#9

How to build on your Learning Outcomes without getting lost.

Building strong Learning Outcomes is about more than a headline. It’s about clusters: sharp sub-points that turn ideas into usable takeaways. This note shows you how to map them clearly, avoid fluff, and design workshops that are easier to build, easier to teach, and easier to sell.


A sharp Learning Outcome is your north star.
But to get there, you’ll need a map.

Because each outcome isn’t just one idea.
It’s a cluster. A core. A little constellation of related insights.

Think of it like this:

You’re not just delivering a headline.
You’re building a case.
A Learning Outcome is your thesis.
The sub-points are the proof.

The question is:
“What else do they need to know, believe, or be able to do…
for the main takeaway to truly click?”

That’s your list.

It’s not about adding fluff.
It’s about adding flow.

These sub-points are the stepping stones that lead to the shift.
Mini-takes. Little truths.
Sharp enough to matter.
Small enough to stick.

Here’s a quick example:



“Speak So They Listen” - A Workshop on Clearer Communication

Learning Outcome 1: Say less. Mean more.

- Why people stop listening after 7 seconds
- The power of one idea per message
- How to cut half your words without losing your meaning
- Practicing the "punchline first" method

Learning Outcome 2: Use structure to think out loud

- How to talk without prepping a script
- 3 simple formats that make you sound smarter (even on the spot)
- The difference between being spontaneous and being messy
- A go-to template for every tough question or pitch

Learning Outcome 3: Make it stick

- What actually makes a message memorable
- Why examples beat explanations
- When to pause, and when to repeat
- Ending with impact (instead of trailing off)




See the difference?

Now your workshop isn’t just “about communication.”
It’s a roadmap.
A set of sharp, helpful, usable takeaways.

And the benefits? Massive.

Easier to build.
Easier to teach.
Easier to sell.

Yup, you can drop this exact outline in a promo email.
Or pitch it to a client.

Or get feedback from a real human before you build a single slide.
Ask: “Does anything feel off? Too boring? Too long? Missing something?”

You’ll catch the blind spots now.
Not during the session.

Once your clusters are set,
you can build everything else around them:
Exercises, slides, timing, handouts.

But this is the core. THE SKELETON.
The shape of your session.

And yes (again), you can reuse this exact outline for your promo.
You’ll be clear. So your audience knows what they’re signing up for.

Because if your blurbs are too vague,
you’ll end up with the wrong people in the room.

Thank you.
And Free Palestine.