Message Structure

Master the frameworks and techniques to organize your ideas for maximum clarity, retention, and persuasive impact.

Table of Contents

Why Structure Matters

The Structure Problem

Without structure:

  • Ideas feel scattered and random
  • Audiences get lost
  • Key points are missed
  • Messages aren't retained
  • You seem unprepared

With structure:

  • Ideas flow logically
  • Audiences follow easily
  • Key points land with impact
  • Messages are remembered
  • You appear competent and credible

The Cognitive Load Principle

Human working memory can hold 3-5 items at once.

When you dump information without structure:

  • Overwhelms cognitive capacity
  • Audiences can't process effectively
  • Information forgotten immediately

When you provide clear structure:

  • Reduces cognitive load
  • Creates mental scaffolding
  • Enhances retention and recall

Example:

Unstructured (Hard to follow): "We need to improve sales. Marketing isn't working. The website is outdated. Competitors are gaining ground. Our team needs training. Pricing might be an issue. Customer service complaints are up. We should consider new markets. The sales process is too long. Social media presence is weak."

Structured (Easy to follow): "We have three problems hurting sales: First, our outdated systems (website and sales process). Second, our unprepared team (lacking training and marketing support). Third, our competitive position (pricing and market presence). Let's address each."

Structure and Credibility

Well-structured communication signals:

  • Preparation and professionalism
  • Clear thinking
  • Respect for audience's time
  • Expertise and authority
  • Competence

Poorly structured communication signals:

  • Lack of preparation
  • Confused thinking
  • Disrespect for audience
  • Lack of expertise
  • Incompetence

Reality: Content alone isn't enough. Structure makes or breaks your credibility.

The Importance of Structure

The Universal Structure

Almost all effective communication follows this pattern:

1. OPENING → Captures attention, sets context
2. BODY → Delivers main content/arguments
3. CLOSING → Reinforces message, prompts action

This applies to:

  • Presentations and speeches
  • Emails and memos
  • Conversations and meetings
  • Sales pitches
  • Job interviews
  • Reports and documents

The Primacy-Recency Effect

Research finding: People remember best what comes first (primacy) and last (recency).

The retention curve:

HIGH    ↗ Opening
         \
MEDIUM   → Middle (forgotten)
            /
HIGH    ↗ Closing

Strategic implication:

  • Put most important points in opening and closing
  • Reinforce key messages in both places
  • Middle needs extra work to maintain attention

Signposting

Signposting: Explicitly telling your audience where you're going and where you are.

Why it works:

  • Reduces uncertainty
  • Helps audience follow along
  • Creates mental roadmap
  • Increases retention

Examples:

  • "Today I'll cover three main points..."
  • "First, let's discuss..."
  • "Moving to the second issue..."
  • "To summarize..."

Rule: Never assume your structure is obvious. Make it explicit.

Opening Strong

The Critical First 30 Seconds

You have 30 seconds (or less) to:

  • Capture attention
  • Establish credibility
  • Create interest
  • Set the frame

After 30 seconds:

  • Attention decided (engaged or tuned out)
  • Impression formed (credible or not)
  • Investment made (worth their time or not)

Strategic imperative: Your opening is your most important 30 seconds.

Opening Mistakes to Avoid

Weak OpeningWhy It FailsBetter Alternative
"Um, so, I guess I'll start..."Uncertain, unpreparedStart strong and deliberately
"Sorry for taking your time..."Apologetic, low-value signalThank them, then deliver value
"Let me tell you about myself..."Self-focused, boringStart with their interests
Long agenda/logisticsBoring, loses attentionQuick roadmap, then hook
"I'm nervous..."Undermines confidenceProject confidence from start
Fumbling with techUnprofessionalTest beforehand, start ready

Opening Techniques

1. The Hook

Purpose: Immediately grab attention

Types of hooks:

Hook TypeExampleBest For
Startling statistic"75% of businesses fail in their first year"Business, data-driven
Provocative question"What if everything you know about X is wrong?"Challenging assumptions
Story"Three years ago, I was broke and desperate..."Personal, emotional
Bold statement"Social media is dead"Attention-grabbing, controversial
Relevant quote"As Einstein said, 'Insanity is...'"Establishing authority
Current event"This week's news about X shows..."Timely, relevant
Humor"So a CEO, engineer, and marketer walk into a bar..."Light, engaging (use carefully)

Example:

❌ "Today I'm going to talk about project management"
✅ "How many of you have been on a project that failed? [Pause] 
    According to PMI, 70% of projects fail. Today, I'll show you 
    how to be in the successful 30%."

