You sound like everyone else.
And your audience knows it.
I’ve watched people lose attention in the first ten seconds of a talk. I’ve read emails that vanish into the void. I’ve sat through meetings where no one remembers what was said.
That’s not your fault.
It’s the default setting for most communication.
Lwspeakstyle fixes that.
It’s not about fancy words or perfect grammar.
It’s about saying what you mean (clearly,) directly, and in a way people actually hear.
You’re tired of being misunderstood. You’re tired of rehearsing and still sounding flat. You want your point to land.
Not float past.
This article shows you how to do it. No theory. No jargon.
Just real techniques I’ve used and tested in real conversations, real presentations, real writing.
You’ll learn how to cut fluff. How to shape sentences so they stick. How to sound like you.
But sharper.
Not louder. Not more polished. Just more felt.
By the end, you’ll know how to shift your voice. And keep people listening.
Why LwSpeak Style Just Works
I hate reading something and having to reread it. So I built Lwspeakstyle around three things: clarity, conciseness, and connection. You already know what those mean.
You just don’t see them together often.
Clarity means using words you’d say out loud. Not “use”. Use.
Not “help” (help.) If your reader stumbles, you failed. (And yes, I’ve stumbled on my own writing.)
Conciseness isn’t cutting words for fun. It’s killing anything that doesn’t move the point forward. Jargon?
Gone. Redundancy? Gone.
That long intro paragraph you wrote to sound smart? Gone.
Connection happens when your reader thinks you get them. Not because you’re polite. But because your sentence rhythm matches theirs.
Because you name their frustration before they do. Because you skip the lecture and go straight to the thing they care about.
Think of a coffee order.
Clear: “Black coffee.”
Concise: No “if possible” or “whenever you’re able.”
Connected: Barista nods and starts pouring (no) follow-up questions.
That’s how Lwspeakstyle works. It’s not theory. It’s what happens when you stop writing for yourself and start writing for the person reading.
You ever finish a sentence and think Wait (did) I just say anything?
Yeah. That’s the enemy. LwSpeak Style kills that.
Speak Like a Human
I used to bury my point in ten-word sentences.
Then I learned better.
Short sentences hit harder. They give your brain room to breathe. You don’t need clauses stacked like Jenga blocks.
I swap fancy words for plain ones. “Use” becomes “use”. “Help” becomes “help”. If you’re reaching for a thesaurus, stop.
Jargon is lazy. It’s code for “I don’t want to explain it.”
Say “server crash” instead of “infrastructure latency event”. (Yes, I heard someone say that.
In a meeting.)
Here’s a before:
“The implementation of synergistic cross-functional paradigms necessitates iterative stakeholder alignment.”
Here’s after:
“We need everyone to agree on how this works (and) adjust as we go.”
That’s Lwspeakstyle.
You already know when something sounds fake. When it makes you pause and re-read. When it feels like climbing stairs in dress shoes.
Ask yourself: Would I say this out loud to a coworker over coffee?
If not. Rewrite it.
Clarity isn’t dumbing down. It’s respect. For your time.
For theirs.
You’ve sat through enough confusing emails. You’ve nodded along in meetings you didn’t understand. Don’t be that person.
Cut the noise. Say what you mean. Then stop.
Cut the Fluff. Say It Clean.

I hate wasting time. You do too. So why do we all keep talking like we’re reading legal contracts?
Conciseness isn’t about sounding smart. It’s about respect. You respect your listener’s time.
They stay engaged. You get heard.
I cut words like I prune dead branches. Ruthlessly. “At this point in time” becomes now. “Due to the fact that” becomes because. “Is able to” becomes can.
Ask yourself: what’s the one thing I need them to know? Not two things. Not three.
One. Then stop.
Try this before you hit send or open your mouth:
Say your thought out loud. Then say it again (half) as long. Then say it again (half) as long again.
(Yes, it feels weird. Do it anyway.)
Before:
“We are currently in the process of evaluating various options related to the timing and structure of our upcoming team meeting.”
After:
“We’ll pick a meeting time tomorrow.”
That’s Lwspeakstyle. No jargon. No padding.
Just clear human speech.
You already know when something’s bloated.
So why do you let it slide?
Practice for five minutes today. Summarize one email in ten words or less. Then do it again.
Your audience won’t thank you out loud. But they’ll listen longer. And remember more.
You Talk. They Listen.
I used to talk at people.
Then I started talking with them.
That changed everything.
You know that feeling when someone says your name and actually looks at you? That’s where connection starts. Not with slides.
Not with jargon. With eye contact and a pause.
LwSpeak taught me to drop the script and ask questions instead. What do you need right now? What’s getting in your way?
(Those questions work even if you’re selling socks.)
I switched to “you” language. Not “Our platform offers solutions” (but) “You’ll save fifteen minutes every morning.”
Big difference. Feels like a hand on the shoulder, not a brochure in your face.
I tell real stories. Like the time I messed up a client call by skipping empathy. And how I fixed it by listening twice as long before speaking once.
Stories stick. Facts fade.
Active listening isn’t waiting for your turn. It’s repeating back what you heard (even) if it’s just “So this deadline feels impossible?”
That’s where trust builds.
Want to see how this sounds in action? Check out What fashion styles are in right now lwspeakstyle. Same energy.
Same “you first” rule.
Empathy isn’t soft. It’s sharp. It cuts through noise.
You already know this.
Why aren’t you doing it more?
Speak So People Actually Listen
I’ve watched people talk for hours and leave no trace.
You know that feeling (when) your words vanish the second you stop speaking.
That’s the pain point. Not fancy vocabulary. Not perfect grammar.
Just being understood.
Lwspeakstyle fixes that. It cuts noise. It builds connection.
It works because it’s simple (not) easy, but simple.
You don’t need a course. You don’t need to rewrite your brain. Just pick one tip from this article.
Try it in your next email. Your next team meeting. Even your next text to a friend.
What happens? You’ll hear it. The pause after you speak gets longer.
Someone nods (not) politely, but yes. Your message lands.
That’s not magic. It’s clarity. It’s respect (for) your time and theirs.
So do it now. Not tomorrow. Not after you “get ready.”
Grab one tip.
Use it before lunch.
You’ll notice the difference before the day ends. And once you do? You won’t go back.

There is a specific skill involved in explaining something clearly — one that is completely separate from actually knowing the subject. Gloriah Osgoodorion has both. They has spent years working with fashion events and runway highlights in a hands-on capacity, and an equal amount of time figuring out how to translate that experience into writing that people with different backgrounds can actually absorb and use.
Gloriah tends to approach complex subjects — Fashion Events and Runway Highlights, Latest Fashion Trends, Designer Spotlights being good examples — by starting with what the reader already knows, then building outward from there rather than dropping them in the deep end. It sounds like a small thing. In practice it makes a significant difference in whether someone finishes the article or abandons it halfway through. They is also good at knowing when to stop — a surprisingly underrated skill. Some writers bury useful information under so many caveats and qualifications that the point disappears. Gloriah knows where the point is and gets there without too many detours.
The practical effect of all this is that people who read Gloriah's work tend to come away actually capable of doing something with it. Not just vaguely informed — actually capable. For a writer working in fashion events and runway highlights, that is probably the best possible outcome, and it's the standard Gloriah holds they's own work to.