For Professionals 1) Lead with the headline Recommendation: extend the deadline by three days . Decision: we’ll ship v1 Friday . ...
For Professionals
1) Lead with the headline
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Recommendation: extend the deadline by three days.
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Decision: we’ll ship v1 Friday.
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Ask: approve the $12k budget.
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Update: the risk is contained.
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Bottom line: we should retain the vendor.
2) One idea per sentence
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The pilot worked.
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Customers want the checklist.
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The API failed overnight.
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We fixed the billing bug.
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The team can deliver by Wednesday.
3) Pause for punctuation
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We tested the patch, pause it passed QA. full stop
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Sales is up 8%, pause costs are flat. full stop
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The risk is low, pause we’ll monitor it. full stop
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I reviewed the contract, pause two clauses changed. full stop
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Let’s start with scope, pause then timeline. full stop
4) Finish with a downstep (end low)
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The migration is complete.
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We will hit the target.
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Support volume has stabilized.
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The plan is feasible.
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The trade-off is acceptable.
5) Cut hedges & fillers
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I recommend pausing signups today.
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I’m confident we can recover by Monday.
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We need two more engineers.
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The data doesn’t support that claim.
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Let’s move the launch to next week.
6) Strong verbs & numbers
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This change will reduce churn 11%.
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The fix cuts load time from 2.4s to 1.3s.
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We saved $18,400 this quarter.
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The pilot increased activation by 9 points.
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The new flow eliminates 3 steps.
7) Signpost your structure
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Three points: cost, risk, and timeline.
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First, scope; second, resources; third, dates.
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Two options: extend or descale.
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Here’s the plan: prepare, test, launch.
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In summary: we stay the course.
8) Frame before detail (What → Why → How)
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What: move launch to Friday. Why: QA needs a day. How: freeze today.
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What: keep the vendor. Why: best SLA. How: renew for 6 months.
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What: add a guardrail. Why: prevent duplicates. How: server check.
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What: increase budget. Why: scope grew. How: reallocate ops.
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What: escalate outage. Why: impacts billing. How: on-call bridge.
9) Control pace & emphasis
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We met the deadline. (steady pace)
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The only blocker is legal. (slow on ONLY)
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We need your approval today. (slight emphasis)
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The impact is moderate, not severe.
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Our priority is customer trust.
10) Articulate consonants
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“Crisp stops cut static.”
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“Ship fast, fix fast.”
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“Direct plans beat vague plans.”
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“Bold bets, brisk tests.”
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“Facts first; feelings follow.”
11) Stand tall, breathe low (speak on the exhale)
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(Inhale) On timeline: we are on track. (Exhale)
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(Inhale) Budget: we’re within limits. (Exhale)
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(Inhale) Risk: medium and declining. (Exhale)
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(Inhale) Next step: finalize scope. (Exhale)
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(Inhale) Ask: approve the plan. (Exhale)
12) Close with a clear ask
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Please share the draft by Thursday, 5 PM.
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Approve the $12k budget today, please.
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Confirm the vendor by noon tomorrow.
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Send the test results before stand-up.
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Book the kickoff for Monday at 10 AM.
12 kid-friendly speaking habits
1) Say your point first
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Plan: let’s play soccer at recess.
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Ask: can I borrow your ruler?
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Update: I finished my worksheet.
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Idea: let’s trade cards after class.
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Reminder: the project is due Friday.
2) One idea per sentence
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I need a pencil.
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You take the first turn.
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I brought the snacks.
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The answer is 36.
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I can’t stay after school.
3) Pause for punctuation (tiny stop at commas; full stop at periods)
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I studied the vocab, pause I still need verbs. stop
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We lost the ball, pause we kept our defense. stop
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The poster is done, pause the title needs color. stop
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I called your name, pause you didn’t hear. stop
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I’ll do math now, pause science after. stop
4) End statements with a low finish (sound confident)
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Our team is ready.
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The homework is done.
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The score is tied.
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The rule is clear.
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That seat is taken.
5) Drop fillers (“um, like, kinda”) and speak cleanly
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I think we should switch players.
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I believe the answer is nine.
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I prefer chess at lunch.
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I need five more minutes.
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I noticed the line moved.
6) Use strong verbs & numbers
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I read 20 pages last night.
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Let’s meet at 3:15 by the gate.
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We scored two goals in the first half.
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I finished three chores already.
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This puzzle will take five minutes.
7) Signpost your points (first/second/third)
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Two reasons: it’s fair, and it’s fast.
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First the outline, second the pictures.
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Three steps: pass, shoot, follow up.
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Here’s my plan: practice, rest, play.
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In summary: we keep the teams.
8) What → Why → How (frame before detail)
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What: trade seats. Why: I can see the board. How: we’ll ask the teacher.
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What: split the chores. Why: faster. How: timer for 10 minutes each.
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What: study together. Why: quiz tomorrow. How: flashcards after dinner.
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What: switch positions. Why: you’re faster. How: I’ll cover defense.
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What: save dessert. Why: soccer practice. How: fridge till later.
9) Pace & volume (steady, not rushed; highlight key word)
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The only page left is five.
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I need help with number eight.
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Our plan is simple.
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The noise is too loud.
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Let’s slow the game down.
10) Crisp consonants (clear endings)
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“Best test, no guess.”
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“Kick, pass, score.”
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“Stop, start, sprint.”
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“Big bricks, black blocks.”
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“Clean clips, quick clicks.”
11) Stand tall, breathe low (talk on the exhale)
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(Inhale) Report: my group is ready. (Exhale)
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(Inhale) Update: we finished step one. (Exhale)
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(Inhale) Plan: I’ll draw the title. (Exhale)
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(Inhale) Game call: I’m open left! (Exhale)
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(Inhale) Home: I took out the trash. (Exhale)
12) End with a clear ask
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Please pass the blue marker next.
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Can we play one more round after homework?
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May I trade this card for two of yours?
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Could you quiz me for five minutes?
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Can I use the computer at 6 PM?