[33:33] What if AI could help you think more clearly, simplify complex ideas, and sharpen your message—without replacing your voice or creativity? In this episode of the Toastmasters Podcast, Greg Gazin welcomes back Diane Windingland, DTM, for a practical conversation on using AI as a thinking partner to improve clarity, strengthen messages, and communicate with greater impact.

Diane offers insights on AI that remain highly relevant today, building on her 2023 Toastmaster magazine article, Using AI to Clarify, Simplify, and Test Your Message. She explains how discovering AI reshaped her workflow—from drafting content and evaluating slides to helping coaching clients prepare for interviews, presentations, and everyday communication challenges. Diane also discusses how AI can reduce overwhelm, spark new ideas, and help speakers overcome “blank page paralysis,” while still requiring human judgment, personal stories, and emotional connection.

Listeners will hear Diane discuss:

  • Why AI isn’t a shortcut and how iteration leads to stronger messages
  • How effective prompting works, including audience, tone, purpose, and context
  • Using AI to simplify complex or technical ideas for broader audiences
  • Brainstorming metaphors, examples, and alternate explanations with AI
  • How AI-assisted feedback can improve clarity, pacing, and structure
  • Maintaining authenticity while using AI responsibly
  • Common pitfalls, including hallucinations and accepting the first response

Diane also shares personal stories, from crafting a humorous Valentine’s poem for her husband to experimenting with AI while developing a humorous speech. She explains how she incorporates AI into her coaching practice and encourages clients to iterate for clarity rather than settle for first drafts. As the episode wraps up, Diane offers practical do’s and don’ts, reminding listeners to treat the first answer as a draft. Whether preparing a contest speech, designing a workshop, or writing a sensitive email, AI can help communicators think more clearly—one revision at a time.

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