Lucy
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Talk Practice · 2026

How to Control Your Speaking Pace and Rhythm

Speaking pace is one of the most commonly cited weaknesses in feedback on presentations. Most people speak too fast, especially under pressure, and the audience stops following before the content is finished. Learning to control your pace is one of the fastest improvements you can make to your speaking.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR

The three things that actually matter

1

The 20 percent rule

When you feel you are speaking at a natural pace, slow down by 20 percent. It will feel uncomfortably slow to you and natural to your audience. Anxious pace tends to feel normal to the speaker because adrenaline speeds up internal time perception.

2

Pause as a pace tool

Natural rhythm in speaking comes not just from pace within sentences but from pauses between ideas. Practise pausing for one to two seconds between major points rather than filling the space with filler words or rushing to the next point.

3

Read aloud for rhythm training

Read text written in good spoken prose out loud, following the natural punctuation for pauses. This trains the ear for spoken rhythm and builds the habit of breathing and pausing at natural sentence boundaries.

TLDR:Practice pace control in real conversation with Lucy. Deliberately slow your responses by 20 percent and notice whether the conversation still flows naturally. Regular practice in a low-stakes context builds the habit of slower pace that holds up in high-pressure situations.

Why Lucy OS1

The 20 percent rule

When you feel you are speaking at a natural pace, slow down by 20 percent. It will feel uncomfortably slow to you and natural to your audience. Anxious pace tends to feel normal to the speaker because adrenaline speeds up internal time perception.

Pause as a pace tool

Natural rhythm in speaking comes not just from pace within sentences but from pauses between ideas. Practise pausing for one to two seconds between major points rather than filling the space with filler words or rushing to the next point.

Read aloud for rhythm training

Read text written in good spoken prose out loud, following the natural punctuation for pauses. This trains the ear for spoken rhythm and builds the habit of breathing and pausing at natural sentence boundaries.

Energy and pace as a system

Pace and energy should vary together. Slower pace with lower energy conveys gravity and seriousness. Faster pace with higher energy conveys excitement and momentum. Practise using both levers consciously rather than keeping both constant.

QUICK COMPARISON

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Gets personal over time ✓ Builds your context continuously ✗ Starts from zero every session

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1

Create your free account

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2

Connect your Google Calendar

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3

Start talking about how to control your speaking pace and rhythm

Speak naturally. Lucy listens, responds by voice, and begins building context from your very first exchange. The more you use it, the better it gets.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I stop speaking too fast when I am nervous?
Deliberately slow your breathing before you speak. Pace follows breath: shallow fast breathing produces fast speech. Slow diaphragm breathing produces measured pace. Practice the breathing first and the pace will follow.
Is there such a thing as speaking too slowly?
Yes. Pace so slow that it sounds deliberate, laboured, or condescending loses the audience for different reasons than speaking too fast. The target range for most presentations is 120 to 150 words per minute. Record yourself and measure if you are unsure.
How do I add emphasis without changing my pace?
Volume, pitch, and pause all produce emphasis independently of pace. A pause before a key word, a slight increase in projection, or a drop in pitch can all emphasise a point without requiring you to slow your overall pace.
Does speaking pace affect how intelligent or confident you sound?
Yes. Research consistently shows that controlled, measured pace is associated with perceived confidence and intelligence. Very fast pace is associated with nervousness. Very slow pace can read as uncertainty or lack of preparation. Controlled variation signals command.

MORE IN THIS CATEGORY

→ How to Warm Up Your Voice Before a Presentation → Voice Warm-Up Exercises for Speaking → Breathing Exercises Before Speaking → How to Prepare Your Voice for a Speech → How to Practice Your Presentation Out Loud → What to Do the Day Before a Presentation → How to Stop Stuttering When Nervous → How to Calm Nerves Before a Presentation → See all

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