You are not shy. You are not lazy. You are not bad at English. You are scared. And there is a very specific reason for it — one that no grammar class will ever fix.
If you have been in Fadzly’s seat — or you have watched someone else sit in it — you know this moment. It is not rare. It happens in meeting rooms, in networking events, in phone calls with foreign clients, in job interviews, and in daily workplace interactions across every industry in Malaysia.
What most people do not understand is that this is not a language problem. It is a fear problem. And fear follows completely different rules.
The fear is real — and it is not your fault
Most Malaysian professionals who are scared to speak English at work are not actually bad at English. They understand it. They can read it. They can write it, more or less. What they cannot do is produce it under pressure, in real time, in front of other people who they believe are judging every word.
This is called communication apprehension — and research consistently shows that it is significantly more prevalent in multilingual societies where one language carries higher social status than another. In Malaysia, English carries that status. Speaking it well signals education, competence, and social standing. Speaking it poorly — or staying silent — signals the opposite. At least, that is what the fear tells you.
Brican English is trusted by over 25,000 professionals across Malaysia. A significant portion of them came to us not because they could not speak English at all, but because they were scared to. Strong people. Educated people. People in senior positions. All carrying the same quiet fear.
The four specific fears behind the silence
The fear of speaking English at work is not one feeling. It is a cluster of four distinct fears that often appear together and reinforce each other. Understanding which ones apply to you is the first step to doing something about them.
Fear 1 — being judged or laughed at for making mistakes
This is the most common one. It does not come from nothing. It usually comes from a specific memory — a moment in school or at work where someone corrected you publicly, laughed at your pronunciation, or looked at you with an expression that said “that was wrong.” One moment like that is enough to create a rule in your brain: speaking English in front of others is risky.
Fear 2 — going blank mid-sentence
You start a sentence confidently. Then somewhere in the middle, the English word you need simply is not there. The sentence stalls. The silence stretches. Everyone is waiting. You feel your face getting warm. This fear is particularly paralysing because it feels like it can happen at any moment, without warning. So many professionals simply choose not to start the sentence at all.
Fear 3 — mispronouncing words in front of senior staff or foreigners
Malaysian English speakers often know far more words than they feel comfortable using, because they are not entirely sure how to pronounce them. They read the word. They understand the word. But they have never heard themselves say it out loud to another person. So they avoid it. Over time, entire portions of their vocabulary become unusable — not because they do not know the words, but because they are afraid of how the words will sound coming out of their mouth.
Fear 4 — the ghost of school English
Malaysian schools taught English as a subject to be examined, not a language to be spoken. Wrong answers were marked in red. Incorrect grammar was corrected out loud. English class was a performance where the goal was to avoid errors, not to communicate. Most Malaysian professionals spent twelve years in that environment. That experience does not disappear when you enter the workforce. It shows up every time you are asked to speak English in front of other people.
What silence at work actually costs you
Staying silent feels safe in the moment. But it is expensive over time.
- Promotions go to people who can present themselves confidently in English, even when your performance is stronger
- International projects and client-facing roles are assigned to colleagues who appear more comfortable, not necessarily more capable
- In meetings, the people who speak are the people who get noticed by management — the people who stay silent become invisible
- At conferences and industry events, networking sessions that could have changed your career turn into awkward hours of smiling and nodding
- Over years, the gap between what you are capable of and what your organisation believes you are capable of widens — entirely because of one thing you were never properly taught to do
This is not a small problem. For many professionals, the fear of speaking English is the single biggest barrier between where they are now and where they are capable of going.
The four things people try that do not work
- ✗Watching English films and hoping it absorbs. Passive listening is useful for vocabulary exposure but it does not address fear. You cannot build speaking confidence by watching other people speak. You build it by speaking yourself.
- ✗Grammar apps and language platforms. Duolingo, grammar books, and vocabulary lists do not help with communication apprehension. They actually make it worse by adding more rules to worry about before you open your mouth.
- ✗Waiting until the English feels good enough. This is the most common trap. “I will start speaking more English when my grammar improves.” It never does, because grammar does not improve in isolation. Speaking improves through speaking. Waiting is the opposite of the solution.
- ✗Grammar-heavy English classes. If the fear of making mistakes is causing the silence, then a class that evaluates and corrects your grammar makes the problem worse. You leave knowing more rules and feeling more self-conscious, not less.
The real fix — speak before you feel ready
This is the one thing that every professional who has overcome English speaking fear has in common. They spoke before they were ready. They spoke when it was uncomfortable. They spoke when they were not sure the sentence would come out correctly. And they kept speaking.
The challenge for most professionals is that the speaking environments available to them are high stakes. Speaking in front of your office colleagues when you are already scared is not a safe place to practise. The mistakes feel public. The judgment feels real. The cost of getting it wrong feels significant.
What is needed is a low-stakes, high-frequency speaking environment — a place where speaking English in front of others is normal, where mistakes are expected and not embarrassing, where the topics are directly relevant to your actual work, and where you speak in every single session, not just occasionally.
That is exactly what Brican provides.
How Brican breaks the fear loop
At Brican, every session is a speaking session. There are no grammar lectures. There are no tests. There is no moment where your mistakes are highlighted in front of the group. The environment is deliberately designed so that speaking feels normal, not risky.
We also use two special techniques — ROL and TGP — that are specifically designed to break the fear loop from the inside.
ROL works on the part of you that freezes before you speak. By the time you finish your first ROL activity, you will have already spoken more English than you typically speak in a full week at the office. The fear does not disappear immediately. But it moves. And once it moves, it keeps moving.
TGP is where the fear of speaking breaks permanently. It trains you to pronounce English words correctly and confidently, so you no longer second-guess yourself before opening your mouth. Once you know you are pronouncing words correctly, the hesitation disappears. Participants who complete TGP not only speak with confidence — they can identify and correct mispronunciations in others. That is how complete the transformation is.
We will not explain exactly how ROL and TGP work here. They only work when you experience them in a live session. What we can tell you is what consistently happens to people who do.
What 30 days actually looks like
From one of our alumni
Fadzly was not just speaking at a formal meeting. He was the only Malaysian in a room full of his Australian boss’s English-speaking friends, in a social setting with no script and no preparation. He mingled naturally. That is what happens when the fear goes away and the speaking takes over.
The fear does not go away on its own. But it can go away.
Join over 25,000 Malaysian professionals who made the decision to stop waiting and start speaking. Live Zoom and physical classes in evenings and weekends. HRDC claimable. Free trial available with no commitment required.
Try a Free Class Talk to Our TeamVisit brican.com.my for full programme details and current schedule.