2. The Problem Statement

Framework:

  1. State a problem they face
  2. Show why it matters
  3. Promise a solution

Example: "You spend hours preparing presentations, but your audience forgets them within 24 hours. This wastes your time and limits your impact. Today, I'll share three techniques that triple retention."

3. The Question Opening

Ask a question that:

  • Is relevant to audience
  • Makes them think
  • Sets up your message

Types:

Rhetorical (no response expected): "What's the #1 skill for career success?"

Show of hands (interactive): "How many of you check email before getting out of bed?"

Hypothetical: "What would you do if you had unlimited resources?"

Example: "If you could only develop one skill this year, what would it be? Most people say leadership. But research shows communication skills are 3× more important for career advancement."

4. The Story Opening

Elements of a good opening story:

  • Short (30-90 seconds)
  • Relevant to your topic
  • Has stakes/tension
  • Emotionally engaging
  • Leads naturally to your message

Example: "Five years ago, I gave the worst presentation of my life. My hands shook, my voice cracked, and I forgot half my points. That disaster led me to study communication science. What I learned transformed not just my speaking, but my entire career. Today I'll share those lessons with you."

5. The Credibility Establishment

When you need to establish authority fast:

  1. Relevant credentials
  2. Relevant experience
  3. Relevant results

Keep it brief (15-30 seconds)

Example: "I've trained over 5,000 professionals in communication skills, and I've seen what works. Companies using these techniques increased their sales by an average of 34%. Today, I'll share exactly what they did."

The Opening Formula

Combine elements for maximum impact:

HOOK (attention)
  ↓
CONTEXT (relevance)
  ↓
ROADMAP (structure)
  ↓
TRANSITION (into content)

Example:

HOOK: "Last year, poor communication cost U.S. businesses $37 billion." [Statistic]

CONTEXT: "Every one of you has experienced this: misunderstood emails, 
unclear directions, confused meetings."

ROADMAP: "Today I'll share three communication techniques that eliminate 
90% of these problems."

TRANSITION: "Let's start with the first: radical clarity..."

Time: 30-90 seconds total

Opening Checklist

Before you speak, ensure your opening:

  • [ ] Grabs attention in first 10 seconds
  • [ ] Is relevant to audience
  • [ ] Establishes your credibility
  • [ ] Promises value/benefit
  • [ ] Sets clear expectations
  • [ ] Leads naturally to your first point
  • [ ] Takes 30-90 seconds (not longer)

Main Body Organization

Choosing Your Structure

Your structure should match:

  • Your content type
  • Your purpose
  • Your audience
  • Your context

Don't use the same structure for everything.

Structure #1: Problem-Solution

Best for: Proposals, recommendations, persuasive communication

Framework:

  1. Problem: Describe the current problem
  2. Impact: Show why it matters (consequences)
  3. Solution: Present your recommendation
  4. Benefits: Explain positive outcomes
  5. Action: What should happen next

Example:

Problem: "Our customer support response time is 48 hours"
Impact: "This leads to 30% customer churn and negative reviews"
Solution: "Implement a chatbot for tier-1 issues"
Benefits: "Response time drops to 2 hours, churn decreases 15%"
Action: "I recommend we allocate $50K for implementation"

Variations:

  • Problem-Cause-Solution: Add a "cause" section before solution
  • Problem-Solution-Prevention: Add how to prevent recurrence

Structure #2: Chronological (Time-Based)

Best for: Stories, project updates, historical accounts, processes

Framework:

  • Beginning → Middle → End
  • Past → Present → Future
  • Step 1 → Step 2 → Step 3

Example (Project Update):

Past: "Last quarter we launched phase 1"
Present: "Currently we're in phase 2 testing"
Future: "Next quarter we'll begin phase 3 rollout"

Example (Process):

Step 1: "First, gather requirements"
Step 2: "Then, design the solution"
Step 3: "Finally, implement and test"

Strength: Natural, easy to follow
Weakness: Can be boring if not made compelling

Structure #3: Topical (Theme-Based)

Best for: Complex topics with multiple aspects, educational content

Framework:

