Scientific Speed Reading: How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes 597 Comments

Topics: Mental Performance


(Photo: Dustin Diaz)

How much more could you get done if you completed all of your required reading in 1/3 or 1/5 the time?

Increasing reading speed is a process of controlling fine motor movement—period.

This post is a condensed overview of principles I taught to undergraduates at Princeton University in 1998 at a seminar called the “PX Project”. The below was written several years ago, so it’s worded like Ivy-Leaguer pompous-ass prose, but the results are substantial. In fact, while on an airplane in China two weeks ago, I helped Glenn McElhose increase his reading speed 34% in less than 5 minutes.

I have never seen the method fail. Here’s how it works…

The PX Project

The PX Project, a single 3-hour cognitive experiment, produced an average increase in reading speed of 386%.

It was tested with speakers of five languages, and even dyslexics were conditioned to read technical material at more than 3,000 words-per-minute (wpm), or 10 pages per minute. One page every 6 seconds. By comparison, the average reading speed in the US is 200-300 wpm (1/2 to 1 page per minute), with the top 1% of the population reading over 400 wpm…

If you understand several basic principles of the human visual system, you can eliminate inefficiencies and increase speed while improving retention.

To perform the exercises in this post and see the results, you will need: a book of 200+ pages that can lay flat when open, a pen, and a timer (a stop watch with alarm or kitchen timer is ideal). You should complete the 20 minutes of exercises in one session.

First, several definitions and distinctions specific to the reading process:

A) Synopsis: You must minimize the number and duration of fixations per line to increase speed.

You do not read in a straight line, but rather in a sequence of saccadic movements (jumps). Each of these saccades ends with a fixation, or a temporary snapshot of the text within you focus area (approx. the size of a quarter at 8 inches from reading surface). Each fixation will last ¼ to ½ seconds in the untrained subject. To demonstrate this, close one eye, place a fingertip on top of that eyelid, and then slowly scan a straight horizontal line with your other eye-you will feel distinct and separate movements and periods of fixation.

B) Synopsis: You must eliminate regression and back-skipping to increase speed.

The untrained subject engages in regression (conscious rereading) and back-skipping (subconscious rereading via misplacement of fixation) for up to 30% of total reading time.

C) Synopsis: You must use conditioning drills to increase horizontal peripheral vision span and the number of words registered per fixation.

Untrained subjects use central focus but not horizontal peripheral vision span during reading, foregoing up to 50% of their words per fixation (the number of words that can be perceived and “read” in each fixation).

The Protocol

You will 1) learn technique, 2) learn to apply techniques with speed through conditioning, then 3) learn to test yourself with reading for comprehension.

These are separate, and your adaptation to the sequencing depends on keeping them separate. Do not worry about comprehension if you are learning to apply a motor skill with speed, for example. The adaptive sequence is: technique ‘ technique with speed ‘ comprehensive reading testing.

As a general rule, you will need to practice technique at 3x the speed of your ultimate target reading speed. Thus, if you currently read at 300 wpm and your target reading speed is 900 wpm, you will need to practice technique at 1,800 words-per-minute, or 6 pages per minute (10 seconds per page).

We will cover two main techniques in this introduction:

1) Trackers and Pacers (to address A and B above)
2) Perceptual Expansion (to address C)

First – Determining Baseline

To determine your current reading speed, take your practice book (which should lay flat when open on a table) and count the number of words in 5 lines. Divide this number of words by 5, and you have your average number of words-per-line.

Example: 62 words/5 lines = 12.4, which you round to 12 words-per-line

Next, count the number of text lines on 5 pages and divide by 5 to arrive at the average number of lines per page. Multiply this by average number of words-per-line, and you have your average number of words per page.

Example: 154 lines/5 pages = 30.8, rounded to 31 lines per page x 12 words-per-line = 372 words per page

Mark your first line and read with a timer for 1 minute exactly-do not read faster than normal, and read for comprehension. After exactly one minute, multiply the number of lines by your average words-per-line to determine your current words-per-minute (wpm) rate.

Second – Trackers and Pacers

Regression, back-skipping, and the duration of fixations can be minimized by using a tracker and pacer. To illustrate the importance of a tracker-did you use a pen or finger when counting the number of words or lines in above baseline calculations? If you did, it was for the purpose of tracking-using a visual aid to guide fixation efficiency and accuracy. Nowhere is this more relevant than in conditioning reading speed by eliminating such inefficiencies.

For the purposes of this article, we will use a pen. Holding the pen in your dominant hand, you will underline each line (with the cap on), keeping your eye fixation above the tip of the pen. This will not only serve as a tracker, but it will also serve as a pacer for maintaining consistent speed and decreasing fixation duration. You may hold it as you would when writing, but it is recommended that you hold it under your hand, flat against the page.

1) Technique (2 minutes):

Practice using the pen as a tracker and pacer. Underline each line, focusing above the tip of the pen. DO NOT CONCERN YOURSELF WITH COMPREHENSION. Keep each line to a maximum of 1 second, and increase the speed with each subsequent page. Read, but under no circumstances should you take longer than 1 second per line.

2) Speed (3 minutes):

Repeat the technique, keeping each line to no more than ½ second (2 lines for a single “one-one-thousand”). Some will comprehend nothing, which is to be expected. Maintain speed and technique-you are conditioning your perceptual reflexes, and this is a speed exercise designed to facilitate adaptations in your system. Do not decrease speed. ½ second per line for 3 minutes; focus above the pen and concentrate on technique with speed. Focus on the exercise, and do not daydream.

Third – Perceptual Expansion

If you focus on the center of your computer screen (focus relating to the focal area of the fovea in within the eye), you can still perceive and register the sides of the screen. Training peripheral vision to register more effectively can increase reading speed over 300%. Untrained readers use up to ½ of their peripheral field on margins by moving from 1st word to last, spending 25-50% of their time “reading” margins with no content.

To illustrate, let us take the hypothetical one line: “Once upon a time, students enjoyed reading four hours a day.” If you were able to begin your reading at “time” and finish the line at “four”, you would eliminate 6 of 11 words, more than doubling your reading speed. This concept is easy to implement and combine with the tracking and pacing you’ve already practiced.

1) Technique (1 minute):

Use the pen to track and pace at a consistent speed of one line per second. Begin 1 word in from the first word of each line, and end 1 word in from the last word.

DO NOT CONCERN YOURSELF WITH COMPREHENSION. Keep each line to a maximum of 1 second, and increase the speed with each subsequent page. Read, but under no circumstances should you take longer than 1 second per line.

2) Technique (1 minute):

Use the pen to track and pace at a consistent speed of one line per second. Begin 2 words in from the first word of each line, and end 2 words in from the last word.

3) Speed (3 minutes):

Begin at least 3 words in from the first word of each line, and end 3 words in from the last word. Repeat the technique, keeping each line to no more than ½ second (2 lines for a single “one-one-thousand”).

Some will comprehend nothing, which is to be expected. Maintain speed and technique-you are conditioning your perceptual reflexes, and this is a speed exercise designed to facilitate adaptations in your system. Do not decrease speed. ½ second per line for 3 minutes; focus above the pen and concentrate on technique with speed. Focus on the exercise, and do not daydream.

Fourth – Calculate New WPM Reading Speed

Mark your first line and read with a timer for 1 minute exactly- Read at your fastest comprehension rate. Multiply the number of lines by your previously determined average words-per-line to get determine your new words-per-minute (wpm) rate.

Congratulations on completing your cursory overview of some of the techniques that can be used to accelerate human cognition (defined as the processing and use of information).

Final recommendations: If used for study, it is recommended that you not read 3 assignments in the time it would take you to read one, but rather, read the same assignment 3 times for exposure and recall improvement, depending on relevancy to testing.

Happy trails, page blazers.

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Related and Recommended Posts:

Tim Ferriss interviewed by Derek Sivers
Tim Ferriss articles on Huffington Post
How to Tim Ferriss Your Love Life

Posted on July 30th, 2009

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597 Comments

  • NSWJuly 30th, 2009, 6:33 pm

    Okay – it’s official – you are amazing.

    Thank you for the inspiration you provide in SO MANY areas!

    I look forward to testing this out!

    Regards,

    NSW

    Reply
    • k — June 27th, 2012, 12:48 pm

      this is great i already read at 400 plus words a minute but with this technique I read at 800 plus wpm which is astonishing.

      Reply
    • Carole — October 5th, 2012, 2:37 pm

      this is absolutely amazing. i went from 390 wpm to 1027 wpm:)

      Reply
    • Keith BrownJanuary 5th, 2013, 11:43 pm

      Most of the “how to” articles don’t actually explain how to do anything. This one actually helped me increase my speed after just ten minutes. Yup it’s that good.

      Reply
      • Eric — April 21st, 2013, 11:19 pm

        Wow I felt like such a slow reader @ 156 wpm. However this helped me reach 300 wpm in just 20 minutes!

        I guess I still have some work to do but at least I can understand a book much faster!

        Thanks for the guide!

        Reply
    • Clytie M,October 6th, 2013, 9:39 pm

      I know right! Sounds too good to be true! Wish I could do it tonight, but it’s 12:30am, and I’ve got school tomorrow!!! ._.

      Reply
  • JohnJuly 30th, 2009, 6:40 pm

    Interesting tactics here, Tim. I’ve got two months left of summer before I go back to college, so I have plenty of time to practice my visual page scanning. I’ve read the speed-reading tactics in the four hour work week book and this is a big improvement.

    Reply
  • Steve PlaceJuly 30th, 2009, 6:40 pm

    Good stuff. It seems that when I read speadreading articles, I start reading faster just because I’m forcing myself to be conscious of it.

    Thanks for the tips

    Reply
    • Gowtham — August 30th, 2012, 4:20 am

      Haha, that’s very true in my case. I find myself reading faster after i have read any article about speed reading or scanning.

      Reply
  • TylerJuly 30th, 2009, 7:01 pm

    This is fantastic!

    Now I must ask you, have you ever heard of photoreading?

    It basically is at the same speed, but it uses your subconcious to read while you are in a prepared brain state, and then you later activate the information within your subconcious by asking questions dealing with the purpose of reading the book, while you go back to speed read and “dip” into information spots that your intuition has to told you to check.

    This is all interesting information.

    Reply
    • vikalp — October 27th, 2011, 10:13 pm

      hey would u please inform me about the photoreading more..!!! i just want to learn and better if u suggest me the link of speed reading software as well.!

      Reply
    • mitch — May 26th, 2012, 12:10 pm

      Photoreading never heard of that I shall investigate, thanks..

      Reply
    • noocyte — January 5th, 2013, 11:51 am

      This is essentially how I made it through highschool without paying attention.

      Reply
    • Galib AnwarNovember 5th, 2013, 7:16 am

      Author Paul Scheele, co-founder of Learning Strategies
      Claims to train to PhotoRead at 25,000 wpm.

      Mostly unsupported.

      NASA states after a study named – ‘Preliminary Analysis of PhotoReading’,
      ‘The extremely rapid reading rates claimed by PhotoReaders were not observed’.

      Avelin Wood is said to have pioneered the science(if you will) of speed reading.

      Reply
  • Peter VoJuly 30th, 2009, 7:03 pm

    Just thought I’d share a related method for rapidly digesting books (reading for study as Tim discusses in his final recommendations) in this PDF published by the University of Michigan.

    http://www.si.umich.edu/~pne/PDF/howtoread.pdf

    Appropriately titled “How To Read A Book”, it highlights the concept of reading a book 3 times, each time with a different purpose:

    a) Overview: discovery (5?10 percent of total time)
    b) Detail: understanding (60?70 percent of total time)
    c) Notes: recall and note?taking (20?30 percent of total time)

    P.S. Tim, we met in Sydney last year and you signed my book with “Learn before you earn, and the rest will follow”. You are a great inspiration. Looking forward to your next book!

    Reply
    • business logoJuly 5th, 2011, 4:58 pm

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      Reply
  • Jordan LaubaughJuly 30th, 2009, 7:10 pm

    Awesome Tim!

    I have been waiting for this post for a long time. Since I read about your seminar in the book. Really sweet man.

    Jordan

    Reply
  • EricJuly 30th, 2009, 7:11 pm

    ok, making your tweets link to stumbleupon sucks for the same reason frames sucked 10 years ago
    http://www.useit.com/alertbox/9612.html

    Reply
  • miltownkidJuly 30th, 2009, 7:12 pm

    I’m off to work and will have to try the techniques listed above later, but for online speed reading I love this free web app:
    http://zapreader.com/

    Reply
    • Robb — August 19th, 2012, 3:08 pm

      Thanks for pointing out Zap Reader. I just tried it with an article and it works great.

      Reply
    • CJ — September 16th, 2012, 9:03 am

      I was looking for something to help my wife increase her reading speed for an upcoming English exam. I tried the site you linked, and in the process of testing it for her, my reading speed went from 750wpm to 900!
      I wasn’t even trying to increase my speed, but it was just so effective.

      Reply
    • James M.November 6th, 2012, 8:13 pm

      Wow, that’s a cool site for online speed reading practice. Thanks for the tip.

