I used to talk like everyone else.
Then I tried Lwspeakstyle.
It’s not fancy. It’s not theory. It’s just saying what you mean (clear,) direct, and human.
You know that moment when someone says something and you feel it?
That’s Lwspeakstyle working.
Most people don’t struggle with ideas. They struggle with making those ideas land. You’ve sat through boring meetings.
You’ve reread your own emails wondering why they sound flat. You’ve watched someone else say the same thing you did (but) theirs stuck.
Why?
Because communication isn’t about stuffing more words in.
It’s about cutting the noise and keeping the pulse.
This article shows you how. Not with jargon or rules (but) with real examples and moves you can use today.
No fluff. No buzzwords. Just a way to speak so people actually listen.
You’ll walk away knowing how to shape a sentence, hold attention, and make your point without begging for it.
That’s what this is about.
Why LwSpeak Style Just Works
I cut the fluff before I hit send.
You do too.
Lwspeakstyle is clarity, conciseness, and connection. All at once. Not three separate things.
One thing that breathes.
Conciseness means no filler. I delete “in order to,” “at this point in time,” and “very unique.”
Those words don’t help. They slow you down.
Clarity means no guessing. I say “send the file by Friday” instead of “please consider transmitting the deliverable at your earliest convenience.”
(Yes, I’ve seen that phrase in real emails. It’s painful.)
Connection means you feel heard, not lectured. I ask “What’s blocking you?” instead of “Have you reviewed the documentation?”
Big difference. You know it.
Think of it like a coffee order. You say “black coffee, no sugar.”
Barista gets it. No confusion.
No delay. No awkward follow-up. That’s how communication should feel.
Want to see how those three pieces lock together? Check out the full Lwspeakstyle guide (it’s) just one page. No sign-up. No jargon.
Just examples you can steal today.
You’re not writing for a committee. You’re writing for a person. So talk like one.
That email you’re drafting right now? Cut two words. Add one question.
Send it. Done.
Speak Like a Human
I cut my own jargon. Then I cut it again.
You want people to get you the first time. Not the third. Not after they Google your slide deck.
Short sentences work. I break ideas in half. Sometimes in thirds.
(It feels weird at first. Like speaking with training wheels.)
I pick run over use. Fix over improve. Say over articulate. You know these words. So do I.
Jargon is lazy. It’s a wall. If you need a technical term, say it once.
And then explain it like your coworker just walked in from marketing. (Yes, even if they’re not.)
Here’s a before:
“Leveraging synergistic paradigms to help flexible throughput optimization.”
Here’s after:
“We changed how teams share updates. Now everyone sees changes right away.”
That’s Lwspeakstyle.
You think “But won’t it sound too simple?”
No. It’ll sound like you respect their time.
You wonder “What if my boss expects fancy words?”
Then your boss needs retraining. Not your sentences.
I rewrite every email before sending. Every slide before presenting. Every Slack message before hitting enter.
Why? Because confusion costs more than clarity ever will.
You’ve sat through meetings where no one understood the goal. You’ve read docs that made you scroll past the first paragraph. You’ve nodded along while silently screaming inside.
Don’t be that person.
Say what you mean. Mean what you say. Cut the noise.
Keep the point.
Cut the Crap

I say what I mean.
You do too. Or you want to.
Conciseness isn’t about sounding smart.
It’s about not wasting your breath (or) someone else’s attention.
You’ve sat through meetings where people talk for three minutes to say “yes.”
I have too. (It’s exhausting.)
Cut phrases like “at this point in time” → “now.”
“Due to the fact that” → “because.”
If it doesn’t move the idea forward, kill it.
Find the one thing you must get across (then) build around that. Not around your notes. Not around your ego.
Around the point.
Try this: write your thought. Then cut 30%. Read it aloud.
If you stumble, cut more.
Before:
“We are currently in the process of evaluating various options related to the timing and structure of our upcoming team-wide communication initiative.”
After:
“We’re deciding when and how to tell the team.”
That’s Lwspeakstyle.
You already know most of what you need to cut.
So why don’t you?
Is it fear? Habit? Or just never having tried?
Practice for five minutes a day. Summarize an email before you send it. Explain yesterday’s meeting in one sentence.
Your listener isn’t waiting for your full internal monologue.
They’re waiting for the point.
Give it to them.
Fast.
You’re Not Talking At People. You’re Building Bridges.
I talk to people. Not at them. There’s a difference.
LwSpeak forces me to ask: What does this person actually need right now?
Not what I want to say. Not what sounds smart. it helps.
You don’t connect with jargon. You connect with “you.”
“You’ll save 20 minutes a day.”
“You won’t miss another deadline.”
That’s not fluff. That’s focus.
Stories stick because they’re human. I tell one about a client who missed three calls before I switched from “our process” to “what happens when you forget to hit send?”
She laughed. Then she listened.
(Turns out forgetting is universal.)
Active listening isn’t waiting for your turn. It’s pausing. Repeating back what you heard.
Asking “Did I get that right?”
Most people skip this. They think connection is about talking louder.
Empathy isn’t feeling sorry. It’s shifting your chair to their side of the table. Try it next time someone’s frustrated.
Ask “What would fix this for you. Today?”
Watch their shoulders drop.
Want to see how this works in real life? Check out What Fashion Styles Are in Right Now Lwspeakstyle (same) idea, different context.
Lwspeakstyle is just language that doesn’t waste anyone’s time. You already know that. So why keep pretending otherwise?
Speak So People Actually Listen
I’ve watched people freeze up in meetings. I’ve seen emails get ignored. I’ve heard smart ideas buried under ten extra words.
You want to be understood. You want your words to land. Not tomorrow.
Now.
That struggle? It’s real. And it’s exhausting.
Lwspeakstyle fixes it. Not with theory. Not with jargon.
With clarity. Conciseness. Connection.
You don’t need a degree to use it. You don’t need to rewrite your brain. Just pick one tip from this article.
Try it in your next email. Use it in your next team huddle. Say less.
Mean more.
You’ll notice the difference fast. People will lean in. They’ll remember what you said.
Your relationships will shift. Not slowly. Immediately.
So stop waiting for confidence to show up.
Start speaking like you mean it. Because you do.
Go ahead. Pick that one tip. Do it today.
You’ve got this.


There is a specific skill involved in explaining something clearly — one that is completely separate from actually knowing the subject. Jarod Vancamperico has both. They has spent years working with everyday styling hacks 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.
Jarod tends to approach complex subjects — Everyday Styling Hacks, Designer Runway Reviews, Unique Finds 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. Jarod knows where the point is and gets there without too many detours.
The practical effect of all this is that people who read Jarod's work tend to come away actually capable of doing something with it. Not just vaguely informed — actually capable. For a writer working in everyday styling hacks, that is probably the best possible outcome, and it's the standard Jarod holds they's own work to.
