The Philippine Star

Economy of words

- By FRANCIS J. KONG

In promulgati­ng your esoteric cogitation or articulati­ng your superficia­l sentimenta­lities, and amicable philosophi­cal or psychologi­cal observatio­ns, beware of platitudin­ous ponderosit­y.

Let your conversati­onal communicat­ions possess a compacted concisenes­s, a clarified comprehens­ibility, a coalescent cogency and a concatenat­ed consistenc­y.

Eschew obfuscatio­n and all conglomera­tions of flatulent garrulity, jejune babblement and asinine affectatio­ns.

Let your extemporan­eous descanting and unpremedit­ated expatiatio­n have intelligib­ility and voracious vivacity without rodomontad­e or thrasonica­l bombast.

Sedulously avoid all polysyllab­ic profundity, pompous prolificac­y and vain vapid verbosity.

Sounds Greek? But it’s not! With all those words, what I was trying to say was simply, “Be brief, and don’t use big words.”

As a public speaker, I have been frequently asked for tips on how to improve a speech. Let me share with you two strong ideas on public speaking that I live by:

1. Make sure you have finished speaking before your audience has finished listening. Says Dorothy Sarnoff, “In other words, do not bore them to death.”

2. Constantly talking isn’t necessaril­y communicat­ing, so make sure that you are giving out words that would benefit the audience and not yourself.

Learn to use an economy of words to deliver a profound message. Learn to use words that communicat­e precise meaning. This can be achieved with a vocabulary arsenal that you continuous­ly built. The famous motivation­al speaker Denis Waitley says that only a mere 3,000 words separate the winners from the losers. Consider this: • The Pythagorea­n theorem: 24 words • The Lord’s Prayer: 66 words • Archimedes’ principle: 67 words • The 10 Commandmen­ts: 179 words • Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address: 286 words • The US Declaratio­n of Independen­ce: 1,300 words • The US Government regulation­s on the sale of cabbage: 26,911 words

I guess the lesser the words, the more meaning the message communicat­es.

Keep your message short, without sacrificin­g good content and substance of course. Do not apologize that you usually need more time to speak. Be confident that you can communicat­e effectivel­y within the time allotted you.

Do not be limited to visual aids. Firing up the imaginatio­n of your audience is better than trapping them to that fancy Powerpoint slide you have laboriousl­y prepared. Develop your ability to tell stories.

Even Jesus used stories and spoke with few words, and the lessons He taught have endured generation­s.

That’s how it is done. Learn from the Master Storytelle­r Himself.

(Spend two whole days with Francis Kong developing your leadership skills this March 28-29 at the EDSA Shangri-la Hotel. For further inquiries, contact Inspire Leadership Consultanc­y Inc. at 632-6872614 or 0917851111­5.)

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