High-Context and Low-Context Signals
In some settings, shared history and subtle cues carry meaning, making brevity powerful but potentially opaque to newcomers. Elsewhere, explicit detail avoids confusion and demonstrates thoroughness. Practice adapting both ways: summarize first, then expand when needed. Try saying, 'Here is the headline in one line, followed by background if helpful.' Invite others to indicate preference. Over time, teams can develop a shared rhythm that avoids over-explaining while still welcoming context when decisions carry risk.