      I’ve read about something similar as Tim’s techniques in this post. I also remember having purchased a speed reading book back in high school. It does take time to practice but the rewards are great I suppose. Now, I think I’ll have to take speed reading seriously. :)

      Reply
  • Jet Set LifeJuly 30th, 2009, 7:14 pm

    Hey Tim,

    I brought a bunch of books you recommended to St Tropez this summer and could have really used these strategies :)

    All the best,
    Rob

    Reply
  • [email protected]July 30th, 2009, 7:19 pm

    This for me is the efficiency equivalent of the invention of OCR in scanning – especially when it is so easy to have wish lists on services like shelfari, but so little time to actually read them.
    Importance value = right up there.

    Reply
  • Michael VanderdonkJuly 30th, 2009, 7:22 pm

    Yeah… that just the tip of the iceberg Tim (as I’m sure you know).

    Very simply just using a pointing device to help the eye track increases reading speeds. Every (and I mean every) fast reader I’ve ever met users a finger, or other marker to ‘pull’ they eye along the line(s).

    My personal preference to training increased reading is to go far faster than possible, not just 3x. 2 to 3 seconds per PAGE. In the beginning they eyes might get only one or two words. Yet after 30-60 seconds, the brain starts to learn and expand that. With everyone I’ve taught, within minutes they are seeing much more than a single word. Then, on returning to their ‘regular’ speed, they find it much easier to see more of the sentence.

    Other tools for training the peripheral vision are some of the games on lumosity and other similar web sites.

    Then we go the other side and train how to read the page in one second, although that takes a bit more effort, training and experience.

    Reply
    • SottoMarch 12th, 2011, 11:51 pm

      amazing…thank u for sharing!

      Reply
    • Otabek Nurmatov — September 7th, 2013, 8:36 pm

      first of all Thank you Tim…Mr. Vanderdonk i’m really astonished by your words and do want to have a skill like that. If you don’t mind, please can you write how can i connect with you. If there isn’t the way to connect with you please write more instructions..

      Reply
  • JulioJuly 30th, 2009, 7:31 pm

    Nice Tim,

    I’ve been following your work for a while and you are one interesting dude. At first (to be honest) I thought you where all about “shameless self-promotion.” And now, after reading your blog for the past year all I can say is that your content is superb, smart and just plain cool.

    I will put this technique to practice and keep reading your posts, it took a while for me to post a comment but I think you are the real thing.

    Keep cool Tim,

    Julio

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissJuly 30th, 2009, 7:41 pm

      Dear Julio,

      Thanks very much for the kind words. I hope the best is yet to come :)

      Pura vida,

      Tim

      Reply
      • Samir — October 29th, 2011, 10:11 pm

        what is the meaning of this “(2 lines for a single “one-one-thousand”).” plz help . .

        Reply
        • tim — August 26th, 2012, 12:51 pm

          Hi Samir,

          Say the statement “one-one-thousand” out loud. thats it. it is jus a simple way of counting a second without looking at a clock. “two-one-thousand” would be two seconds “three-one-thousand” would be three and so on so forth… so the meaning is 2 lines read per second.

      • Agnel — January 9th, 2013, 9:31 am

        Boss,

        People are asking whether given target speed of 900 wpm, one must practice for 2,700 wpm (i.e. 3x as mentioned) and not 1,800 wpm as mentioned. Or else, you should say 2x. Pray, tell us. Or correct the article. We are desperate.

        Reply
  • steveJuly 30th, 2009, 7:34 pm

    oh can not wait to use this

    Reply
  • Noah Fleming — July 30th, 2009, 7:35 pm

    Great post Tim.

    Do you still speed read and at what speed?

    Do you retain things and are the skills lost if you stop practicing? I guess I’m asking if you constany have to retrain yourself?

    Cheers!

    Reply
  • TylerJuly 30th, 2009, 7:35 pm

    I’ve got some time blocked off to experiment with this. The potential for increased productivity and effectiveness is enormous. Keep leading us to the promised land, Tim.

    Reply
  • Vale — July 30th, 2009, 7:41 pm

    This is pretty old information. What I mean by that is it has had time for debunking. While it’s great for skimming, it isn’t the best way to read for deep understanding. That’s why there is emphasis on “DO NOT CONCERN YOURSELF WITH COMPREHENSION.” With this method, full and complete comprehension can never be attained. Attack me as a naysayer, but it’s already been proven.

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissJuly 30th, 2009, 10:02 pm

      Hi Vale,

      Where has it been disproven? I’d be very interested to see the data.

      There is no magic here, and there is no requirement to read beyond comprehension rate when actually reading for recall. The conditioning and drilling is a different matter with a different purpose.

      If you just make better use of peripheral vision, reduce fixation time and duration, you are not missing ANY content whatsoever. The speed then, is up to you.

      Cheers,

      Tim

      Reply
  • SarahJuly 30th, 2009, 7:43 pm

    Thank you, this is exactly what I’ve been looking for. It should make my work much more efficient, and I plan to teach my children this in homeschooling.

    I just discovered that several of my children have an eye “problem” that puts them in the tenth percentile or less in their ability to track lines in reading and shift focus. It impedes their performance significantly, in spite of their being highly intelligent. Four to six months of training fixes it.

    It makes sense, then, that there must be training that can optimize the skill of the rest of us who read “normally”. Being in the top 1%, in this skill, can be taught.

    Very cool. I’ve been planning to research this someday, and you just handed it to us.

    Reply
    • Daniel CabralSeptember 9th, 2012, 6:55 am

      After trying to practice the exercices a few times without much success I’m starting to think I’m like one of your children.
      Would mind sharing with us what is the precticing routine you have used with them in these 6 months?

      I’ve been trying to practice 3 times a day, but I confess I can’t do the two lines per second exercices, my eyes just cant follow the pen and I loose focus on its movement.

      Cheers from Brazil!
      Daniel

      Reply
  • Gordie RogersJuly 30th, 2009, 7:46 pm

    Could you please provide a picture of how the pen should be held? Cheers.

    Reply
  • AlexJuly 30th, 2009, 7:52 pm

    Hey Tim, this sounds great and I’ll try it out.

    Btw, have u ever tried (or heard any feedback) on other famous speedreading techniques? (like Photoreading or that Howard Berg fastest reader dude).

    would love to hear your thoughts since I’m sure you researched this stuff pretty thoroughly.

    Cheers,

    Alex

    Reply
  • NewWorldOrderJuly 30th, 2009, 8:00 pm

    Using this approach on the Made to Stick book, my wpm went from 220 to 374. Those techniques leading up to the second testing, definitely train the eyes to move more efficiently.

    Reply
  • BakerJuly 30th, 2009, 8:03 pm

    I’m going to take this post and put it into practice shortly.

    About two years ago, I did a similar but much less documented program, which drastically helped. I’ve felt myself slipping though, especially recently.

    I’m pumped you took the time to pass along this info. It’s this sort of content that I really connect with. Keep it up!

    Reply
  • NameJuly 30th, 2009, 8:13 pm

    I tried this (or something very similar) a few years ago — but after the “test” part I stopped focusing on it, so clearly I stopped reading faster! Any suggestions for practicing this technique when it’s obviously [for me] not second-nature?

    Reply
  • Learn How to Speed Read | Josh L MannJuly 30th, 2009, 8:15 pm

    [...] Tim Ferriss claims he has the trick to help you read over 300% faster and retain what you read more efficiently. What do I have to [...]

  • MikeJuly 30th, 2009, 8:24 pm

    Thanks for posting this Tim. Many people have started suggesting speed reading to me since I am starting grad school in the fall.

    Reply
  • Michael - Fat Loss TipsJuly 30th, 2009, 8:29 pm

    God I wish I learned some of these techniques in time for University. Way too much time wasted on reading crap I needed just for an exam.

    I’ve been using saccadic movements with a lot of success recently but I’ll give the other ideas a go for sure…

    Reply
  • James BallardJuly 30th, 2009, 8:29 pm

    Thanks Tim. I unconsciously do some of these techniques, however, I need to take the time and learn the proper ones and really start cooking.

    Reply
  • Rahul ShankarJuly 30th, 2009, 8:45 pm

    Its like you read my mind! I’ve been telling myself I need to start speed reading and this is just the timely post I needed. I love the detail and preciseness you’ve managed to include in a post of this length.

    I’m seen people recommend entire books to be read and followed on the subject. Have you gone beyond these steps mentioned and focused on other resources for further mastery? And as the poster Tyler asked what are your thoughts on photo reading?

    Best,
    Rahul

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissJuly 30th, 2009, 9:59 pm

      Hi Rahul and All,

      I tested PhotoReading when it first appeared on the scene and was being advertised heavily on TV. The short answer: I don’t believe it works as advertised. I have yet to meet anyone who can demonstrate it live and then undergo any type of comprehension or recall testing. I could be wrong, but I don’t believe I am.

      Best,

      Tim

      Reply
      • Etienne JuneauMarch 1st, 2012, 6:20 am

        Same here Tim.

        I’ve tested it: didn’t work for me.

        EJ

        Reply
      • JakobJune 16th, 2013, 11:10 am

        Hi Tim,
        time has passed since you wrote that post.

        Have things changed for you?

        Here are my experiences:
        At the moment, I am testing myself. I photoread a book about presenting skills and I made a presentation without any (as neil names it) “brain farts”.
        I “photoread” some other books (with strong believe) but it did not lead to awesome results yet.

        One night I dreamed of the pages. In my dream I was able to see the pages but the Text was not sharp, so I was not able to read conscious within my dream.

        Sometimes I imagine (without timestopping), that speedreading goes faster when photoreading ahead.
        Sometimes when speedreading I rerecognize pages and know that I have seen them before.

        Reply
        • Chris What?June 21st, 2013, 3:21 pm

          Jakob and PhotoReaders,

          I’ve read Paul Scheele’s book and even paid for a pricey PhotoReading seminar 6 or 7 years ago. After trying to PhotoRead many, many books and trying to use the techniques for studying over and over again, I must agree with Tim – I don’t believe it works as advertised.

          Due to the rapid developments in neuroscience however, I haven’t completely ruled out that it might be possible for a regular person to learn something like PhotoReading one day (without the use of drugs, physically altering the brain, or any other type of brain abnormalities).

          For the time being, I will continue to be very selective about what I read (low-information diet) to minimize the time spent with reading. This also means I’m less prone to substituting action with books:

          “I must read book ABC first before I can begin doing XYZ” often means I read half of book ABC and never even attempt doing XYZ.

          Thanks for reading :)
          Chris

        • JakobJuly 12th, 2013, 11:26 am

          Reading a book by A. Huxley about the art of seeing, in which he describes how he manged to heal strong his seeing problems, I figured out that while trying to photoread I had the wrong focus with my eyes.

          http://amzn.to/1drD9RJ

          While learning the photofocus I tryed to reach a visonable expression like described by Scheele in his book.
          Actually I figured out that I did not focus on a thing which is farer away than the book. Instead my visual focus was set up for seeing things very close.

          To test if you do the same mistake you can use a pen and move it infront of your eyes while beeing in the wrong photo focus.
          If you see the pen shark, I think, than you do it wrong.

          I will give it an other try after having learned to focus in the distance. What might improve my eyes too (as Scheele describes too). Next to the exercices of the bates method.

          The experiences I made with sunlight (concerning) the Bates method, are positive. At least in the moment just after the exercise.

          Regards from Germany,
          Jakob

  • John BardosJuly 30th, 2009, 8:59 pm

    In university I studied several speed reading programs and they do work, to a degree.

    It really depends on what you are reading. Sometimes it is necessary to slow down and let your mind and emotions catch up with what you have read. Not everything should be read quickly.

    It is somewhat akin to inline skating through the Louvre. Sure you can see everything 10 times as fast, but you miss details along the way. Speed reading is basically scanning.

    With that said, I had a professor once who could scan long reports in seconds and give detailed feedback. Maybe I just need more practice. :-)

    Reply
  • Adam DunnJuly 30th, 2009, 9:17 pm

    How does Kim Peak do it?

    Reply
  • Pete WJuly 30th, 2009, 9:51 pm

    Thank for the great post. I just did the exercises in the article. In the 25 minutes it took me to get through the post and the exercises I went from an average of 290 WPM to 420 WPM.

    Now if only the rest of the information on the internet was this useful.

    Reply
  • jeremyJuly 30th, 2009, 10:37 pm

    Wow, great tutorial.
    I’ll try this out for sure, and hopefully that can help with all the reading I need to get done next semester.

    Thanks!

    Reply
  • Chris — July 30th, 2009, 10:37 pm

    Hey Tim,

    Great post…as always. I practiced photoreading quite a bit in college while cramming for exams. I found that I could not effectively recall the information for essay questions and oral exams, but it seemed to really help with multiple choice questions. Then again, maybe I just got good at taking MC tests. Any way I have been implimenting 4-HWW principals for about 2 years now and am loving life on my own terms! Thanks again and best of luck on your next book amigo!

    Chris

    Reply
    • JakobJune 16th, 2013, 11:28 am

      Hi Chris, how did you implement the 4HWW principles in university?

      Sometimes for me it is hard to deal with the fact that education is not directly income generating.

      Reply
  • Sean Ring — July 30th, 2009, 10:40 pm

    Speed Reading – So How Do Deaf People Read Then?

    Hi Tim.