  • Topic A → Topic B → Topic C
  • Theme 1 → Theme 2 → Theme 3

Example (Communication Training):

Topic 1: "Verbal communication skills"
Topic 2: "Nonverbal communication"
Topic 3: "Written communication"

Key: Topics should be:

  • Distinct (no overlap)
  • Parallel (similar level of importance)
  • Complete (cover the full subject)

Structure #4: Spatial

Best for: Describing places, systems, organizations

Framework:

  • Left to Right
  • Top to Bottom
  • Outside to Inside
  • North to South
  • Department by Department

Example (Office Tour):

"Front entrance → Reception → Cubicles → Conference rooms → Executive offices"

Example (Organization):

"At the top, executive leadership → Middle management → Frontline employees"

Structure #5: Compare-Contrast

Best for: Evaluating options, showing differences, analysis

Framework:

Option A: Point-by-Point

Criterion 1: Compare X and Y
Criterion 2: Compare X and Y
Criterion 3: Compare X and Y

Option B: Block

Option X: All criteria
Option Y: All criteria
Comparison: Overall assessment

Example (Point-by-Point):

Cost: "Option A costs $10K, Option B costs $5K"
Time: "Option A takes 6 months, Option B takes 3 months"
Quality: "Option A delivers superior quality, Option B is adequate"
Recommendation: "Choose Option A for quality, B for speed"

Structure #6: Cause-Effect

Best for: Explaining relationships, showing consequences

Framework:

Option A: Multiple causes → One effect

Cause 1 + Cause 2 + Cause 3 → Effect

Option B: One cause → Multiple effects

Cause → Effect 1, Effect 2, Effect 3

Example:

Cause: "We cut the training budget"
Effect 1: "Employee skills declined"
Effect 2: "Customer satisfaction dropped"
Effect 3: "Turnover increased 20%"

Structure #7: Monroe's Motivated Sequence

Best for: Persuasion, sales, motivation, calls to action

Framework:

  1. Attention: Grab their focus
  2. Need: Establish problem/need
  3. Satisfaction: Present solution
  4. Visualization: Paint picture of success
  5. Action: Tell them what to do

Example (Sales Pitch):

Attention: "Imagine cutting your costs by 40%"
Need: "Right now, you're overspending on X"
Satisfaction: "Our solution eliminates that waste"
Visualization: "Picture: money saved, stress reduced, goals achieved"
Action: "Let's schedule a demo this week"

Why it works: Follows natural persuasion psychology

Structure Selection Matrix

PurposeBest StructureAlternative
Propose a changeProblem-SolutionMonroe's Motivated Sequence
Tell a storyChronologicalProblem-Solution
Teach a conceptTopicalChronological (if process)
Give an updateChronologicalTopical
Make a decisionCompare-ContrastProblem-Solution
Explain whyCause-EffectProblem-Solution
Describe somethingSpatialTopical
PersuadeMonroe's Motivated SequenceProblem-Solution

Supporting Your Structure

Each main point needs:

  1. Claim: Your main assertion
  2. Evidence: Data, examples, stories, research
  3. Explanation: Why it matters
  4. Transition: Connect to next point

Example:

Claim: "Email is the worst communication medium for complex topics"
Evidence: "Studies show 50% of email messages are misunderstood"
Explanation: "Without tone and body language, nuance is lost"
Transition: "That's why face-to-face conversations work better..."

Transitions and Flow

Why Transitions Matter

Transitions are the glue that holds your structure together.

Without transitions:

  • Jarring jumps between topics
  • Audience gets lost
  • Structure isn't clear
  • Points feel disconnected

With transitions:

  • Smooth flow
  • Clear direction
  • Logical progression
  • Unified message

Types of Transitions

1. Sequential Transitions

Show order or progression:

TransitionUsage
First, Second, ThirdNumbered sequences
Next, Then, After thatSteps in a process
Before, During, AfterTime sequence
Initially, Subsequently, FinallyBeginning to end

Example: "First, let's discuss the problem. Second, we'll explore solutions. Finally, I'll recommend action."

2. Causal Transitions

Show cause and effect:

TransitionUsage
Therefore, Thus, HenceLogical conclusion
As a result, ConsequentlyEffect of cause
Because of this, Due to thisExplaining why
This leads to, This meansForward progression

Example: "Sales dropped 30%. As a result, we need to cut costs."

