![]() According to the FTC, the infomercial promised, in the words of Trudeau, that “you'll be able to read almost as fast as Howard. Berg teamed up with convicted felon and scamster Kevin Trudeau. In the mid-1990s, Berg appeared on television thanks to infomercials selling his Mega Reading system. At no point during his Tuesday Fox News or Fox Business programs did Cavuto note the FTC's actions against Berg. We've been featuring him a lot on my Fox News Channel show, literally ripping through every page of the federal government's 25,000 plus regulations.”īut there might be a bigger reason why Berg has a problem with government “rules and regulations”: He was previously reprimanded by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for “false” and “deceptive” claims related to his speed reading products. Howard Berg says it is too many damn rules and regulations. What does your reading regimen look like? Have any effective speed-reading tricks? Share your thoughts by commenting on this post.Yesterday, Fox host Neil Cavuto told viewers that the “world's fastest reader” knows “what is really slowing this country down. If I could read faster and comprehend (let alone enjoy) the words, I surely would. Pruning and prioritizing helps-not every article, chapter, post and comment thread is worth the time-and still the pile keeps rising. I won’t tell you my speed, but it's not fast enough. On the personal-finance side, throw in an investment newsletter or two, to make sure you're not missing some subtle but important trend.Īll in, it’s not hard to imagine, at 300 words per minute, having to set aside at least two hours of reading every day just to keep up-you know, when you're not doing other stuff like working, eating and spending time with your family.Īt 600 wpm (slightly better than a “high-level executive,” according to the Staples test), the daily regimen is still intense, but it effectively adds back an hour of reading time every day-or nearly an entire workday’s worth of reading every week. How about all those emails, texts and LinkedIn discussions (never mind any active engagement with the authors). That brings the daily total to 98 minutes. Out of necessity (or masochism), some even might feel the need to consult a fortifying textbook or How-To guide, so we'll round up the whole book load to 15 minutes a day. At 300 wpm, that comes to another 11 minutes a day. Continuing the exercise, assume each book contains 100,000 words ( a reasonable estimate), and the goal is to read one book a month. So far we’ve chewed up nearly an hour and a half every day and we haven’t even mentioned books-be it Michael Lewis’ latest financial best seller, the biography of a famous entrepreneur, the random novel (to keep up at cocktail parties), or whatever else happens to be on tap. Applying the ratios above, the total reading time over the course of a month comes to 50 minutes a day. Say the number is more like five, and each comes out once a week. But super-successful types (and those who aspire to be like them) don’t read just one publication. At 300 words a minute, you’ll spend 75 minutes plowing through one magazine. Say each publication is 100 pages long, the ratio of advertising to editorial pages is 50/50, and you think just half of those pages (25) are worth reading. Each issue typically runs between 60 and 150 pages. Consider that one page of text in a typical weekly or bimonthly news-and-analysis-style publication ( Forbes, The New Yorker, the New York Times magazine, etc.) contains roughly 900 words. Let’s look at magazines (yes, many people still read them). (Newspaper stories tend to run longer, blog posts shorter.) At 300 words per minute (the average-adult speed), you’ll spend 33 minutes a day, including weekends, on that part of your regimen.īut we’re just getting warmed up. Say you read 20 articles a day, each an average 500 words long. I'm sad to report that, for most of us, the words are winning. ![]() To put those rates in meaningful context, I applied them to the kind of serious reading regimen favored by the super-successful set.
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