    Firstly, I love your stuff. Thanks so much for it.

    Let me add to this something that I learned when I took my first speed reading course. I did it when I was an institutional broker for a large investment bank in London. I hated reading the (useless) research that our economists were sending out, so I wanted to cut down my time getting the “house view”.

    My instructor shared this with us:

    He was teaching a class in Oxford. His first student came into the room and sat very near him. Seinfeld would have called him a close talker, I believe. The kid was staring at the teacher’s lips and the teacher, quite unsettled by this, moved away as subtly as he could. The student noticed this and wrote on a piece of paper, “I’m sorry, but I’m deaf, I need to read your lips to understand you.” The teacher now realised why his student was on top of him and was calmed.

    As the tuition began, the first speed reading accessment came in. On average, most people read about 250 words per minute, or about as fast as we talk, as we sound the words in our head as we read. This kid came in at 1,500 words per minute. The instructor was astounded. Now most people, after trying and improving a few times, you can get over 1,000 words – I hit over 1,100 per minute – but it takes a couple of tries. This kid was doing 1,500 per minute every time, without the tuition.

    The instructor was telling the rest of the “normal” people in the room to try to stop reading the words and to just look at the them and trust their brains to do the rest.

    The deaf student, reading his lips, start furiously writing down on a piece of paper, “Do you mean to tell me that people who can hear actually sound out the words in their heads when they’re reading?”

    The instructor nodded.

    The deaf student then wrote this:

    HAHAHAHAHAHA!

    If one is deaf, (I now see) clearly one can’t assign a sound to word.

    They just look at shapes. In fact, one of our exercises to get us accustomed to this was to turn the book upside down and to “read” the gobbledegook.

    Much like Su Doku, which is NOT a numbers game, just a game played with numbers, you need to get 9 shapes in a square, row, or line without repeating. We’re using numbers to do this, but really it’s about the shapes.

    Just stop saying the words in your head and your speed will improve pretty much 3-4x…

    See, the “disabled” have much to teach us.

    All the best,

    Sean

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissJuly 31st, 2009, 11:01 am

      Sean, that is an AWESOME comment. Thank you!

      Tim

      Reply
    • Etienne Juneau — March 1st, 2012, 6:25 am

      Great post Sean! Thanks.

      Reply
    • Lej — September 18th, 2012, 11:26 pm

      Hi Sean. May I borrow your thoughts here. I work with PWDs. This is great to share :)

      Reply
    • Laura Ospino — February 18th, 2013, 8:47 pm

      I just tried to stop saying the words in my head but i just can´t , how can i possibly do that?

      Reply
      • Deep — April 14th, 2013, 9:56 pm

        I have the same issue with trying to sound out the words, but can get in the zone sometimes and am able to just “see” the words and move much quicker, but it only lasts for a little bit. I think it will stick with practice.

        I read a lot and would greatly benefit from being able to read faster, so I think it’s something worth putting the time in on.

        Great post Tim, and awesome comment Sean (about the deaf person who is seeing the word versus saying it in his mind)!

        Reply
    • Sandra — July 24th, 2013, 1:00 pm

      Wow! Good things really do come to those who wait! Sean, I don’t know if you’ll ever see my comment as I just found yours now — four years after you wrote it!

      I am a Grade 2 teacher and this past school year, I asked our itinerant Speech & Language Pathologist how deaf children learn to read. She didn’t know for certain, and suggested I consult with an audiologist. The reason I was asking, however, was because of a “speech” impediment one of my weaker readers had, not a hearing issue. I thought everyone read/comprehended by listening to the voice in their heads (I certainly do, and guess what? — I’m a very slow reader), but now I see otherwise. I worried that since this young boy couldn’t pronounce the words properly when speaking, he wouldn’t be able to sound them out correctly when he was reading. . . which he couldn’t. . . and would therefore be slow in his development of comprehension. . . which he was. I was hoping to find a new strategy to use with him that didn’t rely so heavily on phonetics.

      I haven’t contacted an audiologist yet, but your response to Tim, layered onto Tim’s incredible post, has shed a brilliant new light on things for me. You have both refuelled my drive to research alternate ways of teaching my struggling students to read.

      Sean, your story is about a deaf person who could already read, but from what both of you have learned in your respective pursuits, do you have any guesses as to how this might apply to “learning” to read? Is there an age, or developmental stage, below which you wouldn’t attempt speed reading? Or, in other words, how soon in a person’s reading life could they successfully employ your strategies?

      I’m dying to go try this myself, so I won’t spend any more time hijacking your comment space! Thank you both for the best learning I’ve had this month!!!

      Sandra

      Reply
    • Steph — March 17th, 2014, 11:56 pm

      You have singlehandedly managed to change my way of learning, you introduced me to subvocalization and the effects it has on my reading efficiency.. it’s helped me more than the article itself. Thank you, thank you, thank you! :)

      Reply
  • RodneyJuly 30th, 2009, 11:04 pm

    Thanks for posting this. Finally someone tells us the actual science behind speed reading. I’ve tried a few reading programs that promised to help me read 10,000 words a minute that were crap. This stuff actually works.

    Reply
  • Dustin DiazJuly 30th, 2009, 11:09 pm

    Oh wow, you’re the first to use this photo under correct creative commons terms!! Thanks :) This is excellent.

    Reply
  • Eric SmithJuly 30th, 2009, 11:26 pm

    Your recommendation of YMII and Brickwork received a ‘can’t do’ from YMMI for a simple property search and then, Brickwork, a lengthy chat and no follow up within the promised time. I suggest you review you referencing. People are judgrd by the company they keep.
    Eric Smith

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissJuly 31st, 2009, 10:59 am

      Hi Eric,

      It’s very much dependent on who you get, and please note that: 1) I have issued warnings about declining quality from these two (YMII doubled in size due to the book) on this blog, and 2) I just completely revised the book (due out December) to make this point clear.

      I’m very sorry for the inconvenience, but the companies were excellent when I wrote the book, continue to be for many people who use them, and I’m fixing the issue.

      All the best,

      Tim

      Reply
  • Jose CastroJuly 30th, 2009, 11:38 pm

    Tim, Keep it up.!!!! Thanks for sharing so much so far.

    From Dallas to Nicaragua….

    Jose ; )

    Reply
  • Adam — July 30th, 2009, 11:42 pm

    I’m really tired, but I gave it a little go. 286 – 468 wpm. 163% increase. I’ll keep practicing because it’s a very valuable skill to be able to read fast. Thanks!

    Reply
  • richard — July 30th, 2009, 11:47 pm

    Great post! I shot my Words Per Minute (WPM) rate up very quickly from 230 to 386 with just a few practice runs using this easy and fun program!!

    My goal is about 600 WPM and that’s right round the corne for me.

    I use the “Professional” version but there’s other program versions to choose from based on you or your family’s need.

    http://rocketreader.com

    Reply
  • links for 2009-07-31 | sbdcJuly 30th, 2009, 11:59 pm

    [...] Scientific Speed Reading: How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes (tags: howto productivity books timferriss) [...]

  • Alex - Unleash RealityJuly 31st, 2009, 12:51 am

    you are legend!!!

    wasn’t as(s) pompousish as you made out to be :P

    back to uni this week – which means 6AM wakeups and ample reading… so couldn’t ‘av come at a better time.

    i’ve seen some of these ideas before, in Tim’s book methinks, and other places, but the “don’t read in a straight line” bit was power.

    thank you
    alex – unleash reality

    Reply
  • OlaJuly 31st, 2009, 12:53 am

    Interesting post. I was considering the speed reading exercises for some time now. I don’t know my current speed but I think I enjoy my reading as it is. At least when it comes to casual reading (for pleasure I mean). However when it comes to work I would really like to improve my speed. I often need to look through hundreds of pages in a short time.

    I have yet to do the exercise but I am hopeful for the wpm increase. I will be testing it in a foreign language, namely Polish. I thought it would be interesting if we could compare the results for different languages. You said it was tested in five (Which ones?).

    Reply
  • JoelJuly 31st, 2009, 1:34 am

    I believe I once saw that the savant who “Rainman” was based on, could photoread, however, science could not explain it and he was the only known person who could accomplish such a thing. That case is probably photoreading’s basis, but I don’t believe there is any way a person can just learn it.

    Good post. Has this been posted before? Maybe it was in the book? I remember it from someplace. Noentheless, I’ve been using this method since I first saw it in 2007. Naysayers, it really works. The only “problem” I’ve found with this method is that sometimes, I don’t feel like I’ve got the energy to focus on it. But thats usually after a couple days living in airports.

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissJuly 31st, 2009, 10:53 am

      Hi Joel and All,

      Thanks to all of you for the great comments and dialogue! Joel, Kim Peek (the real “Rainman”) can actually read two pages at once, one eye on each page, and he remembers everything he reads. See the documentary “Brainman” and you’ll see this in action. Incredible.

      Best,

      Tim

      Reply
  • Alex — July 31st, 2009, 1:47 am

    MRAGH I haven’t tried it but i am soooooo excited!

    Reply
  • allenJuly 31st, 2009, 1:50 am

    I’m forcing myself to be conscious of it.

    Thanks for the tips

    Reply
  • Kevin NeadleyJuly 31st, 2009, 1:52 am

    Tim, very interesting post indeed. If you think about it, reading a book at normal pace doesn’t equal comprehension either so what is there to lose in trying this technique out. I am still at Uni heading into my third year this September and if I could get this technique down and improve my reading speed, I’m sure it would be a great skill to have just like adding another feather to my bow.

    I bet you get tired of hearing “You’re so inspirational” or “Tim you’re the best” but what the hell, you’re an awesome guy with lots to share so I commend you for that. Keep em’ coming!

    Reply
  • ChloeJuly 31st, 2009, 1:55 am

    Thanks. For online material, I recommend spreed! http://www.spreeder.com
    Adjust the width and words per line to 4+ to increase your peripheral perception. Set the speed to 4 times target, read it, then 2 times target, read it, then target speed. You will not understand the first two passes, but will do surprisingly well at your target speed! Also, use this bookmarklet, which I modified from the site to handle apostrophes and bad Unicode characters:

    javascript:var%20sel=window.getSelection?window.getSelection():document.getSelection?document.getSelection():document.selection.createRange().text;sel=sel+”;sel=encodeURIComponent(sel).replace(/’/g,’%2527′);newdoc=open().document;newdoc.write(%22<BODY><FORM%20ACTION=’http://spreeder.com/’%20METHOD=’POST’><INPUT%20TYPE=’text’%20SIZE=80%20NAME=’passage’%20VALUE=’%22+sel+%22′></FORM></BODY>%22);newdoc.forms[0].submit();

    Attempted repost… silly comment system mangled the bookmarklet.

    Reply
  • Marko Cvijic — July 31st, 2009, 2:17 am

    Interesting thing TIm! I’m just at the beginning of the speed reading process and for now it looks pretty amazing :)

    Reply
  • NSCT — July 31st, 2009, 2:19 am

    Thanks but how to apply this with reading on computer screen? I use my mouse pointer but it’s not big enough to help me. And I don’t want to hurt the screen with a pen. Any idea?

    I have the same concern with my mobile phone. I read a lot on its little screen but I feel it is not fast enough.

    Reply
  • JB — July 31st, 2009, 2:57 am

    I find I can use vertical peripheral for predictable nonchallenging text, skipping like this:
    1
    1
    1

    Here’s my question for Tim: Granted this is faster. Do I need to train it as a habit? I already haphazardly picked up speed reading principles and do use them when comprehension load is light. Will I see a further major cognitive processing benefit by practicing? Or is the real bottleneck cognition past a certain basic proficiency? What’s the value proposition for advanced amateurs?

    For example, when consciously using physical saccajumps I will still regress back to ponder over new things, like the sacca word. And when my perif inferral fills in a word wrong, I’ll go back to reread the sentence. Does this go away with training? Or is cognition the bottleneck at that point?

    Reply
  • JB — July 31st, 2009, 2:58 am

    oops, the above should be:
    —1————
    ————-1—
    —1————

    Reply
  • praveenJuly 31st, 2009, 3:09 am

    This is very true. I’ve checked this method.

    Reply
  • Michael KozakewichJuly 31st, 2009, 3:17 am

    I agree with JB. I found myself naturally doing that. If you build a two-dimensional map of the text in your head, piecing it together using alternating ends of a line lets you scan the page faster.

    Reply
  • Tim JefferiesJuly 31st, 2009, 3:34 am

    Is speed reading this article with spreeder.com overkill? :D

    Reply
  • JackT — July 31st, 2009, 3:36 am

    Sounds just like the adapted version of an Evelyn Wood-style speed reading class I took as a kid in high school. Here are some comments that fit with my experience;

    http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1021/does-speed-reading-training-actually-work

    http://forums.randi.org/showthread.php?t=8853

    Corrections backed by evidence — not assertions — are appreciated.

    Reply
  • JoshJuly 31st, 2009, 3:36 am

    Awesome. I remember seeing someone speed read in high school and always lwanted to learn. I forgot about this for a long time. I haven’t tried it yet because I’m at work, but I will definitely give this a shot. Really, thanks for posting this. I need to read much faster… would save me tons of time with my website and other job.

