 minutes, attention starts to drop dramatically. It doesn’t matter if it’s in-person or online—the human brain has its limits.”
This revelation led him to completely restructure his seminars.
“I see people doing two-hour webinars. Do you know what happens? Many leave. They drop out. That’s why my live sessions last a maximum of one hour—but that hour has to be pure dynamite.”
The Camera as a Confessional: The Art of Visual Connection
“I love looking at the camera,” he admits enthusiastically. “It may seem silly, but when you look directly into the lens, the person on the other side feels like you’re talking to them. It’s pure psychology. My students tell me all the time—they feel like I’m in the room with them.”
This technique, which Gómez perfected over hundreds of sessions, goes far beyond eye contact.
“I use my hands a lot, move around, change my tone of voice. Sometimes I turn around to show my three monitors. All this creates dynamism—it breaks monotony.”
Humor as a Teaching Tool
“Once in a while, I drop a very subtle joke—nothing over the top,” Gómez explains. “It’s not about putting on a comedy show, but a touch of humor at the right moment can wake up those who are starting to drift off.”
His approach is calculated yet genuine:
“When a student joins late and says hi, I don’t ignore them. I say, ‘Hey, welcome, I was waiting for you!’ That small gesture creates a bond. The person feels like they’re not just another number—they matter.”
Empathy as the Foundation of Everything
“The first thing is empathy,” emphasizes Gómez. “But real empathy, not the fake kind. In my seminars, I constantly ask: ‘Any questions? Is everything clear?’ And when someone asks something that might seem basic, I never belittle them. I say, ‘Even if you think it’s not important, it’s very likely it is—and not just for you, but for others watching who didn’t dare to ask.’”
This open-door philosophy has created a unique learning environment.
“Interact, interact, and interact some more. That’s what I love most. I get people to speak up, to participate. It’s not me giving a lecture—it’s a conversation.”
Vocabulary: The Invisible Barrier
One of the most common mistakes Gómez identifies in other trainers is the use of unnecessary jargon.
“No one made things easy for me when I started, and it was awful. Imagine someone who knows nothing joining a class where they start throwing incomprehensible technical terms at them. They’re lost within the first minute.”
His solution is radically simple:
“I use very easy-to-understand language. If I have to explain a complex concept, I start from zero: ‘This means this, and it works like this.’ Period. No showing off with fancy words.”
The “Wake-Up” Technique
“When I notice the group starting to drift off a bit,” he says with a mischievous smile, “I have my tricks. I change the rhythm, raise my tone, ask someone a direct question, or tell a quick story. It’s like being a conductor—you have to feel the pulse of your audience.”
The Power of Personal Example
Gómez isn’t afraid to share his own experiences—including his failures.
“I tell them how I lost 22 kilos during the pandemic, how my ID photo doesn’t look anything like me now. I use examples from my life—like comparing learning to driving school. People connect with real stories, not abstract theories.”
Technology at the Service of Teaching
From his professional studio—equipped with a 4K camera, high-quality microphones, and professional lighting—Gómez has learned that while technical quality matters, it’s not enough.
“You can have the best equipment in the world, but if you’re boring, it doesn’t matter. Though it’s also true that poor image or sound quality can ruin even the best class.”
His setup includes OBS with Stream Elements, allowing him to stream simultaneously across multiple platforms.
“YouTube, Twitch—wherever necessary. The idea is to be where your audience is, not wait for them to come to you.”
The Legacy of a Method
After years of refining his technique, Gómez now has followers who have been with him since the very beginning.
“I have students who’ve followed me since my previous academy. When they hear I’m starting something new, they message me: ‘Ángel, as soon as you know something, let us know.’ That’s priceless.”
His philosophy can be summed up in one phrase he often repeats: “Be approachable.”
It’s not just about being kind or funny—it’s about creating an atmosphere where learning flows naturally, where mistakes are opportunities, and where every person feels capable of achieving what they set out to do.
“In the end,” reflects Gómez, “I’m not selling a course or a method. I’m creating a learning experience. And in that experience, human connection is everything. You can have the best content in the world, but if you don’t know how to communicate it—if you don’t create that bond with your audience—you’re lost.”
In a world saturated with online courses, where new “gurus” appear every day promising miracle formulas, Ángel Gómez’s approach stands out for its authenticity. He doesn’t promise instant results—but rather real learning, built on connection, empathy, and above all, the ability to make the complex simple.
A lesson many trainers would do well to learn.
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