Lwspeakstyle

Lwspeakstyle

I hate when people talk and I forget what they said five seconds later.

You do too.

Lwspeakstyle is just that (saying) things so people actually hear them. Not flashy. Not clever for clever’s sake.

Just clear. Direct. Human.

Most communication fails because it’s padded. Softened. Over-explained.

You’ve sat through those talks. You’ve skimmed those emails. You’ve nodded along while zoning out.

Why does that happen? Because the speaker forgot you’re real. With a short attention span.

And zero obligation to care.

This isn’t about sounding smarter. It’s about being understood (fast.) In meetings. On calls.

Even in texts.

You want to sound like yourself. Just sharper. More trusted.

Less ignored.

That’s why you’re here. Not for theory. Not for jargon.

You want to do something. Today.

This article shows you how Lwspeakstyle works. No fluff, no filler, no fake confidence. Just what to cut, what to keep, and how to say it so people lean in instead of tuning out.

You’ll walk away knowing exactly how to rewrite one sentence. And why that changes everything.

Why LwSpeak Style Just Works

I wrote the Lwspeakstyle guide because most writing feels like shouting into a void.

Clarity means using you and I, not “the individual” or “use.”
It means saying “fix it” instead of “improve the solution.”

Conciseness is cutting the word “very” every time.
It’s deleting “in order to” and just writing “to.”
(Yes, I deleted that phrase mid-sentence just now.)

Connection happens when your reader thinks, This person gets me.
Not because you used fancy words. But because you sounded like a real human who listened first.

Think of a coach yelling “Run faster!” during a game. That’s not clarity. That’s noise.

LwSpeak Style says “Lean forward. Drive your knees. Go.”
Three short commands.

One clear picture. Zero confusion.

You’ve sat through meetings where someone talked for eight minutes and said nothing. You’ve scrolled past emails that felt like tax forms. You’ve clicked away from websites that sounded like robot lawyers.

That’s why this works. It respects your time. It respects your brain.

No jargon. No filler. No pretending.

Just words that land.

Speak So People Actually Get It

I used to bury my point in ten-word sentences.
Then I watched people’s eyes glaze over.

Short sentences work. They land. They stick.

You don’t need “use” when “use” is right there. You don’t need “help” when “help” does the job. Big words slow people down.

(And no, “combo” isn’t cute.)

Jargon? Cut it. If you must say “API,” say “how two apps talk to each other.”
If you say “bandwidth,” ask yourself: do you mean time, energy, or attention?

Here’s a before:
“We’re leveraging cross-functional collaboration to improve deliverables across verticals.”

Here’s after:
“We’re working together to get things done faster.”

That’s Lwspeakstyle.

You think your audience will dig through fog to find your meaning?
They won’t.

They’ll scroll. They’ll tune out. They’ll forget you said anything at all.

So ask yourself: what’s the one thing I want them to remember?
Then say it—once. And stop.

Clarity isn’t boring.
It’s kind.

It’s how you respect someone’s time.
It’s how you make sure your idea survives the first five seconds.

Want proof? Try rewriting one email this week using only words under two syllables. See what happens.

Cut the Fluff. Say It Clean.

Lwspeakstyle

I waste words. You do too. We all do it until we catch ourselves.

Conciseness isn’t about sounding smart. It’s about respecting someone’s time (and) keeping them awake.

You’re scrolling. You’re tired. You’re thinking just tell me what you mean.

I hear you.

Look at your sentences. Kill filler like “at this point in time” (say now), “due to the fact that” (because), “in order to” (to). They add weight, not meaning.

Ask yourself: what’s the one thing I need this person to know? Not two things. Not three.

One.

Then say only that. Or get as close as you can.

I practice by writing a thought, then cutting it in half. Then cutting it again. It hurts.

But it works.

Before:
“We are currently in the process of evaluating various potential options with regard to the upcoming project timeline.”

After:
“We’re deciding the project timeline.”

See the difference? One makes you yawn. The other makes you nod.

You don’t need fancy words to be clear. You need focus. Discipline.

A little self-awareness.

Lwspeakstyle means saying what matters (and) stopping there.

Try it today. Write something. Then delete three words.

Now delete two more.

Did it still land? Good.

If not. Try again.

You’ll get faster. Sharper. Less annoying.

People will actually listen.

Mistakes I Made Connecting With People

I used to talk at people.
Not with them.

That changed when I started using you language instead of I statements. You care about what’s in it for you. Not my agenda.

I told stories that sounded like lectures. Then I tried telling one about getting lost in a mall as a kid. People remembered that.

Not the stats I’d memorized.

Active listening? I thought it meant waiting for my turn to talk. It’s not.

It’s hearing what’s unsaid. Pausing. Nodding.

Empathy felt like pretending. Until I stopped trying to fix things and just said that sounds hard. It worked.

Asking what happened next?

I assumed everyone saw things like I did. They don’t. Ever tried explaining something while someone stared at their phone?

Yeah. That’s what happens when you skip empathy.

I learned this the hard way: connection dies when you forget the other person is real.

Want proof? Look at how fashion shifts (fast,) personal, messy. Check out What Fashion Styles Are in Right Now Lwspeakstyle and notice how tone matches mood.

Lwspeakstyle isn’t about sounding polished.
It’s about sounding present.

You already know when someone’s faking it.
So do your listeners.

Stop performing.
Start relating.

Speak So People Actually Listen

I’ve watched people freeze up before meetings. I’ve seen smart folks lose their audience in three sentences. You know that feeling (when) your words just bounce off the wall.

That’s the pain point. Not fancy vocabulary. Not perfect grammar.

Just being understood.

Lwspeakstyle fixes that. It strips away noise. It puts your idea first.

It makes space for real connection (not) performance.

You don’t need a seminar. You don’t need to rewrite your brain. Try one thing from this article in your next email.

Or your next team huddle. Or even your next text to a friend.

What’s the easiest tip for you right now?
The one you can do today?

Do it. Then notice what changes. Who responds faster.

Who leans in. Who remembers what you said.

Your voice matters. But only if people hear it. So stop waiting for confidence.

Start speaking with impact. now.

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