    Reply
  • Emi GalJuly 31st, 2009, 4:18 am

    From 634 wpm to 1012 wpm, thanks mate!

    Reply
  • szulJuly 31st, 2009, 4:19 am

    Just read about this in your book the other day. It’s definitely something that many people read about, but never condition themselves to use. Back-reading is a major issue when it comes to increasing your speed, so these are great tips.

    Reply
  • Daily Links for Friday, July 31th, 2009July 31st, 2009, 4:31 am

    [...] Scientific Speed Reading: How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes [...]

  • Dan CosgroveJuly 31st, 2009, 5:06 am

    If you read this article, you can pretty much scrap any speed-reading book out there. This is an excellent summary, written in readable English, of what countless books on the subject with regurgitate.

    This is a prime example of results vs. effort (getting all of the important information out in a bookmarkable blog post, as opposed to a 200+ page book)

    Keep up the good work!

    Reply
  • Jeffrey TangJuly 31st, 2009, 5:40 am

    Enlightening. I realize that I’ve been using a lot of these speed reading techniques without thinking about it. Just things I picked up while trying to finish schoolwork faster.

    A lot of very specific information here; thanks for sharing. I’ll be trying these tips out when I get home from work today :)

    Reply
  • Ethan GardnerJuly 31st, 2009, 6:01 am

    With all the productivity tips you have offered, I am beginning to think that your first name isn’t really Tim, but rather an acronym for Time Is Money.

    As a person who is a slow reader with excellent recall, I look forward to trying out this technique.

    Reply
  • Clay — July 31st, 2009, 6:02 am

    Does anyone have any good recommendations for a book to practice this on that meets the requirements (200 pg, lays flat, etc.)? I don’t really have any books that meet this criteria, and I figure I might as well read something good if I am going to try this out.

    Reply
  • Steve — July 31st, 2009, 6:43 am

    Tim,

    Interesting stuff. My question is can you turn it off? After conditioning the brain to read this way, can you simply gear back down and read at a normal pace? I ask because I am one of those people in the world he reads just for the pure enjoyment. I don’t want to speed read Walt Whitman, for example. But if I train my brain that fast is the new normal and then want to go back to regular speed, will it be a constant process of learning and then unlearning?

    Reply
  • Ken — July 31st, 2009, 8:05 am

    Hey Tim,

    thanks for the great post. I just did the practice and my wpm went from 222 to 361 (162% increase in speed). I’ll work on it to get faster! Thank you very much. Greetings from the Netherlands.

    Reply
  • David StillwagonJuly 31st, 2009, 8:34 am

    I have heard about a few of techniques before and they do help to speed up reading.

    Reply
  • EddieJuly 31st, 2009, 8:45 am

    i am yet to check out zap reader, but dynamic reading aside, i constantly use the *readability* bookmarklet

    http://lab.arc90.com/experiments/readability/

    Reply
  • Speed Read in Twenty Minutes! « CreationPadJuly 31st, 2009, 9:00 am

    [...] Check it out so you can read faster too… [...]

  • OscarJuly 31st, 2009, 9:12 am

    Hi Tim,

    I read your book, and this article reminded me this technique. I need to put this technique into practice.
    I believe that the training times can be changed. Right?

    “Tenha uma boa semana!”

    Oscar.

    Reply
  • Kristjan-Olari LepingJuly 31st, 2009, 9:29 am

    That kind of techniques clearly help you to increase your reading speed. Basically they are the same things I teach in my speed reading courses. I think there is at least one important thing what has not turned much attention in this post, but what is vital for achieving good comprehension at high speeds. You have to fully focus to the text you are reading.

    The main reason behind poor concentration is that we let our thoughts to wander away form the text. Because of that we do not remember what we read even if we read at slow speed. Actually reading at faster pace can help you to increase your comprehension if you concnetration abilities are poor.

    Consider an example of driving a car. Assume that you are driving at 30mph at any empty highway. Of course you will not drive so slowly there in fact, but let’s say you do. If you are driving that slow then you can shave your beard, eat hamburgers and read newspaper while driving and you will still not crash. Now assume that you are driving at 130mph. Now there is no possibility to read newspaper while driving. The same principle applies to reading. If you are reading at slow pace then you can think on other things while reading. If you are speed reading then there is no possibility to think irrelevant thought. You have to focus your mind 100% to the text or you do not have any chance of understanding and remembering the content.

    So if you force yourself to read faster then it wil help you to improve your concentration. In addition you will benefit from practicing special concentration exercises. For example you could peform following drills:
    1. Counting the words. Take a book and open it on any page. Count words in every paragraph. Count words only with your eyes, do not use your fingers or pencil for that purpose. If you reach the next paragraph, start counting from zero again. Duration of the exercise is 5-10 minutes.
    2. Drawing geometrical shapes. Draw a geometrical shape on the paper (for example circle, square, triangle). Then draw a similar but a bit smaller shape inside the previously drawn shape. Draw it in a way that the smaller shape fits in the bigger shape, but does not touch it. Next draw another shape inside the previous one exactly as you did before. Continue until you reach the shape with minimal possible size.
    3. Reading a boring text. Find a book or journal, which content offers you absolutely no interest. Find 10-15 minutes for the exercise. Read this text as it was the most interesting thing in the world. Avoid any distracting thoughts or making pauses whilst reading

    Reply
  • Brandon JamesJuly 31st, 2009, 10:00 am

    I started using the techniques outlines in your book and it’s incredible how effective it is. The interesting thing it that it reframes your approach to reading in general, when you read for efficiency, you don’t wait time on topics that aren’t of value. I’ve used that philosophy on a macro level and started only reading things that I truly get benefit from or truly enjoy. I love how it’s possible to Stoicize everything in life.

    Reply
  • Au Dang — July 31st, 2009, 10:09 am

    Hey Tim,
    Thanks for the great article. I’ll surely be using it for school (re-reading a few times of course) and as I start reading for enjoyment again.

    PS: I went to Tsukiji fish market in my VFFs, and now they smell like fish!

    Reply
  • Alex T. — July 31st, 2009, 11:41 am

    Finally!!!! I have been waiting for you to blog on this subject. Awesome. Now I just have to wait to see a blog on Capoeira.

    Reply
  • JackT — July 31st, 2009, 11:52 am

    I guess I was too subtle. Either that, or there are lots of believers in this thread and very few skeptics.

    As was covered in the links from my previous post, there is a non-trivial trade off of comprehension when reading speed is increased. Speed readers and skimmers tend to have the same level of understanding of text that is processed at the same speed, and comprehension is greatest when reading without either technique.

    If I’m mistaken — and in this technique reduces or eliminates comprehension problems unlike previous speed reading techniques — please feel free to let me know what I’m missing. Facts before assertions, please.

    If this is the holy grail, I’d be grateful for a correction. If not, limits and trade offs should be noted.

    Reply
  • Gurpreet — July 31st, 2009, 11:56 am

    Hi Tim,

    Very informative and interesting post as usual!
    I was going to ask you about Photoreading too, but seems you’ve already discussed it with others.

    I bought it back in 1997 and had some success with it, but struggled to make it work to the full extent as promised, and was going to tackle it again recently, so this is a particularly timely article for me :)
    …and the discussion about Kim Peek is fascinating! I’ll definitely find that documentary “Brainman”!

    However, I have seen videos of people demonstrating Photoreading on live radio, etc. (although they were Paul Scheele’s videos) – any thoughts on those?

    I’m definitely going to practice this PX Method…but wouldn’t it be great if both methods (PX & Photoreading) could be be made to work, & used in conjunction?

    Reply
  • TheFamilyManJuly 31st, 2009, 12:02 pm

    I swear Tim Ferris has one of the greatest marketing minds of our generation.

    Reply
  • TNS — July 31st, 2009, 12:06 pm

    Great post. I did this years ago as the “Evelyn Wood” reading program. The night of “finals”, I read three books in just over 35 minutes with 96% comp. There was mention of a student at USC that read 85,000 wpm. He was tested on a micro-fiche machine, as page turning was the limiting factor.

    ps. I got away from some of it, because I was constantly interrupted by gawkers telling me “you’re not reading that”. I never had the heart to tell them to f*ck off! But I can assure you it works, if you keep with the drills. One day, your eyes will “pop” and you will wonder how you ever got along without it.

    ps. If you’ve ever fallen asleep reading a book, YOU’RE READING TOO SLOWLY!
    YOUR BRAIN IS TELLING YOU “I’M BORED!”

    Reply
  • Dakota O'NeillJuly 31st, 2009, 12:21 pm

    Don’t really get this, not sure if its because I am dyslexic or what but yea. I hope other people get this and get it to work. Wish I do :(

    Reply
  • Crappykoreabot — July 31st, 2009, 12:22 pm

    Eh, the whole trying not to speak in your head while reading (subvocalization), well according to wikipedia (I know it can be false, but generally it’s correct) it says that it may be potentially harmful to comprehension, learning and memory. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subvocalization I suggest that you experiment with different techniques, photoreading/speedreading and see what works best for you.

    Reply
  • Steve — July 31st, 2009, 12:28 pm

    How well does this work for non-native languages? My reading speed in Chinese is much, much slower than in English and I’m looking for ways to speed up, but I think I’m limited by my vocabulary recall speed, not by eye movement. Any research on whether this is of use in language acquisition?

    Reply
  • Mark Tennenhouse — July 31st, 2009, 12:37 pm

    Tim,
    I really like your stuff. keep it coming..

    It is true that we can force ourselves to speed up by fewer fixations, and larger groups of words for each fixation. BUT, for good readers, this is only a minimal gain.

    A MUCH larger increase can be achieved by eliminating SUB-VOCALIZATION.

    That is, eliminate the voice in your head, eliminate reading each word to yourself.

    What am I talking about?

    Well, we learn to read by reading aloud to parents, at school. The habit never leaves us without special training. We read at roughly the same speed at which we speak, somewhere (give or take) around 150-220 WPM. That’s not a coincidence.

    SO..how fast can we understand written text?
    Well, how fast can we think?? The answer is MUCH MUCH faster than our current rate. In fact, it’s hard to say exactly what the upper limit of speed reading is..

    As your posters pointed out, there are deaf people and other rare individuals that have learned how to stop talking to themselves as they read.
    Their reading rates are amazing, over 1000 WPM. This amazing speed can only be achieved by a completely different approach.

    There are methods to eliminate sub vocalization but they are very different from what you’re discussing here. The methods I’ve seen out there simply don’t work.

    Please let me know if you come across any useful methods for eliminating sub vocalization. If you put another tutorial or video out there on the topic, I’m sure it would be interesting.

    thanks,

    Mark

    Reply
  • James — July 31st, 2009, 1:01 pm

    Also another way to increase your speed is to increase your vocabulary.
    When you come across a word you do not know. You will stop and reread the words around it to understand the context it is being used. This is another way to increase your speed when reading.

    Reply
  • fmvsJuly 31st, 2009, 1:01 pm

    Bigup for the nice summary! Ever used speedreading softwares like Acereader? Pretty cool, but I guess keeping it zen and using the good ol’ paper and ink can be just as effective.

    I’m curious: what is your wpm right now?

    all the best!

    Reply
  • PaulJuly 31st, 2009, 1:19 pm

    I read this title on twitter: “How to read 300% faster in 20 minutes.” I instantly said this link has to point to Tim’s blog and it did…Ha.

    Good work Tim.

    Paul

    Reply
  • CL — July 31st, 2009, 1:25 pm

    I would like to see an article on “speed understanding” (if there is such a thing). I think the above techniques are useful for increasing the speed of reading fluff, but for more worthwhile or dense material I don’t think increasing reading speed makes much of an overall impact.

    Understanding to me is about making connections between what you don’t know and what you know. In order to do that, you need to stop reading and think. I’d say the reading aspect of understanding a text accounts for 5% of the time, while developing an understanding or figuring out how to apply the knowledge is the other 95% of the time. So while a gain on 5% of the pie is still a gain, focusing on how to improve the other 95% (how to develop an understanding) might be more worthwhile.

    Reply
  • Chris — July 31st, 2009, 2:04 pm

    Tim,

    Most of the material I read these days is digital.
    Any specifics as to how to apply these techniques to reading on a vertically oriented screen?

    Reply
  • Brant ChoateJuly 31st, 2009, 2:19 pm

    Tim,

    You read my mind with this post. I was just looking into speed reading last night!

    Reply
  • MartinJuly 31st, 2009, 2:25 pm

    Just gave it a go. Googled online stop watches and found http://www.online-stopwatch.com/

    Easily reading over 300% faster after walking through the post.

    It’s strikes me that before the techniques become second nature, it might help to take a few minutes to practice before diving into a book or long reading session… A reading “warm up”.

    thx

    Reply
  • Eryk Banatt — July 31st, 2009, 2:29 pm

    Tim, it’s official, you are the most interesting blogger I’ve come across. Your posts aren’t overwhelming and arrogant, your content is always amazing, and you are efficient to the point of being kinda scary.