3. Comparative Transitions

Show similarity or difference:

TransitionUsage
Similarly, Likewise, AlsoShowing similarity
However, In contrast, ButShowing difference
On the other handAlternative view
While, Whereas, UnlikeDirect comparison

Example: "Plan A is low-cost. However, Plan B delivers better quality."

4. Emphasis Transitions

Highlight importance:

TransitionUsage
Most importantly, CriticallyHighest priority
In fact, IndeedReinforcement
Notably, SignificantlyDrawing attention
The key point isCentral focus

Example: "We've tried several approaches. Most importantly, we need executive buy-in."

5. Summarizing Transitions

Pull together ideas:

TransitionUsage
In summary, To sum upRecap
Overall, In essenceBig picture
The point isMain takeaway
What this means isInterpretation

Example: "In summary, we have three options, each with trade-offs."

Internal Summaries

After each major section, briefly summarize before moving on:

Formula:

"So we've covered [Section A], which showed [key point].
Now let's turn to [Section B]..."

Example:

"So we've seen that email creates misunderstandings 50% of the time.
Now let's look at better alternatives for complex topics..."

Why it works:

  • Reinforces what they just heard
  • Provides mental break
  • Signals transition
  • Aids retention

Signposting Throughout

Constantly remind audience where you are in the structure:

Opening: "I'll cover three main areas..."
Transition 1: "That's the first area. Moving to the second..."
Transition 2: "Now for the third and final area..."
Closing: "So we've covered all three areas..."

Visual signposting (in slides):

  • Progress indicators (1 of 5)
  • Agenda with current item highlighted
  • Section headers

Creating Flow

Good flow = Each point naturally leads to the next

Techniques:

1. Question-Answer Flow

Point 1 raises a question → Point 2 answers it

Example: "Social media reach is declining [raises question: why?]. This is because algorithms prioritize paid content [answers]."

2. Problem-Solution Flow

Point 1 identifies problem → Point 2 provides solution

3. Zoom In/Zoom Out

Big picture → Specific detail → Back to big picture

Example: "Our company is struggling [big]. Specifically, sales in the midwest region dropped 40% [detail]. This threatens our overall market position [back to big]."

4. Build-Up

Start small → Progressively increase stakes/importance

Example: "This affects one team → This affects the whole department → This affects the entire company → This affects our industry position"

Transition Checklist

After drafting your content, check:

  • [ ] Every section has a clear transition
  • [ ] Transitions show logical relationship
  • [ ] Progress is signposted throughout
  • [ ] Internal summaries after major sections
  • [ ] No jarring jumps between ideas
  • [ ] Flow feels natural, not forced

Closing with Impact

The Closing Problem

Most common mistake: The rambling, uncertain ending

Weak closings:

  • "So... yeah... I think that's it"
  • "Any questions?" [awkward silence]
  • "Well, I guess that's all I have"
  • Trailing off without clear conclusion

Impact: Undermines everything that came before

The Purpose of Your Closing

Your closing should:

  1. Signal you're ending (no surprises)
  2. Reinforce key messages
  3. Provide emotional resonance
  4. Prompt action or next steps
  5. Leave a lasting impression

Remember: Due to recency effect, your closing is second most-remembered part (after opening).

Closing Structure

The Classic Formula:

SIGNAL → "In conclusion..." "To wrap up..."
  ↓
SUMMARY → Key points recap
  ↓
RESONANCE → Story, quote, or emotional connection
  ↓
CALL TO ACTION → What should happen next
  ↓
FINAL STATEMENT → Memorable last sentence

Time: 5-10% of your total time

Closing Techniques

1. The Summary Close

Best for: Information-heavy presentations, teaching

Formula:

"Today we covered [three main points]:
First, [point 1]
Second, [point 2]
Third, [point 3]

Remember: [Key takeaway]"

Example: "Today we covered three communication skills: active listening, clear structure, and confident delivery. Master these three, and you'll dramatically improve your influence."

2. The Call-to-Action Close

Best for: Persuasive communication, sales, motivation

Formula:

"Based on what we've discussed, I recommend [specific action].
Here's what to do next: [1-3 specific steps]
Let's [immediate next step]."

Example: "Based on this analysis, I recommend we implement Plan B. Here's what to do: First, approve the budget. Second, form the team. Third, launch next month. Can we commit to this today?"

