- Alexia Poe, a strategic communications expert with 30 years of experience across journalism, government, and consulting, has released a free 15-minute guide designed to help people catch confusion early and communicate with confidence.
Nashville, TN, Jun 09, 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Most communication breakdowns happen before anyone speaks. Meetings end with nodding heads, then five teams walk out chasing five different goals. Emails get sent with unclear next steps. Leaders believe everyone is aligned, only to find out weeks later that nobody moved in the same direction.
Alexia Poe has spent three decades watching this pattern repeat in newsrooms, governor’s offices, boardrooms, and crisis situations. Now, she has released a free resource called the 15-Minute Clarity Check. The tool is designed to help people test whether their message will land before they send it.
“I’ve been in rooms where everyone nodded yes. Then a week later, five teams were working toward five different goals,” Poe said. “Clarity creates momentum. When people understand what is happening, they can move forward with confidence. Without that clarity, even strong plans can stall.”
A Career Built on Making the Complex Simple
Poe started her career as a television anchor and reporter before becoming the youngest person and only the second woman to serve as Press Secretary to a Tennessee Governor. She went on to serve as Deputy Press Secretary to First Lady Laura Bush, Communications Director for U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander, and Director of Communications for Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam. She also led the public campaign for the Music City Center, a $600 million convention center project, working for Mayor Karl Dean as Director of Economic Development for Nashville/Davidson County.
In 2015, she founded Poe Consulting, a certified woman-owned strategic consulting firm based in Nashville, Tennessee. The firm helps organizations navigate complex challenges, strengthen leadership communication, and turn ideas into action.
“In government, every word matters. You are speaking not just for yourself, but for the people you serve,” Poe said. “That time taught me to listen first. You cannot tell a story well if you don’t fully understand it.”
Why the Clarity Check Exists
The guide grew out of a simple observation. Poe noticed that most communication problems could be prevented if people paused to ask a few questions before hitting send, stepping into a meeting, or rolling out a decision.
The Clarity Check asks users to test their message against four filters. Can you explain the core idea in one sentence? Do you know exactly what you want people to do next? Can you name what might confuse your audience? Have you stated why it matters to them?
“Simple wins. If you can’t explain it clearly, it’s probably not ready yet,” Poe said.
The tool is built for speed. It takes 15 minutes or less to complete. It works for emails, presentations, announcements, project kickoffs, and even difficult conversations. Users can apply it solo or as a team exercise before launching a new initiative.
Use This in 15 Minutes
The Clarity Check is a one-page guide that can be completed in a single sitting. Start by writing down the message or idea you want to communicate. Then answer four questions.
First, state your core message in one sentence. If you cannot do this, the message is not ready yet. Second, write down the single action you want your audience to take. If there are multiple actions, decide which one matters most. Third, list anything that could confuse your audience. This might include jargon, unclear timelines, or missing context. Fourth, explain why your message matters to the person receiving it.
Once you finish, review your answers. If any feel vague, revise before you communicate. The guide is designed to be used repeatedly. Teams can run through it before every major announcement or campaign launch.
Common Mistakes People Make
One of the biggest mistakes is assuming everyone starts with the same information. Leaders often communicate from their own level of knowledge and forget that their audience does not have the same context. The result is confusion, even when the speaker believes they were clear.
Another mistake is skipping the why. People are told what to do and how to do it, but they are not told why it matters. Without that understanding, they struggle to prioritize or execute.
A third mistake is trying to say too much at once. Messages get packed with detail, timelines, and exceptions. By the time the speaker finishes, the audience has lost the main point. Clarity requires focus. One idea, one action, one reason.
Finally, many people never test their message. They assume it will make sense. They send the email, make the announcement, or launch the project without checking whether the core idea is clear. The Clarity Check solves this by forcing a pause.
A Simple Fix for a Costly Problem
Miscommunication costs time, money, and trust. Projects stall. Teams duplicate work. Leaders lose credibility. In some cases, poor communication creates crises that could have been avoided.
Poe has seen the consequences firsthand. She has helped organizations recover from miscommunication during high-stakes moments. She has also helped prevent problems by building clarity into the process from the start.
“Clear communication builds trust. And trust is what moves everything forward,” Poe said.
The 15-Minute Clarity Check is designed to give people a tool they can use before the problem starts. It is free, fast, and easy to apply. It works in any industry and at any level of experience.
How to Use the Resource Today
The 15-Minute Clarity Check is available now at no cost. Readers can download the guide and start using it immediately. The tool works for individuals, teams, and entire organizations. It can be printed, shared, and adapted to fit specific needs.
To access the guide, visit Poe Consulting online or contact Alexia Poe directly. The resource is part of a broader effort to help people communicate with greater clarity, especially in high-pressure situations.
Poe encourages anyone who sends emails, leads meetings, or manages teams to try the Clarity Check before their next communication moment. The goal is simple: stop confusion before it starts, and help people move forward with confidence.
About Alexia Poe
Alexia Poe is Principal of Poe Consulting, LLC, a certified woman-owned strategic consulting firm based in Nashville, Tennessee. With more than 30 years of experience across journalism, government, higher education, and business, she has worked as a morning television anchor and reporter and held senior communications roles for two Tennessee Governors, a United States Senator, in the East Wing of the White House, and for a Nashville Mayor. She graduated magna cum laude from the University of Tennessee and serves on the University of Tennessee Knoxville Chancellor’s Advisory Board, the Tennessee Performing Arts Center Board of Directors and Executive Committee, and the Friends of Warner Parks Board of Directors and Executive Committee.
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Echo Gazette journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.