    Kudos to you, sir,

    -Eryk

    Reply
  • Will H — July 31st, 2009, 2:42 pm

    [On visual media]: I’ve taken speed reading to another level: speed watching digital media.
    I use software to speed up online lectures, videos, etc: whenever I’m needed to consume a larger amount of information than per the usual 60 fps. Enounce is an example of this type of software, and I use it to watch opencourseware lectures, for example. Futher, I’ve experimented with ‘so-called’ speed reading software– e.g. it flashes phrases of 11 words on the screen in 1/10 of a second.
    Anyway, my question for Tim and everybody: still working on an advanced notetaking system to UP the comprehension from all this reading, and (now) listening. Any suggestions?

    Thanks, Will

    Reply
  • Ryan EliasonJuly 31st, 2009, 3:07 pm

    Than you Tim. I appreciate that you bring us practical and useful information. There’s too much information in the world these days and most people are on overload. I also love your “low information diet” recommendation from your 4-Hour Work Week book.

    Reply
  • DaveJuly 31st, 2009, 3:07 pm

    Are we really in that much of a hurry. I appriciate the skill for sure, but it seems like it would be just adding stress to my already stressful life. I do enough stuff fast :) Cool read.

    Reply
  • wedward — July 31st, 2009, 4:01 pm

    I’m curious about how I might best apply this to reading content on the iPhone Kindle app or on Kindle itself… Any recommendations?

    Reply
  • matt — July 31st, 2009, 4:04 pm

    So, from the comments that i read it appears the big thing is to not “say or sound out” the words in your head. By doing this it allows you to comprehend multiple words at a time where as when you sound them out you can only move as quick as you speak. I’m curious to know if there is anywhere i can test my comprehension. I’ll continue to practice, but i never know if i REALLY got all the information i was supposed to out of it. Thanks.

    Reply
  • Matt HarrisJuly 31st, 2009, 4:39 pm

    This is something I’ve experimented with before, but never really fully committed myself to doing. I’ve heard that learning speed reading skills can have a huge impact on someones professional life.

    Reply
  • lucho — July 31st, 2009, 4:54 pm

    Enlightening!

    Reply
  • CH — July 31st, 2009, 4:54 pm

    Thanks for this post! I just posted a week or so ago asking about speed reading in some other post of yours. I’ve been practicing ever since though I’ve run into some hurdles despite a definite improvement.

    Here are a few concerns I have I hope you can answer:

    1.The pacing method works well, but when I start using your method of fixation (looking at every 3rd word in) I become unsure where I should start and end the pacing of my pen. Should I start from the third word in and end at the third word out as well? Wouldn’t that call my attention away from perceiving whatever is at the margins?

    2. Also, since you fixate on only two or three words per line, wouldn’t it make sense to move your pacer in “jumps” as well to the words you are fixating on? Since I am only looking at 2 words, why am I pacing across the entire line when it defeats the purpose of moving your eyes as little as possible? The pacing calls attention and your eyes move along with the pen rather than just jumping to the two words they are supposed to be perceiving. This reaaally confuses me because the two suggestions seem to be contradictory.

    3. When pacing at such speeds, my hands/pen is moving psychotically fast, making a lot of distracting “wooshing sounds” on the pages as well as just going in between and on lines I am supposed to be reading. Is this normal or am I going waaay to crazy with the pacing?

    4. Lastly, can you recommend any drills that can help me improve my horizontal eye span? A lot of times I’m missing words at the margins that are completely blurred out. You suggest starting at the second word in, but will that condition my eyes to where I will be able to move in to third/fourth word eventually? Or is this something that cannot be improved?

    Thanks so much for this post, speed reading is something I really want to learn to do properly and this is very helpful!

    PS; Just out of curiosity, what’s YOUR reading speed Tim?

    Reply
  • Matthew GartlandJuly 31st, 2009, 4:58 pm

    Thanks Tim!

    I’ve been hoping that you’d hack reading speeds for a bit now. Brilliant! I’ve always had the frustration of never being able to intake as many books and other publications as I’d like. Problem cured — hopefully. I still have to give these tactics a go.

    Out of curiosity, how do these techniques and the protocol overall apply to non-English texts? I’m unfortunately not fluent, yet, in another language. Have you been successful at replicating the results in other languages?

    Cheers!
    Matt

    Reply
  • Benjamin M. BrownJuly 31st, 2009, 5:33 pm

    I hadn’t done a wpm test before, but I have tried to speed up my reading (primarily through quicker comprehension and not through technical methods).

    First test, I was at 800.4 WPM. Second test was at 883.2. Solid improvement @ 10.3%. I’m looking forward to trying this method again on my flight home to Chicago on Monday. Would love to get over 1000. I will try to keep track of progress on my blog.

    -Benjamin

    Reply
  • Steve — July 31st, 2009, 5:49 pm

    This is the same as “Mega Speed reading” from the 90′s Very effective

    Reply
  • Scott FormanJuly 31st, 2009, 5:56 pm

    This is great! My Mom took a speed reading course in college and always amazed me with how fast she could read.

    Doing your exercises here I increased from 290 to almost 700. What is the next step? Just re-doing these exercises more often or simply reading more as in Step 4?

    Reply
  • Eric — July 31st, 2009, 8:05 pm

    Dear Tim,
    Thank you so much for this and other fantastic posts!

    I just did a quick, somewhat sloppy run-through of the protocol and my w.p.m. hopped up from 377 to 829 AND my comprehension seems to have improved too! It really works, what a gift!

    In return I would like to draw your attention to something that I think you might find of great interest and use: Systema (or Russian Martial Art). You may have seen it featured on the ‘Go Warrior’ series or even more recently on the ‘Deadliest Warrior’ series on Spike as used by the Spetsnaz. As a dancer, martial artist and curious human being I think you might find the methodology fascinating. There are some good (and bad or mislabeled) clips on youtube, though the only way to really ‘get’ the system is of course to experience it personally. The following is a link to the various schools operating in California (if you ever get a chance I highly reccomend Martin Wheeler):

    http://www.russianmartialart.com/main.php?page=affiliates&loc=us&sta=CA

    Though of course the real fun stuff happens in Moscow, if you ever get the guts to try and learn Russian ;)

    Anyway, Thanks again for everything!
    -Eric

    Reply
  • Peter P — July 31st, 2009, 8:20 pm

    Great post!

    This is something REALLY wanted to see since lately I’ve started reading tons of books, specifically on online networking and what not. And it may shave off a few minutes the next time I take the SAT!

    I like how you challenge both mind and body to their limits, challenging the norm to achieve outstanding results, with others blaming it on sheer talent/luck.

    Well, I tried out the stuff and I can read at LEAST twice as fast, but it feels kind of weird going at this speed, thus I remembered the quote about being afraid of human potential. Keep it up TM.

    PXP

    Reply
  • Tim FerrissJuly 31st, 2009, 11:00 pm

    Hi All,

    Just two quickies:

    1) My current reading rate is, I would guesstimate, on average between 700-900 wpm for non-technical, or 2-3 pages per minute. If I want to speed through, I can near double that after 15-30 minutes of exercises, but to reach the highest speed requires constant conditioning. Not close to my Pton days, but — then again — I no longer teach this and have to demo it in front of large groups and do recall tests afterward. Sound stressful? It was. Grab a book from someone who reads at “normal” speed and test their recall. It will be horrendous. Book recall is universally overestimated.

    2) This can be used for any language, though ideograms will naturally be slower to read (Chinese, for example). The language is much denser than English, so you can consume more data with fewer characters.

    Tim

    Reply
  • Ben Elgar-White — July 31st, 2009, 11:06 pm

    ive got only one problem, at first it sais “do not read faster than normal” but in the final step, “Read at your fastest comprehension rate”.
    im not saying there wasnt a significant improvement (by these measure, using all the steps i went from 151-356), but im nor sure how much of that was concentration, and how much was training.
    And if it wasnt training, could an individual hold such intense concentration for an extended period of time.
    This isnt an argument against this speed reading, i have only just finished the training, and havnt tried to practice & apply it over time. But i will in the future, and if i see a significant improvemenrt ill be back to talk about it.

    Again, not saying it doesnt work, but has there been a double blind study, or something similar, where the fastest comprehensible speed with a tracer (but no training) has been measure prior to a program like this one.

    Ben Elgar-White

    p.s.
    if this works half as well as im hoping ill probably be reading dozens more of your recomended articles.

    Reply
  • Au Dang — August 1st, 2009, 3:30 am

    Thanks for another useful post.
    I’ll definitely practice this method on the beaches of Nha Trang!

    PS: Just went from Tokyo to Vietnam, but during my stay at Tokyo, I went to Tsukiji Fish Market in Vibrams, needless to say but they reek of fish. Just wanted to thank you for those two suggestions as well.
    -Au

    Reply
  • arb1trage — August 1st, 2009, 9:24 am

    Went from 306 to 505 wpm! Very impressive but to really increase comprehension I bet I will have to practice. I plan to use this technique in medical school (I will be sure to read everything 3 times, don’t worry).

    Thanks!

    Reply
  • Kevin NeadleyAugust 1st, 2009, 9:58 am

    To everyone who reads this:

    I have been practising these techniques and took my wpm from 220 wpm to 803 wpm. However, recalling this info is proving difficult. Is it right in thinking that if I keep practising the techniques mentioned above, recall will start becoming more easily possible?

    Thanks to those who can help.

    Reply
  • Jonas Storm — August 1st, 2009, 10:28 am

    Hi Tim,

    Thanks for another great post. I’ve read some books on the topics and it has helped me to increase my reading speed if I focus on it.

    I did find that I did not enjoy the reading as much when I read at higher speeds. I like to sound out the words in my head and go slow. It’s like telling a story to oneself.

    So when I read to enjoy myself I keep it at 250 words per minute as this brings more life to the stories and I get time to visualize and debate upon what’s written.

    And then when there’s something that I merely have to read I’ll speed it up.
    I also find it useful to use these techniques on books that I’ve already read to freshen up on the subjects.

    What are you guys take on this? Do you speed read fiction/novels?

    Jonas

    Reply
  • Stephen OAugust 1st, 2009, 10:41 am

    Great comment by the earlier poster (Sean) regarding the hearing impaired speed reader. I am hearing impaired and read way faster than anyone else I personally know, and now after reading that comment and your blog, it makes sense as my world is visual.

    Reply
  • Mike Yang — August 1st, 2009, 11:47 am

    Hey Tim,

    Is there more to this training method ??

    Looks like just an introduction.

    Great stuff. Thanks,
    Mike

    Reply
  • Luiz Campos — August 1st, 2009, 3:03 pm

    Hi Tim,

    I’ve been trying for weeks to get your contact (email or something) to talk to you about something you would be really interested.

    I’m from Brazil and I just need to send you a file so that you can have a good overview the whole thing. It’s definitely a solid plan.

    Let me know if you might be interested in doing some entertainment web business in Brazil too.

    Well, can’t tell you much here.

    Email me or something.

    Thanks,

    Luiz

    Reply
  • Sachit GuptaAugust 1st, 2009, 4:47 pm

    Great post! I know you love metrics – i went from 615 to 855 wpm. Solid improvement. What’s the next step? Keep practicing these techniques over and over or is there more?

    Quick questions:

    I stumbled onto this old blog – http://lifestyleentrepreneurship.com/blog/ – has the content from there also been moved to this blog? Also, you mentioned your coming out with a new version of 4HWW in December, what kind of improvements can we expect?

    Keep challenging and inspiring. Thanks!

    - Sachit

    Reply
  • Alex — August 1st, 2009, 5:01 pm

    OH MY GOD this is amazing. I’ve drilled once so far and went from 300 WPM to 624 WPM. Absolutely astonishing.

    Reply
  • AnthonyAugust 1st, 2009, 7:46 pm

    Hey Tim

    Completely unrelated to the post, but I wanted to make sure you got wind of this ;).

    The third year of a convention I host just rolled by, total success. I can’t say I owe it to you 100% (Seth Godin has been a big influence as well), but I will say I would not have found the balls to continue hosting it through the tough points had I not read and been inspired by 4HWW.

    thanks for doing what you do Tim, hope to have you out next year, will shoot you the trailer when it releases

    -Anthony

    Reply
  • LNS — August 1st, 2009, 10:03 pm

    Hi Tim,

    I am just about finished with your book “4 hour work week”. I love it!! I was recently laid off and need major inspiration and I am finding it from your book. I have two questions. I keep doubting myself and the world as to whether I can do what you have done especially given that you are super smart!! I am 42 years old (just about to turn 43) and wonder if there is really still time for me to live the life I want and make a reasonable living into my retirement? Do I still have time?

    Cheers,
    LNS

    Reply
  • Lori HavrillaAugust 1st, 2009, 10:44 pm

    I could have used this program BEFORE

    Reply
  • Lori HavrillaAugust 1st, 2009, 10:45 pm

    …OOPS! Hit the wrong key. I was saying, I could have used this program BEFORE I went to college. That was a painful 4 years.

    Reply
  • Michael MedlockAugust 2nd, 2009, 2:15 am

    Try Tony Buzan’s The Speed Reading Book. (ISBN 1-4066-1021-6) It’s a BBC publication so I don’t know if it is available in the US. Another great book from the inventor of mind maps.

    Reply
  • Jeremy Sinner — August 2nd, 2009, 5:29 am

    Tim,

    Not to call you out on anything, but I’m very appreciative of the repost from your old blog. I could never remember the name and always had to search for a bit to get to this information.

