What You’ll Learn
🚫 The Myth
“Smart people speak fast because their brains process information quickly. If you speak slowly, panels will think you’re slow-witted or unprepared. In GDs especially, you need to speak rapidly to get your points across before others interrupt. Fast speech signals confidence, competence, and quick thinking.”
Candidates deliberately speed up their speech, cramming as many words as possible into their allotted time. In GDs, they rush through points to “claim airtime” before being interrupted. In interviews, they race through answers as if being timed. The result: panels struggle to follow, key points get lost, and the candidate appears anxious rather than intelligent.
🤔 Why People Believe It
This myth has deep cultural and psychological roots:
1. The “Quick-Witted” Stereotype
Movies and media portray intelligent characters as rapid-fire talkers—think fast-talking lawyers, quick-responding debaters, or the witty protagonist with instant comebacks. We’ve internalized the idea that mental speed = verbal speed. But this is fiction, not reality.
2. GD Anxiety and Interruption Fear
In group discussions, candidates observe that slower speakers get interrupted. They conclude that speed is necessary for survival. But they’re confusing correlation with causation. Slower speakers get interrupted because they lack assertiveness, not because they lack speed. You can speak at moderate pace with strong presence and hold the floor easily.
3. Nervous Energy Misinterpretation
When anxious, people naturally speed up—it’s a physiological response. Candidates notice that confident-seeming peers often speak quickly and assume the speed causes the confidence appearance. In reality, both the speed and the apparent confidence might be anxiety manifesting differently.
4. Quantity Over Quality Mindset
Some candidates believe more words = more points = better evaluation. They try to maximize verbal output. But panels don’t score by word count. They’d rather hear 3 clear points than 7 rushed, incoherent ones.
✅ The Reality
Research and panel experience consistently show the opposite of what this myth suggests:
What Fast Speech Actually Signals
- “I’m intelligent—my brain works fast”
- “I’m confident and know my stuff”
- “I have so much to share”
- “I’m energetic and enthusiastic”
- “I can think on my feet”
- “They seem nervous or anxious”
- “Hard to follow—what’s the point?”
- “Sounds like a rehearsed script”
- “Not giving us time to process”
- “Lacks gravitas and presence”
The Science of Speaking Pace
- Listener comprehension drops significantly
- Key points blur together—nothing stands out
- No time for emphasis or pauses
- Panel can’t take notes or follow structure
- Speaker appears to be “performing” rather than conversing
- Listener comprehension maximized
- Key points can be emphasized with pace variation
- Strategic pauses create impact
- Panel has time to process and formulate follow-ups
- Speaker appears confident, thoughtful, and in control
Real Scenarios from Interview Rooms
But he delivered it in 45 seconds flat. No pauses. No emphasis. Each point blurred into the next. When he finished, there was a moment of silence. Panel member later said: “I caught maybe 60% of what he said. By the time I processed one point, he was three sentences ahead.”
Panel’s follow-up: “Can you slow down and tell us again what specific skill gaps you want to address?”
He slowed down for about 10 seconds, then gradually sped back up. The pattern repeated throughout the interview. Each answer had good content that was undermined by delivery that made it hard to absorb.
“Three reasons. [pause] First, I’ve hit a ceiling in my current role…” [explained for 30 seconds] “[pause] Second, I want to transition from operations to strategy…” [explained for 25 seconds] “[pause] And third, IIM Bangalore specifically because of the healthcare management electives…” [explained for 20 seconds]
Total time: about 90 seconds for an answer that could have been crammed into 50. But the panel heard every word. They could follow the structure. They had time to process.
Panel reaction: Nodding during the answer. No requests to repeat or slow down. Follow-up questions built naturally on her points because they’d actually absorbed them.
Candidate A (Fast): Spoke 6 times, each intervention rapid-fire. Packed 3-4 points into each 30-second burst. Technically had the most “content” by volume. But each intervention was so dense and fast that other candidates couldn’t respond to his points—they literally couldn’t process them fast enough to build on them. He was essentially talking to himself.
