London is the regional centre of southwestern Ontario, with an economy anchored by London Health Sciences Centre and St. Joseph's Health Care, a major life sciences and medical research cluster, Western University, Fanshawe College, and an established insurance sector. About a fifth of London's residents were born outside Canada, and the most commonly spoken non-English languages at home include Arabic, Spanish, Polish, Mandarin, Portuguese, Italian, Punjabi, Urdu, Vietnamese, and Tagalog. Many of the physicians, researchers, faculty, and senior specialists working at Western and the city's hospital networks built their careers in English as an additional language and look to accent reduction once they are in teaching, leadership, or patient-facing roles. Accent modification is another term for the same work, and the two are used interchangeably.

Accent reduction is one-on-one coaching with a registered speech therapist. The work is not about erasing a first language or a cultural identity. It focuses on the specific sounds, stress patterns, intonation, and pacing of Canadian English that shape how easily listeners follow you on the first try. It suits professionals in London who want to be understood with less effort by colleagues, clients, patients, and audiences, and people preparing for credentialing exams, interviews, or moves into more senior, client-facing roles.

Consider a few situations a London professional might recognize. A staff physician at University Hospital briefs a patient and family on a discharge plan, and the family asks the floor nurse to clarify the medication timing because some vowels in the drug names were unclear. A faculty member at Western delivers a lecture to a large undergraduate class, and several students ask for the key concept to be repeated because the stress pattern in longer sentences shifted in ways the audience did not expect. A senior underwriter at a London insurance head office presents an updated risk model to a broker call, and the broker asks her to repeat a key assumption because the consonant clusters in the financial phrasing ran together. None of these moments is about competence. They are about clarity in specific, recurring situations that coaching can target once the patterns have been identified.

Speak Fluent helps London professionals communicate more clearly and impactfully through one-on-one work with a registered speech therapist. Coaching is assessment-first, which means each plan is built around what your speech actually reveals rather than a template. Sessions are virtual and available across Canada, so you can attend from home, from a London office, or from anywhere your day allows. Because your coach is a registered speech therapist, sessions are often covered by extended health benefits, and many clients expense them as professional development through their employer.

If you are based in London and want to communicate with greater clarity to Canadian listeners, Speak Fluent offers a free 15-minute consultation to help you figure out how to start.