3. The Story Close

Best for: Emotional connection, inspiration, memorable endings

Formula:

Tell a brief story that:
- Illustrates your main point
- Creates emotional resonance
- Has a clear resolution
- Ties back to opening (if possible)

Example: "I started today by telling you about my worst presentation. Here's what happened next: I committed to improving. I practiced every day. Six months later, I won a speaking award. That journey taught me that communication isn't talent. It's skill. And if I can do it, so can you."

Callback: Referencing your opening story creates powerful closure.

4. The Quote Close

Best for: Adding authority, universal wisdom, elegant ending

Formula:

"[Relevant quote from credible source]
This captures [your key message].
[Your final statement]"

Example: "Maya Angelou said, 'People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.' That's what great communication is about: making people feel heard, valued, and inspired. Go make them feel that."

Caution: Quote must be highly relevant, not generic filler.

5. The Question Close

Best for: Inspiring thought, creating dialogue, interactive sessions

Formula:

"As we close, I want to leave you with a question:
[Powerful, relevant question]

Think about that as you [next steps]."

Example: "As we close, I want to leave you with a question: What would change in your life if you communicated with complete confidence? Think about that, and take one step toward it today."

6. The Vision Close

Best for: Inspiration, change initiatives, future-focused messaging

Formula:

"Imagine a future where [positive outcome].
This is possible if we [action].
Let's make that future real."

Example: "Imagine a team where everyone communicates clearly, conflicts are resolved quickly, and everyone feels heard. This is possible if we commit to these principles. Let's make that team a reality, starting today."

7. The Circle Back Close

Best for: Creating cohesion, demonstrating preparation

Formula:

Reference your opening (story, statistic, question)
Show how your content addresses it
Close the loop

Example (if you opened with a statistic): "I opened by saying 75% of businesses fail in their first year. Now you know the three reasons why, and more importantly, how to be in the successful 25%. Go be that success story."

Closing Mistakes to Avoid

MistakeWhy It's BadBetter Approach
No clear endingAudience confused when you're doneSignal clearly: "In conclusion..."
New informationConfuses, feels incompleteOnly new info = next steps
ApologizingUndermines entire presentationEnd with confidence
RushingFeels unimportantTake time, deliver with impact
"Any questions?"Weak, uncertain endingQuestions after strong closing
Trailing offSeems unpreparedDefinitive final statement
Too longLoses impactKeep closing tight: 5-10% of total

The Final Sentence

Your very last sentence should be:

  • Short and memorable
  • Delivered with confidence
  • Followed by silence (don't fill it)
  • Something they'll remember

Examples:

Confident: "Now go make it happen."

Inspirational: "The future of communication starts with you."

Action-oriented: "Let's begin today."

Thought-provoking: "What will you do with this knowledge?"

Simple: "Thank you."

Delivery: Say your final sentence, pause 2-3 seconds, then step back or stop. Don't immediately say "Any questions?" or fidget. Let it land.

The Rule of Three

Why Three?

The magic number: Three is the optimal number for human memory and communication.

Cognitive science:

  • Easy to remember (not too few, not too many)
  • Creates rhythm and pattern
  • Feels complete
  • Persuasive and satisfying

Historical evidence:

  • "Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"
  • "Government of the people, by the people, for the people"
  • "I came, I saw, I conquered"
  • "Blood, sweat, and tears"

Applications of Three

Main Points

Structure your content around three main points:

❌ "Today I'll cover: preparation, opening, body, transitions, closing, Q&A, follow-up, and evaluation"

✅ "Today I'll cover three elements of effective presentations: structure, delivery, and engagement"

Why: Three points are memorable. Seven aren't.

Supporting Evidence

Provide three pieces of evidence per claim:

"This approach works because: [1] Research shows X, [2] Company Y achieved 40% growth, [3] I've seen it succeed with 100+ clients"

Lists and Examples

When listing or giving examples, use three:

"The most important communication skills are listening, clarity, and confidence"

"For example, this applies to presentations, meetings, and one-on-one conversations"

The Power of Triadic Structure

Sentence-level pattern:

"Communication is clear, compelling, and memorable"
"Learn it, practice it, master it"
"Think before you speak, speak with purpose, listen to understand"

Why it works: Creates rhythm, builds to climax, satisfying completion

Building to Three

Crescendo pattern:

  1. First: Good (establish baseline)
  2. Second: Better (build interest)
  3. Third: Best (climax, most impactful)

Example:

  • "This saves time" (good)
  • "This saves money" (better)
  • "This saves your business" (best: highest stakes)

When to Break the Rule

Use more than three when:

  • Providing a full list (but group into three categories)
  • Brainstorming (then narrow to three best ideas)
  • Q&A or discussion (open-ended)

Use fewer than three when:

  • Only two clear options (A vs. B)
  • Single, powerful point deserves full focus
  • Time is extremely limited

General rule: Default to three unless there's a good reason not to.

