š Huh?
This is the last reaction you want from your audience. As a speaker, your job is to make sure everyone understands you š¤.
But what if your topic is too complex, and you donāt have time to explain it in detail?
Thatās when you step into the gray zone between accuracy and comprehension, where comprehension should be tipping the scale āļø.
For example: in my last post, I wrote about virus āinactivation.ā
But many people arenāt familiar with that term. So if I donāt have time to explain it, Iāll say ādestroyā or ākill.ā
Are these words perfect synonyms for āinactivateā? No.
Are they close enough to help the audience understand the idea? Absolutely.
And thatās the point: sometimes you need to trade a little precision for a lot of clarity (and I know how difficult this often is, especially for scientists). Not by saying anything false, absolutely not, but by choosing the version your audience will actually understand.
Because if they donāt understand you, the value of your talk is lost, no matter how accurate it is.

