Three groups of people have difficulty being concise. Do these sound like anyone you know?
The
 first group is those who are nervous about speaking to those in 
authority, or calling in to a talk show or a tele-seminar. Sometimes 
radio reporters also have difficulty with this, rephrasing their 
questions twice or more when interviewing guests.
The
 second group is those who are inductive thinkers. Inductive thinkers 
present all the facts or ideas and then express the main idea or 
request. People who are not inductive thinkers are deductive thinkers.)
The
 third group of people are those who haven't thought through what they 
mean to say, and just ramble. Sometimes they use stream-of-consciousness
 techniques of basically saying whatever they are thinking, with no 
obvious means of connecting the thoughts.
If
 a supervisor who is deductive has an employee who is an inductive 
thinker, there will be problems and frustration unless one of them 
changes. If it is the employee ( inductive thinker) who is to change, he
 or she needs to start thinking of the main point or "executive 
summary", and then add one solitary short sentence, starting the most 
vital fact or reason. If the supervisor wants more, he will ask.
This
 is difficult for inductive thinkers to do. Practice thinking this way, 
and even write down the summary statement and the reason statement ahead
 of time. Practice these two sentences until they sound great!
If
 the person gets nervous speaking to an authority figure or when calling
 in to a tele-seminar or radio talk show, write down your 2-3 sentences 
ahead of time. Your audience's time is short; make every second count!
Some
 people think best out loud, and need to practice doing this privately. 
Possibly recording their words would help them to then record a summary 
statement.
In all 3 cases, find someone who is a concise speaker, and emulate him or her!
 
 
 
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