Using Frameworks

What Are Frameworks?

Frameworks: Pre-established structures that organize thinking and communication.

Benefits:

  • Save time (don't reinvent structure)
  • Proven effectiveness
  • Easy to remember
  • Professional standard
  • Reduce cognitive load

PREP Framework

Best for: Quick responses, Q&A, impromptu speaking

Structure:

  • Point: State your main assertion
  • Reason: Explain why
  • Example: Give concrete evidence
  • Point: Restate your assertion

Example:

Point: "We should invest in employee training"
Reason: "Because skilled employees are more productive and engaged"
Example: "When Google increased training budget 20%, productivity rose 15%"
Point: "That's why I strongly recommend we invest in training"

Time: 30-90 seconds

What-So What-Now What Framework

Best for: Updates, status reports, recommendations

Structure:

  • What: State the facts/situation
  • So What: Explain why it matters
  • Now What: Recommend action

Example:

What: "Our customer satisfaction score dropped from 85 to 78"
So What: "This predicts 10% revenue decline and negative word-of-mouth"
Now What: "We need to implement a customer feedback program immediately"

Why it works: Moves from information → meaning → action

STAR Framework (Situation-Task-Action-Result)

Best for: Job interviews, storytelling, demonstrating competence

Structure:

  • Situation: Set the context
  • Task: Describe the challenge
  • Action: Explain what you did
  • Result: Share the outcome

Example:

Situation: "Our team missed three consecutive deadlines"
Task: "I was asked to turn it around"
Action: "I implemented weekly check-ins and clear milestone tracking"
Result: "We met our next five deadlines and team morale improved"

Past-Present-Future Framework

Best for: Updates, progress reports, strategic planning

Structure:

  • Past: What happened/was accomplished
  • Present: Current status/situation
  • Future: Plans/next steps

Example:

Past: "Last quarter we launched the new product"
Present: "We've acquired 500 customers and learned key insights"
Future: "Next quarter we'll expand to three new markets"

Problem-Agitate-Solve (PAS)

Best for: Sales, persuasion, motivating change

Structure:

  • Problem: Identify the problem
  • Agitate: Make them feel the pain
  • Solve: Present your solution

Example:

Problem: "Your marketing emails have a 2% open rate"
Agitate: "That means 98% of your time and money is wasted. 
         Your competitors are reaching the same customers while you're ignored"
Solve: "Our AI-powered subject line tool increases open rates to 35%"

Caution: Don't over-agitate; can backfire if too negative.

Feature-Advantage-Benefit (FAB)

Best for: Product presentations, proposals, sales

Structure:

  • Feature: What it is
  • Advantage: What it does
  • Benefit: What it means for them

Example:

Feature: "This software includes automated reporting"
Advantage: "Reports generate in seconds instead of hours"
Benefit: "Your team saves 10 hours per week for strategic work"

Key distinction: Benefits are about them, not about the product.

SCQA Framework (Situation-Complication-Question-Answer)

Best for: Business presentations, consulting, problem-solving

Structure:

  • Situation: Current stable state
  • Complication: Problem disrupting the situation
  • Question: The question this raises
  • Answer: Your proposed solution

Example:

Situation: "We've been profitable for 5 years with our current model"
Complication: "But a new competitor just launched, taking 15% market share"
Question: "How do we protect our position?"
Answer: "By differentiating through superior customer service"

Choosing Your Framework

SituationBest FrameworkWhy
Quick verbal answerPREPFast, clear, complete
Status updateWhat-So What-Now WhatInformation + meaning + action
Interview questionSTARDemonstrates competence
Strategic updatePast-Present-FutureShows progression
Sales pitchPAS or FABCreates urgency and desire
Problem presentationSCQAStructured thinking
RecommendationProblem-SolutionClear and logical

