Is your work generating interest and excitement?
Craft engaging science communications where complex material is simple and understandable.
Are you attracting the collaborations you want?
When audiences understand your work and why it matters, they want to support it.
Is your work making the impact it deserves to make?
Audiences must understand your work to be inspired by it.
Are you developing non-technical skills needed to gain influence and prestige?
As scientists progress in their careers, communication skills become increasingly important.

Coaching

Make your breakthroughs break through!

A researcher’s worst nightmare is to give a talk followed by no questions from the audience — a clear signal that they did not understand your content.

This fate is avoidable. A few hours of coaching could mean the difference between blank stares and email checking and an attentive, appreciative audience.

We help you create clear and thoughtfully structured presentations that:

  • Hold the audience’s attention
  • Show them the value of your work
  • Improve your professional credibility

Team Training

You have a great team. Teach them to make their work shine.

Team leads juggle many roles: technical mentor, manager, career advisor, presentations coach, and more. Too often, instruction in science communications is a casualty of limited time, even though subpar presentations reflect poorly on both mentor and mentee.

Science Clarity’s training workshops will ensure your team members learn the core principles of effective technical communication.

Our training programs:

  • Teach actionable communication skills
  • Save you editing and revision time
  • Provide growth and development opportunities
  • Boost your reputation and that of your team

Speaking

Start your team’s journey from jargon to genius.

Most technical experts are not even aware that their presentations are confusing. Poor scientific communication is so common, enigmatic dialogues are accepted as normal.

It’s time to raise the communication bar.

Setting a higher standard starts with an educational seminar introducing your team to topics such as the key components of effective science communications, common communication mistakes researchers make, and charting basics. In one to two hours, we will inspire your team to think about their communications differently.

Key themes include:

  • Using the 3 As to achieve effective science communication: Audience, Aim, and Argument
  • Understanding and identifying unintentional barriers to effective communication
  • Applying techniques to simplify and distill key messages

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