The fastest way to say more

It’s counter-intuitive, but the fastest way to say more is to slow down and say less.

Here’s what I mean:

Recently I was working with a client on her storytelling and public speaking skills. She ran an insurance company, and she felt like her speeches to her employees were not “landing” — they weren’t motivating people in the way she wanted.

The thing is, one-to-one, she was doing great. Nice, clear, inspiring.

But over the years, she had picked up a really bad habit, which is that when she stood in front of a group she spoke unnaturally fast and said way too much. She was trying to cram too much information into too little time.

When she first started practicing, it was pretty much impossible to cram everything into her self-imposed 10-minute time limit. She was rushing, and the words alone were taking 15 minutes, and then there was a video too, and some slides, and it just didn’t look possible.

So I listened to the little voice in the back of my head, the one that was saying “Tell her to go slow and see what happens.”

She did, and within three practice rounds the speech had fallen to 8 minutes.

Not 10, 8.

I don’t think I’ll ever forget the feeling of surprise and amazement that I had, watching the timer: 7:57, 7:58, 7:59, 8:00, stop.

I think what happens is that when the speaker slows down, the mind clears. The brain focuses, and the fat is cut, naturally and easily.

Related Posts

On AI and consulting

I have a number of clients in the consulting business, and many members of this email list are consultants. This one goes out to them… Some outside the industry say consulting is all about the collection and presentation of data. However, the real business of...

There is no spoon

This subject line is, of course, a reference to the scene in the movie The Matrix where Neo visits the Oracle's house and the weird bald kid tells him how to bend the spoon. (As you can tell, I am a huge fan of The Matrix, and in fact have, for over three years, been...

More on AI and writing

ChatGPT (and similar LLMs) will get you 90% of the way there. Which means if you are using ChatGPT to write your sales materials, you will convert about 10% of the time, which in B2B leads to bankruptcy. If you are a going concern, you will usually convert 20% to 25%...