    I have been trying to fit this in my everyday life, trying to start reading a few words in occasionally; on subtitles, television show tid-bits like the History channel and what not. And it has improved my reading speed quite a bit from just passive practice.

    Can’t wait for the new book to come out. I hate to try to ruin any surprises, but I hope you have some bits about Crossfit in there.

    Respectfully from Fussa City,
    Jeremy

    Reply
  • Steve — August 2nd, 2009, 6:54 am

    thought you of all people would like this TJ quote…
    I do not take a single newspaper, nor read one a month, and I feel myself infinitely the happier for it.
    – Thomas Jefferson

    Reply
  • Rick — August 2nd, 2009, 7:53 am

    this is good stuff, but it doesn’t have to be either/or with something like PhotoReading.

    I’m a fan of PhotoReading and use it successfully. Photoreading as a system is a multi-stage process and people always get hung up on the actual photoreading step. I actually view that as one of the least important parts of the process. I believe the information outlined above on this post can be used successfully in conjunction with Photoreading.

    The thing I don’t like about this type of approach to speed reading is it still uses (or implies usage of) the paradigm of “the reader’s job is to read every word in the book and remember as much as possible”, which is absolutely false. The reader’s job is to get their needs met from the material. Sometimes that requires reading every word, usually, not so much.

    I love how Photoreading stresses the entire process of reading. First determining intention, what does one desire to obtain from the material? Then utilizing tools like mind mapping to lay that out. Approaching written material with clear intention does wonders for the experience. Then the multi-pass system is absolutely the way the brain is wired to interact with written material. The concept of one pass through, remember as much as you can, is sorely outdated.

    The material presented above is actually close to one of the photoreading techniques, ‘superreading’. I believe it can all be utilized together.

    Good stuff, thanks for sharing it.

    Reply
  • dasaAugust 2nd, 2009, 1:52 pm

    Hi dear Tim,

    a friend gave me your book to read just few days ago. Now I have a technique how to be liberated even faster :) Thanks for both.

    I just wonder how it would be with other languages as English is not my mother tongue. I suppose it could take a bit more time cos the range of the shared word register is not that large. Any research in that way?

    Love Dasa

    Reply
  • Jacob — August 2nd, 2009, 2:58 pm

    Hey Tim,

    I loved this article. Speed reading is one thing, comprehension is another, what about memory? If you can’t recall the information (for application) the other two elements don’t seem all that important.

    Do you know of any systems out there or techniques where one can increase their memory? I’m familiar with the link/peg methods and have recently started working with Ruslans Mescerjakovs Phenomenal Memory System. Do you have any experiences/feedback on how one can increase their memory of written material?

    Thanks!

    Shaju

    Reply
  • elizabeth mars — August 2nd, 2009, 3:58 pm

    ole!

    thanks, Tim,
    e

    Reply
  • AndyAugust 2nd, 2009, 4:13 pm

    Tim,
    a great summary of a key life skill.

    Listening is another area where a speed increase can be a huge benefit. We recently built a little site that lets you automatically speed up your podcasts, letting you get through more, and with less distraction.

    http://www.podshifter.com lets you set the speed you want to receive your podcasts at, and then they are automatically provided to your iTunes in that faster speed.

    While it was built for ourselves to use, we find that pretty much anyone keen on speed reading will also love speed listening.

    Reply
  • Naomi — August 2nd, 2009, 4:32 pm

    Hey Tim,

    I’ve been following your crazily-speeded-up learning adventures with interest and I have a question: have you ever applied your learning techniques to gymnastics / learning to do flips?

    This is something I’m struggling with at the moment, and I wondered if you have any pointers.

    cheers
    Naomi

    Reply
  • Yak — August 2nd, 2009, 5:46 pm

    OK I have a problem with this..I dont understand anything I am “reading”

    Fast: Yes, but what was it about? No idea.

    Reply
  • WillAugust 2nd, 2009, 9:06 pm

    Hey Tim,

    I’ve been on the market for checking out speed reading courses like PhotoReading and the like.

    Do you know if the PX Method will be made available anytime soon?

    Thanks!

    - Will

    Reply
  • SchmidtyAugust 3rd, 2009, 1:22 am

    @ Sean Ring

    Love the story and comment. Very inspiring.

    Reply
  • Mary HuiAugust 3rd, 2009, 2:28 am

    Wow, my speed has gone up from a slow 198 wpm to a new 385 wpm! The catch is, the new speed seems to have been detrimental to my comprehension – has anyone else experienced this problem?

    Reply
  • Felix — August 3rd, 2009, 4:05 am

    Dude, I officially love your Blog. So much inspiration in here. I enjoy every post. Thanks so much!

    Felix

    Reply
  • Rocky Adams — August 3rd, 2009, 6:07 am

    Thanks for everything Tim. You’re a calss “A” stud. I’m looking forward to increasing success, and appreciate your help.

    Reply
  • tom — August 3rd, 2009, 8:44 am

    speed reading is EASY.
    I use the Kim Peek method. Start reading slowly, gradually increase the speed until you are reading 1 line per second. Then have a surgeon remove your corpus collosum through your nose. Now you should be able to start reading the left page with your right eye and the right page through your left eye. Remember what your eyes see (concentrate!).

    It’s that simple folks.

    Reply
  • Tiit Pähn — August 3rd, 2009, 8:50 am

    Just finished reading every single comment on this post:) Got many great tips and hopefully this will help my Economics @ University of Tartu

    Thanks Tim

    Reply
  • CurtisAugust 3rd, 2009, 9:11 am

    Tim,
    Finally! I have been awaiting this post for awhile. I actually purchased the PX Project from the site referenced in your book (your assistant was kind of enough to tell me there wasn’t one). That shows you how excited I am to improve my reading speed and for self – improvement items.

    Thank you for your constant insight in ways to improve my life.

    You’re the man,
    Curtis

    Reply
  • Jan CisekAugust 3rd, 2009, 9:11 am

    Really helpful info about speeding up reading – and research (and
    experience) shows that comprehension increases the quicker you read.
    However, speeding up reading is only one aspect of more effective reading.
    For retention, you also need to read with purpose, and use various other
    techniques to make sure you remember the stuff you need. On our Spd Rdng
    course we also teach numerous strategies which save much more time than
    simply reading faster. Happy to share if anyone’s interested (or you can
    check our site or download 37 speed reading techniques).

    Reply
  • Ben Davidson — August 3rd, 2009, 1:41 pm

    Tim,

    Thanks for the post. I’ve been using this method since I read the book, but it’s nice to have a digital copy that I can link to easily.

    -Ben

    Reply
  • Ben Davidson — August 3rd, 2009, 1:54 pm

    Tim,

    Of other note – Once I started using the principles in 4HWW (particularly the 80/20 principle), college got much easier. Within one semester I was able to increase my credit load by 50%, decrease my homework time by at least half, and raise my GPA by almost an entire point. I even managed a social life in there, which is something I’ve always struggled to have time to do!

    The breakdown:
    BEFORE 4HWW
    —13 Credit Hours
    —3.00 End of semester GPA
    AFTER 4HWW
    —19 Credit Hours
    —3.92 End of semester GPA

    Again, I also decreased my homework time by about 50% in the second semester. That’s 50% of what I spent with fewer credits.

    If you want, I’ll tell you about what you have taught me in the areas of body management, too. For now, suffice it to say that one blog post of yours taught me more than either of the training courses I have taken in college, with faster results.

    Thanks again for everything, Tim!

    -Ben

    Reply
  • TerranceAugust 3rd, 2009, 4:41 pm

    I believe that even a simplified form of this “speed reading” could change the atmosphere and attitude of most public high schools.

    Perhaps 80%of the foundation of learning is READING and learning to read well can change every thing for a young person.

    Good vocabulary and reading/comprehension speed can make ALL the difference in a young person’s life of learning.

    Thank you Tim for striving for excellence.

    Reply
  • Rich — August 3rd, 2009, 5:00 pm

    This Princeton PX Project seems to a bit water down or short cut version of the original Zox Accelerated Learning System Details: http://bit.ly/DtkM1

    The website rather loooooong, but this is the orginal source of the speed reading techniques.

    It was originally developed in the 70 by retired business Richard Welch.

    The original program still 33 years later is the best by far. Numerous other people have copied elements of, but ultimately the leave out some of the original training techniques, which still work.

    Reply
  • Alex — August 3rd, 2009, 9:08 pm

    Looks awesome. I know a couple people who have a lot of trouble in school because it takes them so long to read. I’m going to show this to them next time I see them (and try it myself of course).

    Reply
  • Read A Whole Book In Under 3 Hours | Style Through IntelligenceAugust 4th, 2009, 4:37 am

    [...] other day I read a blog post by Tim Ferriss (Find it here) on how to speed read using a method called PX. This exercise takes around 20 minutes to complete [...]

  • kyle — August 4th, 2009, 7:48 am

    timbo!

    thanks for your thoughtfulness and heart. really.

    separate question: If you could go back in time and have a conversation with 22 year old tim, what would you try to communicate to him? -or- What is the one thing you wish you knew when you were 22?

    Reply
  • Meena D. — August 4th, 2009, 7:58 am

    thanks Tim indeed i’ve been a poor reader but not any more i assure you. I’m gonna make sure i make do with this idea you’ve given me. It’s a great one keep it up !
    Meena……..

    Reply
  • CaseyAugust 4th, 2009, 10:11 am

    Tim,

    I spend a lot of time slogging through NASA documents, so this could easily save me hours everyday!

    First time visiting your site, and you have me hooked. Can I be your side kick?

    Reply
  • Steve @ Freedom EducationAugust 4th, 2009, 10:56 am

    Hey Tim,

    Love the Princeton video. It’s the first time I’ve seen it and it was really good. I love how you addressed the first question from your own personal experience. This video is the real Tim (me thinks) because it’s authentic and it’s just you speaking from the heart. More of us should learn how to do that.

    Cheers and all the best Tim,

    Reply
  • Lou AaronsAugust 4th, 2009, 5:03 pm

    Tim,

    Some of the comments are on the mark, e.g. Mark Tennenhouse suggests that minimizing subvocalization should speed up reading & asks for methods
    to reduce this silent speech. In looking at this issue, I basically agreed with Edfeldt (Silent speech and silent reading, Chicago, U. Chicago Press, 1960)
    that subvoclization per se is not diagnostic of reading ability (Aarons, L. Subvocaliztion: Aural and EMG feedback in reading. (1971) Perceptual and Motor Skills, 33, 271 – 306.)..

    If altering the fine motor controls of eye movements and eventually having good comprehension has been demonstrated (beyond subjective evaluations by the learner), it would be helpful to cite the studies, It has been my personal belief and feeling that both enjoyment and comprehension of read text requires slower text reading with some wandering of the mind than that available in speed reading.

    The note on perceptual expansion and the comments on the use of speed reading in foreign languages reminds me of the effects of marginal stimulation use in my Japanese & Spanish language programs. The method used divides auditory input between the left & right brain hemispheres while the learner’s attention is focused on the foreign word (right ear > left hemisphere) and the simultaneous equivalent native word (left ear >right hemisphere). Most listeners show a right ear advantage hearing the foreign word as clearer, louder, or better tha the native language word (which they may or may not hear consciously. The learner automatically links the the two words. Similarly, if an eye fixation controls focal attention, than peripheral (non-focal attention) may be used to absorb the meaning ot the read material. Please excuse this somewhat academic analogy. Those interested may take a peek at:

    https://www.mhprofessional.com/product.php?isbn=0071443517

    Reply
  • Chris Weingartner — August 5th, 2009, 8:03 am

    Do you have any advice for someone who sub-vocalizes each word and basically sees only one word at a time? (Very slow reader, yet maintained a 3.8 average in a large and respected University)

    Reply
  • arvindAugust 5th, 2009, 8:58 am

    cool technique Tim! This will really help me to get through my final semester of varsity more easily.

    Reply
  • Pat — August 5th, 2009, 12:48 pm

    Although I don’t agree with the address of ‘timbo’ I would be quite interested in what you have to offer in short form to this question.

    Reply
  • Larry — August 5th, 2009, 2:21 pm

    This is intense. I did the exercises in about 25 minutes yesterday, and spent about an hour reading afterward. In the reading afterward it was a struggle to read faster and comprehend, and I was skeptical about any lasting effect. Today when I sat down to retry the exercises and conditioning I found myself comprehending quite a bit of what I was scanning at the exercise speed. Even at 2-3 lines per second I was picking up most of what I read, even while consciously trying not to bother with comprehension.
    So: amazing. Thanks so much for posting this!

    Reply
  • Natalie MichelsonAugust 5th, 2009, 2:42 pm

    Haha, it’s my dream to be able to read so fast, and a lot of people have told me about speed reading but never really gave me the tips on how to get started with it. Thanks for these suggestions! I’ll give them a try and see how it goes :)

    Reply
  • Benjamin LoncharAugust 5th, 2009, 3:30 pm

    Great post Tim,

    This is great I have a few books I have been wanting to read but am still reading The World is Flat (great book). I should be able to finish that up any day now and get moving on the others.

    Thanks again Tim

    Reply
  • scoobydubido — August 6th, 2009, 11:29 am

    DO NOT CONCERN YOURSELF WITH COMPREHENSION??? doesnt work for medical books thou!!!!

