Cracking yourself up is a good thing. It means you are serious about what you say but you don’t take yourself too seriously. Shalom and Merry Christmas.
Your distinction between technical jargon and empty buzzwords captures something crucial about professional credibility. The observation that buzzwords function as a mask for insecurity rings true, becuase when someone genuinely understands their domain they can explain it without retreating into abstraction. What's particulary sharp here is the connection between self-confidence and communication clarity,advisors who lean on vague "strategic alignment" talk are essentially telegraphing doubt about their own value proposition.
Excellent article! No one cares what you know unless you can communicate it clearly at their level of understanding. Know the client!
Thank you!
Cracking yourself up is a good thing. It means you are serious about what you say but you don’t take yourself too seriously. Shalom and Merry Christmas.
Your distinction between technical jargon and empty buzzwords captures something crucial about professional credibility. The observation that buzzwords function as a mask for insecurity rings true, becuase when someone genuinely understands their domain they can explain it without retreating into abstraction. What's particulary sharp here is the connection between self-confidence and communication clarity,advisors who lean on vague "strategic alignment" talk are essentially telegraphing doubt about their own value proposition.