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3 Ways to Express Your Thoughts So That Everyone Will Understand You | Alan Alda | Big Think

Big Think | August 28, 2025



3 Ways to Express Your Thoughts So That Everyone Will Understand You
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Alan Alda doesn’t want you to take “pro tips” from anyone—not even Alan Alda. When it comes to his area of expertise—public speaking and empathetic communication—there are no hacks or shortcuts; if you want to be a world-class public speaker, you have to earn those stripes through the process of deeply understanding what it is to talk, listen, and connect. Alda calls tips intellectual abstractions; it’s akin to the difference between information and knowledge, between parroting a few words in French and speaking the actual language. But, when pushed by yours truly at Big Think, Alda does give up the goods (willingly—we promise no Alan Aldas were harmed in the making of this video). His best tip to become a better communicator is what he calls the three rules of three. Listen to his practical hints for becoming a communication pro but, as he remarks, try to get there organically through the process. Alan Alda’s most recent book is If I Understood You, Would I Have This Look on My Face?
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ALAN ALDA:

Alan Alda has earned international recognition as an actor, writer and director. In addition to The Aviator, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award, Alda’s films include Crimes and Misdemeanors, Everyone Says I Love You, Flirting With Disaster, Manhattan Murder Mystery, And The Band Played On, Same Time, Next Year and California Suite, as well as The Seduction of Joe Tynan, which he wrote, and The Four Seasons, Sweet Liberty, A New Life and Betsy’s Wedding, all of which he wrote and directed. Recently, his film appearances have included Tower Heist, Wanderlust, and Steven Spielberg’s Bridge of Spies.

He helped found the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science at Stony Brook University where he is a Visiting Professor, helping to develop innovative programs that enable scientists to communicate more effectively with the public. He originated The Flame Challenge, a yearly international competition for scientists in which they compete to explain complex scientific concepts so that 11-year-olds can understand them. Since 2008, he has worked with physicist Brian Greene in presenting the annual World Science Festival in New York City, attended since its inception by over a million people. He has won numerous awards for communicating science from the National Academy of Sciences, the American Chemical Society, and the National Science Board.

Alda was born in New York City, the son of the distinguished actor, Robert Alda. He began acting in the theater at the age of 16 in summer stock in Barnesville, Pennsylvania.

During his junior year at Fordham University, he studied in Europe where he performed on the stage in Rome and on television in Amsterdam with his father.

After college, he acted at the Cleveland Playhouse on a Ford Foundation grant. On his return to New York, he was seen on Broadway, off-Broadway and on television. He later acquired improvisational training with “Second City” in New York and “Compass” at Hyannisport. That background in political and social satire led to his work as a regular on television’s “That Was the Week That Was.”

His wife, Arlene, is the author of nineteen books, including her latest, Just Kids from the Bronx. An award winning professional photographer, her work has appeared in a number of magazines and books. They have three daughters and eight grandchildren.c
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TRANSCRIPT:

Alan Alda: I don’t really like tips; tips about communicating well, tips about writing. What I would prefer is a process that transforms you so the tips take place automatically.
I mean for instance, very often a tip is given: “When you’re speaking to a crowd, vary the pace of your speech, vary the volume.”

Well, those are two good things, but if they happen mechanically it gets to be kind of boring. Some people are encouraged when they’re coached: “At this point leave where you’re standing and walk over there and take a pause.”

Well, maybe that makes sense in terms of how it’s written; at the end of that paragraph you want to make a space before the next paragraph, but it doesn’t necessarily make sense in terms of how you’re talking and relating to the people you’re talking with.

That—relating to them—should be the source of a pause, the source of moving, because it comes out of the thought process I’m going through and it comes out of the thought process I sense you’re going through. Have you understood that last…

Read the full transcript at https://bigthink.com/videos/alan-alda-we-were-built-to-connect-with-other-people-heres-how-to-be-better-at-it

Written by Big Think

Comments

This post currently has 34 comments.

  1. @Strill_

    August 28, 2025 at 2:36 am

    My teachers in school always did this and I absolutely hated it. Complete waste of time repeating the same thing over and over again. I slept through class.

  2. @2bnew517

    August 28, 2025 at 2:36 am

    Act 1 – tell them what you are going to tell them
    Act 2 – tell it to them
    Act 3 – tell them what you just tell them

    If you have 2 minutes to summarize a lengthy report to your leader or audience. Tell them:

    One Fact
    One Anecdote (story)
    One Solution

  3. @studytosparkle

    August 28, 2025 at 2:36 am

    班代表:
    1. 三個重點法則
    當我們在與人交流時,三個重點是艾達所建議的基礎法則。他強調,無論是口頭演講或寫作,應該專注於傳達三個重要的訊息。過多的訊息往往無法被記住,聽眾的注意力也容易分散,因此將資訊濃縮成三個關鍵點,不僅能增強記憶效果,還能提升表達的清晰度。

    2. 多角度解釋
    在表達複雜或難以理解的概念時,艾達建議我們應該嘗試用三種不同的方式來解釋同一個問題。這樣做可以從不同角度呈現該概念,幫助聽眾建立立體的理解,並增加他們理解的機會。例如,你可以透過類比、故事或具體數據來解釋同一個問題,使其更加生動易懂。

    3. 反覆重申
    有些訊息可能需要多次強調才能確保聽眾完全理解。第三條法則是將重要的訊息在講話中重複三次。這樣做能讓聽眾在初次聽到時開始理解,第二次時更為熟悉,第三次時就能完全吸收並做出反應。重複不僅能強化記憶,也能提高訊息的可接受性。

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