    Reply
  • Heather MartinsonAugust 6th, 2009, 4:03 pm

    Hi Tim!

    I just listened to your Ted talk and am responding to your invitation at the end. I didn’t find any of your blogs that talk about education, so I don’t have an idea what point you’re at now, but I would love to share with you where I am.

    I’m coming from completely outside school systems – homeschooling. The lessons that public schools can learn from homeschooling are tremendous. You know, we don’t have to appeal to the government to try something new. If we want to re-tool, we can be up and running with a new program in 10 minutes. We have learned so much, that it really is a shame that classroom children are being left behind.

    Here’s a list of myths that society holds on to so dearly:

    1. Children can only learn from credentialed teachers.
    2. More words means higher intelligence.
    3. More desk time means more learning.
    4. Passed tests means learning happened.
    5. More schooling equals more success.
    6. Learning is hard, boring work

    I have explanations and examples for each of these myths. I have started a school where children have the amazing opportunity to teach themselves.

    Reply
  • Bert HeatonAugust 7th, 2009, 9:23 am

    Hi Tim,

    Great stuff. I am of course biased, but believe that the best way to dramatically increase your reading speed and comprehension is with PhotoReading, a technique developed over 30 years ago by Paul Scheele, founder of Learning Strategies. Millions of people have bought the book, purchased the home study course or taken one of our classes.

    Bert

    Reply
  • ChadwickAugust 7th, 2009, 9:24 am

    Tried it and doubled my speed from 210 to 420 the first time. Not a bad start. I think with practice and persistence, anything is possible.

    Reply
  • Jerry Sablo — August 7th, 2009, 5:05 pm

    I’m a little confused.

    Chris Weingartner’s situation is similar to mine, coming from a background of 28 years’ proofreading. I read every word, and I’m tired of hearing myself! How can I turn my voice off?

    The other part I have a question with is what Lou Aarons refers to:

    ” I basically agreed with Edfeldt (Silent speech and silent reading, Chicago, U. Chicago Press, 1960) that subvoclization per se is not diagnostic of reading ability (Aarons, L. Subvocaliztion: Aural and EMG feedback in reading. (1971) Perceptual and Motor Skills, 33, 271 – 306.).”

    Are we talking about reading speed, and not reading ability?

    Anyway, Tim, thank you for you post. Now I will have to get your book, 4WWW.

    Reply
  • ami ronalds — August 8th, 2009, 1:08 am

    thanks for the nice piece of information.

    Reply
  • Henry Barth — August 9th, 2009, 5:17 am

    Thanks, now that I can read faster I’ll have to buy three to four times as many books.

    There should be a federal “cash for books” program.

    Reply
  • Tim RosanelliAugust 9th, 2009, 9:04 am

    Excellent Tim,

    I took a speed reading course before that outlined these exact technique and increase my reading from 250wpm to 900 wpm on written materials. These results are great, but I noticed a dramatic decrease in speed when reading materials on a computer screen.

    Do you have any tips for increasing the speed on computer reading (I instantly go from 900wpm to 500wpm, Try it out.)? I noticed a few things myself. Usually books, I am able to read with two fixations per line but since the words on the computer are larger each fixation appears to encompass less words, therefore, greatly decreasing my speed. I also noticed a decrease in speed because of the paging down a page.

    Any Advice? Maybe, a good topic for a future article. It seems that all of these speed reading courses are for books and they seem to ignore the fact that people read more and more on computer screens.

    Reply
  • MilesAugust 9th, 2009, 10:38 am

    Tim, have you tried out any of the software products that help you read faster on the computer? RapidReader (thick client) and Reasy Reader (Firefox plugin) are my two favorites.

    More at http://mileslasater.wordpress.com/2009/08/09/reading-quickly-through-technology/

    Anyone know of a piece of software that assists you in learning to read books faster?

    Miles

    Reply
  • Suresh KannanAugust 9th, 2009, 12:08 pm

    Hey Tim

    Congratulations!!! You really have the balance. Health, Wealth, Happiness, Money and Relationships. It would’nt have come all of a sudden. Somewhere, it must have started in this direction a mentor or a book when you were really young isn’t it. Can you tell us when or who was that triggered you to unlock this Unknown Stupendous Human Potential.

    Regards
    Suresh K

    Reply
  • W. D. Terrell — August 9th, 2009, 4:21 pm

    The program is sound. The only limitation of success is the reluctance of some to be skeptical. Having successfully taught the similar Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics program over 50 years ago I can attest to the benefit when one follows the directions without question. I had one exceptional student in grad school who read scientific texts as fast as he could turn the pages with excellent comprehension. The key to success with technical material is having a sound understanding of the vocabulary and terms used in the particular discipline. I personally read Michener’s ” The Source” in 25 minutes over 50 years ago and can still relate the story anytime, including the description of the main characters. The imagery can be even more vivid when reading prose and poetry. This technique should be taught in every school in the country.

    Reply
  • Tim RosanelliAugust 10th, 2009, 7:44 am

    Okay Miles,

    I checked out the software plugin for Firefox and tried it out. It’s a great tool. I need to check it out a bit but this looks like what I’m looking for.

    Tim

    Reply
  • Michael Pearson — August 10th, 2009, 11:20 am

    Tim,

    Are you affiliated with Derren? He uses your text and PX Project spiel as his own, but seems to be using the technique that avoids mental or subconscious vocalisation mentioned above in comments, rather than what seems to be the core of your approach.

    http://derrenbrownart.com/blog/2009/08/scientific-speed-reading-read-300-faster-20-minutes/

    Keep up the great work,

    Michael

    Reply
  • vinayak kamath — August 10th, 2009, 3:04 pm

    Tim

    The “do not daydream bit” is very critical to me… Have you seen people with attention deficit conditions improve speed and more importantly concentration? How about dyslexics, any experience with them?
    Vinayak
    PS. I read the 4 hour workweek last year and it inspired me to take off backpacking in Europe for a month.

    Reply
  • Mohit SoniAugust 10th, 2009, 9:34 pm

    After reading the article, I doubled my reading speed from 300wpm to 600wpm. I’ll thrive to increase it.

    Thanks Tim!

    Reply
  • Jason — August 11th, 2009, 12:19 am

    Excellent Tim,

    I tried this in high school but just couldn’t/wouldn’t let go. So I’ve been reading around 250 wpm for years. Painful. At the end of PX Project I was up to 910 wpm.

    My comprehension is a bit still a bit shaky but with work I know it will improve dramatically and if not I can just read it again in my spare time.

    Hey, one nice instant improvement – I just busted through 180 comments in record time (for me anyway) normally I glaze over before the end.

    Two thoughts:

    If you vocalize like I do – force your tongue to stay still. Put the tip on the roof of your mouth or behind your teeth. Then read faster than you can speak. There is a point where the voice just gives in. And oh yeah – don’t daydream…

    Second – for reading digital materials. Try increasing the zoom level (of the browser or the application) to 150% or 200% – whatever works for you. I find that if the text is too small I lose track of the next line plus the eyestrain gets to be too much.

    Thank you,

    Jason

    Reply
  • Keith Roberson — August 11th, 2009, 7:29 am

    Speedreading is very much like watching a film in fast forward.
    It works well in subjects, like nonfiction, where timing and nuance are less important to deep comprehension.

    Watching a film in FF, is great for “scanning” scenes, and general action.
    (Sometimes its even better…)

    But if you’re REALLY interested in comprehension, then you MUST slow down and replay the events at a slower speed.

    There is more going on in my brain, then simply decoding the words.
    I am simulating the actors in the scene. I visualize it in real time, giving the actors their dignity in timing and nuance.

    Scanning can certainly help you spot the parts to focus on for simulation.

    But, Just as when we want to analyze a film, in order to analyze the greatest amount of detail and subtlety, we watch the scene in SLO-MO.

    I guess if your word memory is very good, you can replay the scene in your mind without re-reading the text.

    But I have a hard time, especially considering the subtlety of word-play and spoken timing within dialogue, believing that you can read dialogue at high speed, and still get all the nuance and subtlety an actor would bring to his spoken dialogue.

    By slowing down, I allow my mind to fill-in much of the missing detail of the scene, and I can emulate the actor, emotional pauses, even his intentions, etc, more effectively. My brain builds a much richer story via simulation and emulation of the scenes and minds of the actors.

    By doing so, I increase my comprehension.

    Reply
  • Russ — August 11th, 2009, 8:06 am

    Hey;

    I tried this for five minutes or so and seemed to read at about 600wpm with full comprehension. Unfortunately, it left me with what feels like motion sickness – light headache and nausea – so I think I’ll stick to trundling along at 300wpm and skipping the dull bits.

    I mostly read for pleasure anyway and don’t often find myself having to process a stack of papers in a short time.

    Interesting though! I was linked here from http://derrenbrownart.com/blog/2009/08/scientific-speed-reading-read-300-faster-20-minutes/ btw.

    Reply
  • Jonathan FranzoneAugust 11th, 2009, 8:14 am

    That is a very interesting technique for improving reading speed and comprehension. I’ll definitely be giving this a try. Thanks, Tim!

    Reply
  • danielmeieriscrazyAugust 11th, 2009, 11:19 am

    Thanks, I have been meaning to do this for awhile, I was going to listen to the audiobook again and take notes on this section, but now i don’t have to!

    Reply
  • John ThomasAugust 12th, 2009, 4:47 am

    non-speeding reading (MASSIVE regression to double-check comprehension) WPM = 130 wpm yikes.
    speed reading, partial comprehension, max speed WPM = 812 wpm.

    A Whopping 624% speed increase. Yippeee!! This’ll come in handy. I already differentiated from a “thorough reading” (very slow, high comprehension) and a “skim reading” fast (but certainly not this fast) and lower comprehension. This technique probably tripled or quadrupled my speed/skim-reading mode while maintaining the same level of comprehension and partially increased thorough reading wpm speed as well. Grazie. Cheers!

    Reply
  • John ThomasAugust 12th, 2009, 5:02 am

    Just wanted to reiterate how awesome I think this approach is. I love how it employs:

    Fixation Elimination/Mitigation
    Regression Elimination/Mitigation
    Peripheral Vision Maximization/Utilization

    And implicitly the Time Constraint on reading is very comforting. I’ve liked audio books because of their set time (avoiding regression and fixation that can cause certain readings to be unexpectedly long). So Having a set reading time ensures elimination of such regression-fixation hangups, stalls, and delays and creates smoother more “ETA capable reading”.. cool!

    Reply
  • Philosophy, Technology and Math » Blog Archive » 11 Ways to Make Your Brain StrongerAugust 12th, 2009, 1:04 pm

    [...] at speed reading, and making yourself read faster. Need help? Check out these simple instruction to improve by 100% in 20 minutes and then download this PDF document and read [...]

  • Ben Elgar-White — August 13th, 2009, 2:39 am

    Ok, i posted a while ago somewhat skeptical right after the exercise, but now im using this to read mostly semi-technicle books (i.e. astronomy in the middle east) which requires occasionally stopping to work out a basic equation, but im still reading about 250wpm with total comprehension, more than double what i did before, with practice i hope to get to around 600 for non technicle books.
    thanks tim, this article got me doing something ive been meaning to for a long time.

    Ben

    Reply
  • GaryKAugust 13th, 2009, 8:13 am

    Happened to find your blog from a new follower in Twitter and I got to say love how social media can let you come across inspiring articles.You got me trying the technique and I hope I can read PC articles faster with the technique.Thanks Tim, for the inspiration today.

    Reply
  • DanielAugust 13th, 2009, 8:50 am

    Tim and All -

    Apologies if this has already been covered – too many posts to read (at my current speed anyway :) – but I’m curious: how does the technique translate to pages of different size and format? given that it relies partially on muscle memory of the eyes how can it?

    For example, if you develop the technique by practicing with a small book won’t you have to relearn the technique to speed-read text that spans the width of a 24 inch computer monitor? Seems like there would necessarily be a curve to overcome every time you encounter material that is formatted differently than your training text . . .

    Thanks!

    Daniel

    ps. Tim- I’d venture you’re familiar with the Gunning fog index – Do you know what the index number was for the material you trained/taught on? Was there a standard fog index for the PX project?

    Reply
  • Michael KozakewichAugust 14th, 2009, 4:43 am

    I spent Sunday speed-reading some stuff, and I think it drained me for the next couple days. Since then, I’ve been able to keep up 1000 WPM fairly easily. It’s a matter of getting into the groove, and not letting your mind wander.

    I set the font-size way up, squish all the text into a window about four inches across, and set it to scroll at about 1000 WPM, and I can manage to cascade down the text relatively fine as it scrolls. It’s hard to learn things like that, but I can go even faster for things I already know, like blog posts about topics I’m familiar with.

    Reply
  • Eli Baker — August 14th, 2009, 7:57 am

    Woody Allan took a course in speed reading. He read War and Peace in one hour…he says it’s about Russia!

    Reply
  • race42008.com » Blog Archive » Friday DiversionAugust 14th, 2009, 9:47 am

    [...] I ran across this interesting item linked at Marginal Revolution.  It claims to teach you to…speed read in 20 minutes (up to a 300% increase).  It’s a fun exercise, so check out his technique.   [...]

