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Speechcraft and Pithiness: Give your tips here

This isn't a large question. Because of the users we have here, I think we could all benefit from short sharp tips to edit our own words.

In this topic, can you provide advice on how to curate yourself when you throw words in speech and on 'paper'.

Links to 'speechcraft' sources are appreciated.

I'll start:

  • Take a second to think about how someone else would hear your words if they were you. (rule 0)
  • Curate and cut your words before you throw them.
  • "Brevity is the soul of wit" - Hamlet - Shakespeare.
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When I was taught public speaking in an old-fashioned English private school, this was summed up as "Look up, slow up, speak up."

This remains good advice. When I have to correct colleagues or family members on public speaking, speaking too fast is the problem about 80% of the time.

Listen to the great audio book readers and podcast hosts for exemplars.

Reading bedtime stories to children is remarkably good practice. They switch off if you go monotone. If you get good at it, children remember it to the point where extended family bedtimes get reorganised around your visits.

They switch off if you go monotone.

Is that a good thing or a bad thing in terms of bedtime stories?