Candidate B (Measured): Spoke 4 times, each intervention at moderate pace. Made one clear point per intervention, with a pause at the end. Other candidates frequently responded to her points: “Building on what she said…” “I disagree with her point about…” Her ideas became the threads the discussion wove around.
Post-GD panel discussion: “Candidate A dominated airtime but didn’t influence the discussion. Candidate B spoke less but her points shaped the conversation. That’s leadership.”
Candidate B: Advanced to PI, eventually converted. In GDs, influence matters more than volume. You can’t influence people who can’t process what you’re saying.
⚠️ The Impact: What Fast Speech Actually Costs You
| Dimension | Fast Speech Effect | Measured Speech Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Comprehension | Panel catches 50-70% of content. Key points blur together. They miss nuances and specifics. | Panel catches 90%+ of content. Key points land clearly. Specifics register and are remembered. |
| Perceived confidence | Appears anxious, nervous, or over-rehearsed. Speed signals “I need to get this out before I forget.” | Appears calm, confident, and in control. Pace signals “I trust what I’m saying and know you’ll listen.” |
| Gravitas | Words feel disposable. Nothing stands out. Candidate seems junior or inexperienced. | Words carry weight. Key points are emphasized. Candidate seems mature and thoughtful. |
| Engagement | Panel disengages because processing is exhausting. They wait for you to finish rather than engaging. | Panel stays engaged because they can follow. They nod, react, and formulate meaningful follow-ups. |
| In GDs | Others can’t build on your points because they can’t process them. You speak but don’t influence. | Others respond to and build on your points. You become a node that discussion flows through. |
B-schools are looking for future business leaders. Think about the executives you’ve seen—CEOs giving speeches, leaders in meetings, managers presenting to teams. They almost universally speak at a measured, deliberate pace. They pause for effect. They let points land. Fast-talking is associated with salespeople trying to close before objections arise, or junior employees nervous about their standing. It is not associated with executive presence. When you speak rapidly in an interview, you’re signaling that you’re not yet ready for leadership—even if your content is leadership-quality.
💡 What Actually Works: Mastering Pace for Impact
The goal isn’t to speak slowly—it’s to speak at a pace that maximizes comprehension and impact.
The Pace Optimization Framework
Target: 145-165 WPM for conversational interview answers. Slower (130-145) for important points you want to emphasize.
Reality check: If you’ve never measured your speaking pace, you don’t know if you have a problem. Measure first, then adjust.
Script example: “Why MBA? [1-sec pause] Three reasons. [1-sec pause] First… [content] [2-sec pause] Second… [content] [2-sec pause] Third…”
Why it works: Pauses signal confidence (“I’m not afraid of silence”), create emphasis (“This point matters”), and give listeners processing time. They’re more impactful than slowing your speaking rate overall.
Example: “I led a team of 12 [slower, emphasizing] to deliver a project that saved [normal pace] the company [slow down] two hundred thousand dollars [pause] in the first quarter alone.”
The pattern: Numbers, results, and conclusions = slower. Context and transitions = moderate. This trains the listener’s ear on what matters.
Goal: Not to speak at this pace in interviews, but to recalibrate your internal sense of what “slow” and “normal” feel like. After a week of practice, your natural pace will be slower without conscious effort.
Reality: This technique is used by broadcast journalists and professional speakers. It works.
Pace Adjustments by Context
Listen to how professional podcast hosts speak—measured, deliberate, with pauses for emphasis. Now listen to how guests who are nervous speak—faster, with less variation, fewer pauses. Practice speaking like the host, not the nervous guest. Record yourself and compare. This single adjustment—adopting a “host” cadence—can transform how you’re perceived in interviews.
🎯 Self-Check: Is Your Pace Working For or Against You?
Speaking fast doesn’t signal intelligence—it signals anxiety. Panels at top B-schools consistently prefer measured, deliberate speech that allows them to follow and engage. Fast speech reduces comprehension, undermines gravitas, and in GDs, prevents others from building on your points. The candidates who convert at the highest rates speak slower than average, use strategic pauses, and vary their pace for emphasis. If you want to appear confident and intelligent, slow down. Trust your content. Give your words weight. That’s what executive presence sounds like.