Struggling to get your point across? Learn why our brains over-explain and how to use the BLUF method to communicate your ideas with more brevity.

Clear communication is just a symptom of clear thinking. If you find yourself rambling, it’s often because you’re trying to use your mouth as a search engine to find the point.
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Nia: Hey Blythe! I was just thinking about that feeling when you’re in a meeting, you have this brilliant idea, but as soon as you open your mouth, it’s like your brain turns into a browser with fifty tabs open. You just start talking to find the point, and suddenly you’ve been rambling for three minutes.
Blythe: Oh, I know that spiral! It’s actually fascinating because research shows that listener attention peaks at about thirty to sixty seconds. Once you hit that ninety-second mark, people start tuning out. It’s not that you don’t know your stuff; it’s just that our brains think in these messy, interconnected webs, but speech has to be linear.
Nia: Right, it’s like trying to fit a whole web through a tiny straw! And the irony is, the more we know, the harder it gets to stay concise.
Blythe: Exactly. So let’s dive into how we can use the BLUF method to lead with the bottom line and stop that rambling before it starts.