Getting to the point.
What was the best lesson you learned from a teacher, that you have carried with you into your career? Seriously... share your story with me on LinkedIn. I'm looking for inspiration. Tuesdays are good for that (while Mondays are for good for spaghetti).
The best lesson I learned was from Prof. Brown in my first year of college. Before assigning us our first essay of the semester, he went on a long rant about how high school failed us by making us think a good essay is a long essay. He elaborated about how, in the many public and private positions he held, brevity was critical. If we wanted to be persuasive, the critical first step would be to ensure we were being brief.
He gave us a controversial topic we had to outline in 1,000 words or less. Every word over would get a 1% deduction.
For our next essay he reiterated the importance of brevity but also challenged us even more: We had to pick a side, and persuade. 750 words. 2% deduction for every additional word.
Final essay. The topic required giving background info, provide recent context, and persuade using data. 500 words. 5% deduction.
I like prose. I like flowery language. Prof. Brown taught me to subtract. If there's one way I consistently receive praise it's with my communications with leadership.