Complex words can actually make you sound less intelligent. Learn how to use semantic triples and precision speech to make your ideas unshakeable.

Mastering communication isn’t about a massive vocabulary—it’s about semantic intelligence, the ability to generate and navigate meaning structures with high coherence while reducing the friction that occurs when different worldviews collide.
Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco

You might think using big, complex words makes you sound more intelligent, but a Princeton study actually found that unnecessarily complex language reduces your perceived intelligence. If you want to be a master communicator, the secret isn’t a massive vocabulary—it’s precision and structure. Today, we are hacking your communication using semantics, the science of meaning. I’ll show you how to use semantic triples—a simple subject-predicate-object sequence—to make your ideas unshakeable. We’ll also dive into the Point-Proof-Stop framework to cut the fluff and command the room. Ready to see how a two-second reset can change everything?