"Clear writing is clear thinking." My 10th-grade English teacher shared that morsel of wisdom
once as I was slogging through a 20-page term paper with no idea where I
was going or how to make the points I wanted to make; every word I
wrote led me further down a rabbit hole of rambling sentences, incomplete thoughts, and disjointed ideas. It felt like I was writing in circles.
If clear writing
was clear thinking, then my thinking was as clear as mud. The problem
wasn't that I couldn't put words to paper. The problem was I couldn't
get those words to make sense. That's because I wasn't clear on my
objective. I was trying to say too much and, as result, I was saying
nothing.
Many speakers feel this way when they write speeches. They have
too many ideas competing for attention and too many themes pulling them
in different directions. There's no through-line to hold their arguments
together and, so, their content feels jumbled and confused.
What's more, they lack a big idea — a powerful insight,
perspective, or thought that serves as the backbone of their
presentation; the big idea is the spine that holds everything up. In the
words of TED curator Chris Anderson, the big idea is a "gift"
transferred from the speaker's mind to the audience by way of a
compelling talk. It's what separates a memorable speech from a mediocre
one.
"Anyone who has an idea worth sharing is capable of giving a powerful talk," Anderson writes in his book, TED Talks: The Official Guide to Public Speaking.
"The only thing that truly matters in public speaking is not
confidence, stage presence, or smooth talking. It's having something
worth saying."
Without a big idea to light the way, you'll wander aimlessly
through draft after draft of your speech until, eventually, you run out
of steam; you'll become so tired of going in circles you'll simply want
to give up or, worse, you'll decide to "wing it." You'll jot down some
notes, throw together a few slides, slap on a title, and call it a
presentation. Why shortchange yourself like that? Why not give yourself
the chance to create something worth saying?
By distilling your thoughts into one succinct takeaway — your
big idea — you can communicate with power and precision. And your
audiences will walk away feeling satisfied and excited, instead of
bleary-eyed and confused. Here's one simple trick to help you cut
through the distractions and get to the heart of your message:
Decide and Determine
First, decide on the topic you want to focus on (hint: it's usually your area of expertise or passion, i.e. leadership, creativity, communication, etc.). Then, determine what inspires you — or, conversely, what drives you insane — about that topic.
You might be a health expert, say, who believes carbs are your
friends or a business leader who's fed up with the modern-day definition
of success. That's what drove best-selling author and businesswoman
Arianna Huffington, for example, to refute the pervasive, and mistaken,
belief that burnout is the price we must pay for success.
It was the subject of her popular TED Talk, in which she argues
that we are in the midst of a sleep-deprivation crisis. Being sleep
deprived does not mean employees are more productive; it simply means
they're more exhausted. Huffington then goes on to explain why that's a
problem and what to do about it.
Create the Single Sentence
Once you've settled on your topic and decide where you stand,
the next question to ask yourself is: Can I articulate my position, my
stance, my big idea, in one sentence? In Huffington's case, after
sifting through the data, she was able to distill her message into a
single sentence: Only by renewing our relationship with sleep can we
take back control of our lives.
Distilling your message into a single sentence will make your
writing flow better, and make your key points easier to arrange. Think
of the single sentence as a lighthouse guiding you through fog. If you
become overwhelmed with an abundance of data or competing themes, the
single sentence will help you stay on track.
It will help inform the choices you make regarding what
information to keep and what to set aside in your speech. Any piece of
data, story, or anecdote that doesn't jive with your single sentence
will wind up sidetracking and diluting your message.
In his book Speak Like Churchill, Stand Like Lincoln,
former political speechwriter James C. Humes writes, "Whether you are
going to a breakfast meeting with a potential investor, making a sales
talk, or delivering a product presentation, you need to first come up
with the key message you want to leave with your audience."
Let that key message be your North Star. If you can't state your
idea in a single sentence, don't give up. Keep at it. For many
speakers, this is the hardest part of their speech — and the most
critical one.
If you do the heavy mental lifting upfront, it will be much
easier to craft clear, compelling copy when you sit down to write. As
Humes notes, "Make figuring out your bottom-line purpose (your big idea)
your first priority."
This article was originally published on
November 22, 2017, by Inc., and is republished here with permission.
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