The lights come up. The music fades. A speaker steps on stage. Hundreds, or thousands, of eyes lock in.
And in that moment, everything has to work.
If you’ve ever produced or spoken at a live event, you know there’s no pause button. No “let’s try that again.” It’s real-time. High stakes. High visibility.
That’s exactly why understanding what a confidence monitor is and how to use one can completely change the experience for both your presenters and your audience.
Here’s the reality: live events are unpredictable.
Microphones cut out. Slides advance too soon. Speakers lose their place. Lighting shifts. Energy changes. A confidence monitor acts as a stabilizer in the middle of that controlled chaos. Here’s a couple examples in practice:
Imagine a CEO is delivering a keynote to 1,500 employees. In this keynote, the CEO wants to come off as confident and educated so the overall delivery stays aligned with visual data, reference statistics, while transitioning smoothly between sections.
Turning around to look at a giant screen behind them? That breaks authority and flow. With a confidence monitor, they remain forward-facing, composed, and connected.
These events often combine scripted and unscripted moments.
Hosts juggle:
Nominee announcements
Sponsor recognition
Timed transitions
Emotional storytelling
A subtle stage monitor keeps them on track without reading from a script like a news anchor.
At its simplest, a confidence monitor, or downstage monitor (DSM), is a screen placed on or near the stage that mirrors the content being shown to the audience.
It faces the presenter, not the crowd.
If the audience sees slides on a giant LED wall behind the speaker, the presenter sees those same slides on a smaller screen positioned in front of them.
No turning around.
No guessing what slide is up.
No awkward pauses.
Depending on the event setup, a confidence monitor can display:
Presentation slides
Speaker notes
Video playback
Countdown timers
Live camera feeds
Script cues
It’s essentially a backstage assistant sitting right at the speaker’s feet. And during a live event, that assistant is invaluable.
The good news? Technically, it’s straightforward.
In most live event environments:
The presentation laptop outputs via HDMI or SDI.
The signal routes through a video switcher.
That signal feeds both the main display (LED wall or projector) and the stage monitor.
Both screens help the presenter deliver an exceptional presentation while not having to look back at the main screen for reference.
Placement matters more than most people realize.
The monitor should:
Sit low and angled upward
Align with the presenter’s natural eye line
Remain discreet to the audience
People often ask: “Can’t we just use a teleprompter?”
Not quite. While both are uniquely useful in different ways, there are some crucial differences to look at.
Here’s the difference:
At its core, teleprompters are designed for scripted reading and confidence monitors are designed for live event flow.
When choosing the right confidence monitor for your live event, it’s important to think beyond just grabbing the nearest screen. Consider the full environment:
Stage size
Audience size
Lighting intensity
How much your presenter moves around
Budget
Every event has its own personality and technical demands, so the goal isn’t simply to pick a screen, it’s to choose equipment that supports the overall experience you’re trying to create.
Now if doing all this sounds like a lot, you can always hire professionals to take care of all that tedious setup. Live events are rarely straightforward, so partnering with AV professionals ensures your monitor is properly routed, positioned at the ideal eye line, and fully tested before showtime.
This means no additional stress for you or your speakers, allowing your team to focus on delivering a powerful experience instead of troubleshooting cables minutes before the doors open.
At the end of the day, live events aren’t about equipment.
If you’re planning your next live event and want it to feel seamless, intentional, and truly impactful, partner with Clarity who understands both the technology and the experience behind it.