Creating Your Own Framework

When existing frameworks don't fit, create one:

Requirements for a good framework:

  1. Logical flow
  2. Easy to remember (ideally acronym)
  3. Covers all necessary elements
  4. Can be applied consistently

Example custom framework:

D.E.A.L. (for negotiation communication)
- Discover: Their needs/interests
- Explain: Your position
- Align: Find common ground
- Lock: Commit to agreement

Adapting Structure to Context

Structure by Time

Adjust structure based on time available:

TimeStructure Approach
30 secondsOne point only (PREP for one idea)
2 minutesOne point with evidence (PREP)
5 minutesThree points, brief support each
10 minutesThree points, solid support, story
20 minutesFull structure, multiple examples per point
45+ minutesFull structure, interaction, deep dives

Key rule: Fewer points with deeper exploration > many points covered shallowly

Structure by Audience

Adapt structure to audience characteristics:

Executive Audience

Characteristics:

  • Time-starved
  • Big-picture focused
  • Decision-oriented

Best structure:

  • Lead with recommendation
  • Bottom-line-up-front (BLUF)
  • High-level overview
  • Details only if asked

Example: "Recommendation: Invest in Plan B. Cost is $200K, ROI is 18 months, risk is low. [Then provide backup details if needed]"

Technical Audience

Characteristics:

  • Detail-oriented
  • Want to understand how
  • Skeptical

Best structure:

  • Methodical, thorough
  • Step-by-step explanation
  • Data and evidence heavy
  • Address potential objections

General Audience

Characteristics:

  • Varied knowledge levels
  • Limited attention
  • Need engagement

Best structure:

  • Clear, simple language
  • Stories and examples
  • Visual aids
  • Interactive elements

Structure by Purpose

Match structure to communication goal:

PurposeBest StructureKey Elements
InformTopical or ChronologicalClear categories, examples
PersuadeProblem-Solution or PASEvidence, benefits, CTA
InspireStory + VisionEmotion, aspiration
UpdatePast-Present-FutureFacts, status, next steps
TeachProcess or TopicalStep-by-step, practice
DecideCompare-ContrastOptions, criteria, recommendation

Structure by Medium

Different mediums require different structures:

Email/Written

  • Front-load: Most important info first
  • Scan-able: Bullets, headers, white space
  • Brief: Respect their time
  • Action-clear: What do you want them to do?

Structure:

Subject: [Clear, specific]
Opening: Purpose in one sentence
Body: 2-3 key points (bullets)
Closing: Clear call to action

Presentation

  • Visual-supported: Slides complement, not repeat
  • Verbal emphasis: Say what matters most
  • Interaction: Q&A, discussion
  • Memory-focused: Repetition, stories

Conversation

  • Flexible: Adapt in real-time
  • Interactive: Respond to their cues
  • Brief: Make your point, listen
  • Natural: Less rigid than formal presentation

Video/Recording

  • Hook immediately: First 5 seconds critical
  • Paced: Can't ask questions, so extra clear
  • Visual: Show, don't just tell
  • Tight: Edit ruthlessly

Cultural Considerations

Structure preferences vary by culture:

Western (US, Europe)

Preferences:

  • Direct, get to the point
  • Bottom-line-up-front acceptable
  • Time-efficient
  • Argument → Evidence structure

Eastern (Asia, Middle East)

Preferences:

  • Context before conclusion
  • Relationship before business
  • Indirect approach to disagreement
  • Building to point gradually

When in doubt: Ask or observe. "Would you like the executive summary first, or should I provide context?"

Flexibility Within Structure

Having a structure doesn't mean being rigid.

Be prepared to:

  • Skip sections if audience already knows
  • Go deeper on sections of high interest
  • Re-order based on questions
  • Pivot based on reactions

How to be flexible:

  1. Know your material deeply (not just memorized structure)
  2. Have modular content (sections can stand alone)
  3. Read the room constantly
  4. Ask: "Would you like me to go deeper here or move on?"

Exercises

Exercise 1: Structure Analysis

Time: 30 minutes
Goal: Understand effective structure through analysis

Steps:

  1. Find a highly-rated TED talk (or business presentation)
  2. Watch once for content
  3. Watch again, mapping structure:
    • Opening technique used
    • Main body structure type
    • Number of main points
    • Transition techniques
    • Closing technique
  4. Note what makes it effective

Bonus: Compare a poorly-rated video and note structural differences.

