Absolutely. If you can't break down your ideas into digestible chunks in terms that people are familiar with, you can not communicate. If you communicate well, and understand the dynamics of rapport, you will always be more effective than someone who is not. In any industry.
Fortunately it is something that can be learned. Social dynamics can be gamed and leveraged in a multitude of ways, but again, it comes down to your skill space, and what tangent your mind has had you studying all your life.
I think you missed what I wrote. I wrote about the ability to break information down into digestible chunks of familiar language, and understanding how rapport works. That's not "trying too hard with big words".
Again, if you think hyper intelligent people are somehow "more" likely to be affluent, I'm not sure you've met many hyper intelligent people.
Speaking to "normies" is a skillset. Particular in things like board rooms and meetings with stakeholders who's only role is to control purse string. Again, this is entirely different than "trying too hard with big words".
Or maybe the intelligent people you dealt with are a different demographic than I'm used to dealing with and have dealt with.
Absolutely. If you can't break down your ideas into digestible chunks in terms that people are familiar with, you can not communicate. If you communicate well, and understand the dynamics of rapport, you will always be more effective than someone who is not. In any industry.
Fortunately it is something that can be learned. Social dynamics can be gamed and leveraged in a multitude of ways, but again, it comes down to your skill space, and what tangent your mind has had you studying all your life.
You haven't met many brilliant people if you think that honestly.
I think you missed what I wrote. I wrote about the ability to break information down into digestible chunks of familiar language, and understanding how rapport works. That's not "trying too hard with big words".
Again, if you think hyper intelligent people are somehow "more" likely to be affluent, I'm not sure you've met many hyper intelligent people.
Speaking to "normies" is a skillset. Particular in things like board rooms and meetings with stakeholders who's only role is to control purse string. Again, this is entirely different than "trying too hard with big words".
Or maybe the intelligent people you dealt with are a different demographic than I'm used to dealing with and have dealt with.