Exercise 2: The Three-Point Challenge

Time: 15 minutes
Goal: Practice the rule of three

Task: Take these topics and identify three main points for each:

  1. Why communication skills matter
  2. How to build confidence
  3. Your job/expertise
  4. Your hometown
  5. A book you love

Example: Topic: Why communication skills matter

  1. Career advancement
  2. Relationship quality
  3. Personal confidence

Practice: Can you quickly find three points for any topic?

Exercise 3: Framework Application

Time: 20 minutes
Goal: Master common frameworks

Practice applying each framework to the same scenario:

Scenario: Your team missed an important deadline.

Apply:

  1. PREP: Explain what happened
  2. What-So What-Now What: Give an update
  3. Past-Present-Future: Show the situation
  4. Problem-Solution: Present recommendations

Notice: How different frameworks shape the same content.

Exercise 4: Opening Variations

Time: 20 minutes
Goal: Develop multiple opening techniques

Task: Write 5 different openings for the same presentation topic:

  1. Statistic hook
  2. Question hook
  3. Story hook
  4. Bold statement hook
  5. Problem statement hook

Topic: [Your choice: work presentation, hobby, expertise]

Compare: Which is most engaging for your specific audience?

Exercise 5: Closing Strong

Time: 15 minutes
Goal: Practice powerful closings

For the same topic from Exercise 4, write 3 different closings:

  1. Summary + Call to Action
  2. Story that circles back to opening
  3. Vision of future + Final statement

Practice delivering each out loud. Which feels most impactful?

Exercise 6: Structure Selection

Time: 20 minutes
Goal: Choose appropriate structures for different situations

For each scenario, identify the best structure and explain why:

ScenarioBest StructureWhy?
Project update to boss
Sales pitch to client
Training new employees
Explaining why project failed
Motivating your team
Comparing three solutions

Exercise 7: Transition Practice

Time: 15 minutes
Goal: Smooth transitions between points

Task: Create transitions between these points:

Topic: Improving team productivity

Point 1: Better communication reduces errors
[YOUR TRANSITION]
Point 2: Clear goals increase motivation
[YOUR TRANSITION]
Point 3: Regular feedback accelerates growth

Write at least 3 different transition types:

  • Sequential
  • Causal
  • Comparative

Exercise 8: Restructure Exercise

Time: 20 minutes
Goal: Improve poorly structured content

Given this messy communication:

"So we need to do something about the website because it's old and customers are complaining. Also, the sales team isn't hitting targets. Maybe it's the pricing, I don't know. Marketing keeps asking for more budget. Oh, and we should think about new markets. The competition is tough. Our product is good though. Training might help. I think we should meet about this."

Your task: Restructure this into:

  1. Clear opening
  2. 2-3 organized main points
  3. Strong closing

Exercise 9: One-Minute Message

Time: 30 minutes (includes practice)
Goal: Deliver a perfectly structured 60-second message

Steps:

  1. Choose a topic (recommendation, update, idea)
  2. Structure using a framework (PREP, What-So What-Now What, etc.)
  3. Write it out
  4. Practice out loud
  5. Time yourself
  6. Refine to exactly 60 seconds
  7. Record final version

Success criteria:

  • Clear beginning, middle, end
  • Fits in 60 seconds
  • Includes all necessary elements
  • Delivered smoothly

Exercise 10: The Complete Presentation Structure

Time: 60 minutes
Goal: Build a fully structured 5-minute presentation

Assignment: Create a complete 5-minute presentation on a topic of your choice.

Requirements:

Opening (30 seconds):

  • Hook
  • Context
  • Roadmap

Body (3-4 minutes):

  • Three main points
  • Evidence for each
  • Clear transitions

Closing (30 seconds):

  • Summary
  • Call to action or final statement

Deliverables:

  1. Outline with timings
  2. Full script or detailed notes
  3. Transition phrases marked
  4. Opening and closing memorized

Bonus: Deliver it, record it, review it for structure effectiveness.


Congratulations! You've now completed all seven chapters of effective communication. You have the frameworks, techniques, and knowledge to communicate with clarity, confidence, and impact in any situation. The key now is practice: apply these principles daily, and watch your communication transform your relationships, career, and life.

Remember: Communication is not talent. It's skill. And every skill improves with deliberate practice.