  • Deodoro — August 16th, 2009, 7:31 am

    Hi, would you mind if I translate this to portuguese and post it in a blog (and link it back here, of course) ?

    Reply
  • Diego ScatagliniAugust 16th, 2009, 1:35 pm

    Hi Tim,
    great post. For those that would like to practice with online content, I created web based reading pacer @ http://www.eyercize.com
    It’s free and it comes with a bookmarklet.

    I originally built the tool for myself, because I do most of my reading online and speed reading online content is usually much harder then printed material. There is more eyestrain, lower resolution, and a lot more.

    You can set the tool to exercise all aspects of speed reading and simulate normal book reading.
    Most users can’t believe how fast they can read and how quickly it happens when they are forced to do so.

    One thing that I like about using the pacer is that I can concentrate on the reading and not on the technique.

    Tim, please give it a try and let me know what you think.

    Diego

    Reply
  • Hamish Oudney — August 16th, 2009, 8:45 pm

    I’ve practised these techniques before, and they work fantastically well.

    The one principle which easily doubled my reading speed immediately, is to read with your eyes, not with your ears.

    We are still in the habit of reading like we’re 10 years old. Our teachers told us to read aloud to the class, and nothing has changed, we’re still reading each word aloud but not using our voice. We need to learn to shut the internal voice up and let the more efficient sense do the reading. Have this in mind while reading and you’ll read faster than ever.

    When reading on computer, ensure that you have the web page set so that you can see the whole page without having to scroll down.

    If it’s a technical book, firstly you should decide if you need to read the whole book or just one section. How many times have we read the whole book when we could have just read a few select sections?

    Also, decide what question you’re trying to answer, so that you have a purpose for reading. When you have a target, it gives you motivation for reading difficult passages.

    Thanks for the info Tim

    Reply
  • BorisAugust 17th, 2009, 3:59 pm

    Wow! Just went from 276wpm to 600wpm in the first sitting. I love it. Thanks Tim!

    Can’t wait to see what a month of practice will do.

    BTW, in case someone else is looking for a timer, I used Weird Metronome 1.4 from download.com. It’s small, free, and easy to use (just set it to 60 or 120 bpm).

    Reply
  • Nick — August 17th, 2009, 9:17 pm

    Thank you so much! I just went from 345wpm to 1000 wpm in an hour!!

    Reply
  • Anne Marie — August 18th, 2009, 6:23 pm

    yeahhh just went from 330 words per min to 980 words per min. Should have read all of the Omnivore’s Dilemma (practice book) like this.

    Reply
  • exapted — August 19th, 2009, 12:37 pm

    I’ve been interested in the human vision system for a while, so this blog post makes sense to me. I love how simple in concept it is. As a proof-of-concept, I highly recommend those who are skeptical or curious to try http://www.spreeder.com/ to read a random blog post that you haven’t read yet. I can read so much faster with spreeder. I just put a techcrunch post into spreeder and found it really easy to fully comprehend it at 800 wpm.

    Reply
  • LibAugust 21st, 2009, 10:37 am

    I went through the exercise one time, and went from 273 to 806wpm! I’ll definitely have to stick with this. Thanks :)

    Reply
  • Link-a-tron « A. Ekerplay and the Personal LegendAugust 24th, 2009, 2:53 am

    [...] ever want to rush through anything EVER again, but oh-so-clever Tim Ferriss has written about learning how to read 300% faster whilst still savouring every word and I’m anxious to try it out with my new [...]

  • JoornaalAugust 25th, 2009, 4:39 am

    Wow, this really does work. I did not go all the way to 300% but I did improve my reading speed considerably.

    Reply
  • Hushpreet — August 25th, 2009, 11:33 am

    The story told by Sean Ring is brilliant!

    I for one am really struggling to quiet down that internal voice, does anyone have any tips?

    Reply
  • Sean Ring — August 25th, 2009, 5:57 pm

    Hi Hushpreet,

    Thanks for the kind words.

    I’d definitely try turning the book upside down and running your finger across the page while following it with your eyes. It’ll feel like nothing’s getting done. And that’s how it’s supposed to feel. Since you have nothing to sound out, it will feel a bit strange the first few times around. Then turn the book right side up and give it a go to see. Rinse and repeat as often as you need, for it takes practice. Hope that helps.

    All the best,

    Sean

    Reply
  • A Guide to Speed Reading » Lone GunmanAugust 26th, 2009, 2:01 am

    [...] PX Project is a single 3-hour “cognitive experiment” designed to increase your reading speed. Average increases using the technique are apparently in the region of 386%. The technique seems to [...]

  • technolitics.com § The Untrained Eye: Why Gullibility Sometimes PaysAugust 26th, 2009, 2:57 pm

    [...] no delivery. It was with that skepticism in mind that I dug into Tim Ferriss’ article “How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes.” With grad school looming, a potential boost in reading speed seemed well worth a few lost [...]

  • bradAugust 27th, 2009, 7:48 am

    this is great stuff tim. thanks a ton for all the incredible wisdom.

    best,

    brad

    Reply
  • Barry Graham — August 30th, 2009, 11:45 am

    I tried this today and it seems good, I was distracted rather a lot while doing the exercises because the topic of the pages I randomly chose in the book I randomly pulled from my book shelf, was eye fixations. While it wasn’t talking about speed reading, it was pretty close. I am not kidding!

    Here is the question I have for you Tim. When I use the pen and follow the top of it, the text is blurred. Is that what you are suggesting we do? Or are you suggesting that we use the pen to make sure we don’t skip lines, but while we are moving the pen from the 3rd work on the left to the 3rd word on the right, it doesn’t matter if our eyes fix on certain words rather than following the pen exactly?

    BTW great book, I listened to it on CD, the unabridged version, and I lent it to one of my managers. My only suggestion is to remove the bad language so that people with young children can listen to it without having to worry about them hearing language we don’t want them to use. I also bought the hard copy book as a back up now I’ve listened to it. I work for a consulting company where we have to be billable 44 hours a week so I am not sure that I can ethically do exactly what you suggest, but there were some very helpful ideas in there.

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissSeptember 3rd, 2009, 12:56 am

      Hi Dan,

      It would certainly seem that way. Based on the “Adaptagenix” reference, it seems he pulled it off of my first blog (before this one and the new edits). It’d be nice to at least get a link back, but life is too short to chase everyone.

      I just try and take a few deep breaths, laugh, and move on…

      Thanks for the heads up, though. It’s important to be aware of who does this.

      Cheers!

      Tim

      Reply
  • Matthew CornellSeptember 1st, 2009, 8:34 am

    While reading all of a piece faster is a great goal, a significantly faster *effective* rate is possible by selective reading and non-method scanning. I.e., question what you want to get out of it, and apply strategy. FYI on-topic link: I’m told my article “How to read a lot of books in a short time” has helped a lot – http://matthewcornell.org/blog/2006/02/how-to-read-lot-of-books-in-short-time.html

    Reply
  • Matthew CornellSeptember 1st, 2009, 8:37 am

    http://www.fourhourworkweek.com/blog/2009/07/30/speed-reading-and-accelerated-learning/#comment-47699

    While reading all of a piece faster is a great goal, a significantly faster *effective* rate is possible by selective reading and non-method scanning. I.e., question what you want to get out of it, and apply strategy. FYI on-topic link: I’m told my article “How to read a lot of books in a short time” has helped a lot [link in name]

    Reply
  • amIT singhSeptember 5th, 2009, 3:12 am

    well i have been preparing for many exams to get into a good B school here in India

    this technique to read faster has really helped to read and answer the reading comprehension section of CAT really quickly i have almost double my reading speed
    thanks

    Reply
  • Alexander MendozaSeptember 6th, 2009, 5:19 pm

    Antes de nada, gracias por que desde que lei tu libro mi vida cambio, y no es solo un modo de hablar.

    y eso que aun no he encontrado el producto adecuado que vender.

    sobre este metodo me parece asombroso y me gustaria poder emplearlo y adaptarlo al español para ofrecerlo como un producto en internet, si me daria su permiso.

    gracias por dar lo mejor de si

    Reply
  • Beka — September 7th, 2009, 7:30 am

    So this is my first comment…way to take off the training wheels :). I’ve had this sitting in my Google Reader until I had about a half hour to practice and try it out–I wish I’d made time sooner. My reading speed increased from 310 wpm to 650 wpm with adequate comprehension in about 40 min (I went through each step a couple times and didn’t move on until I’d hit the target practice speed). Another great post, Tim!

    Reply
  • Jure Jesenovec — September 8th, 2009, 2:49 pm

    Very interesting concept that works in many cases. I use this regularly for reading through all emails and news, easy reading etc.

    As I understand the main theory behind this concept is increasing ones’ recognition ability. The reading speed would be limited only with our own personal ability of recognition the semantics at the given density of information flow. Reading insainly complex mathematical equation has extremly high density in comparison to yesterdays’ yellow pages.

    But I must ask you Tim, where is the limit?

    If I’m reading my favorite magazine, I deliberately slow down, take my time, enjoy the lines… For all other material I use your suggestions from chapter E in your book – elliminate :) The book is excellent!

    WBR,
    JJ

    Reply
  • Antoinette — September 10th, 2009, 10:02 am

    I really enjoyed your blog about speed reading training and I have this to share.
    During the Vietnam war when new draftees were required to be trained and ready almost the next day, the US Govt began a test program with elementary schools. My school in rural Virginia happened to be selected and my class was the test subject. I was 9 at the time. We sat in a darkened room with the page projected on the screen in front of us. At first the light showed a paragrapgh at a time and went slowly. Then it went down to a line at a time, then a few words, then one word. Once we had mainteained that speed it began to pick up speed. Each session lasted about 30 minutes and after each session we were tested on comprehension, even to the point of being asked if specific words were used and how. As you can imagine the class quickly split into several levels of speeds. Suprising though, the comprehension was almost equat to the base line comprehension level (and I know this because the teacher was a friend of the family and they often talked about it later).
    This process went on for the whole semester and then disappeared from the classrom never to be seen again.
    While as an adult I’m not comfortable with how we were used as guinea pigs, I am thankful for the training. The speed I attained allowed me to do many things I would not have been able to do without it. Standardized tests were much easier, homework was less time consuming, etc. The down side is that after years of speed reading I’ve had to really work to slow down to read for pleasure- not that I enjoy the book more if read slowly- I just hate having to replenish the reading material supply at such a fast rate! Also- sometimes my friends kid me that I can’t have finised the whole book that fast- I just smile and move on to the next book:)

    So I say to Yale and other nay sayers- this program works but it will not change your basic comprehension levels. If you didn’t understand the words before you read them- reading them faster won’t change that. It will, however, allow you to intake more information that may, when digested, allow you to increase your understanding. And it will certainly give you the extra time for looking up new words and concepts.

    Thanks for including the atrticle. I’ve printed it out for friends so now I can get the books I loan them back faster!

    Reply
  • Eryk BanattSeptember 12th, 2009, 3:06 pm

    I raised my reading speed from 426 WPM to 934 WPM in just about a half hour. Thanks for the help, Tim! I’ve tried things like photoreading and other programs that are days long, and this was the fastest and most effective improvement.

    With much respect,
    -Eryk

    Reply
  • Tom Forese — September 16th, 2009, 8:12 pm

    Tim-thanks for the tip……..very helpful.

    I read the other day that when the train was being introduced naysayers warned that speeds of 40 miles per hour would cause the heart to explode.

    Progress will always have its critics!!!!!!!

    When will we see another Tim Ferris book?

    Tom

    Reply
  • André BrancoSeptember 17th, 2009, 7:44 am

    @Tim

    I couldn’t avoid remembering this quote:

    “I took a speed reading course and read ‘War and Peace’ in twenty minutes. It involves Russia.” —Woody Allen

    I guess we should not overdo this technique beyond the point where we are still enjoying the reading. =)

    Best,
    André

    Reply
  • odinSeptember 17th, 2009, 9:09 pm

    This is trully brilliant! Real effective methods that can be put to use immediately.Can’t wait to try it.

    Reply
  • Jim HardinSeptember 22nd, 2009, 5:50 pm

    Hi Tim!
    I just found your blog. Wow there is a lot of cool stuff here. This post on speed reading is very interesting and I think I am going to put it to the test. I would love to be able to read faster. I have 3 kids and not a lot of time to read books, but if I could read faster I could fit it in. It would be awesome!

    Reply
  • durbinSeptember 26th, 2009, 8:57 pm

    “you will need to practice technique at 3x the speed of your ultimate target reading speed. Thus, if you currently read at 300 wpm and your target reading speed is 900 wpm, you will need to practice technique at 1,800 words-per-minute”

    That should be 2x or 2,700 wpm, no?

    Reply
  • Paste Interactive » Blog Archive » Using Summarize on Mac OSX to Read FasterSeptember 29th, 2009, 8:46 am

    [...] you truncate as much of the text as you like, getting it down to a much more scannable size. Like speed reading SummaryService is sucking out all the redundant words, transitions, and filler that make text more [...]

  • DaveOctober 2nd, 2009, 6:02 am

    Tim,
    Very useful information. Thanks. I’ve always been frustrated with my reading speed. To learn to read by more than a word at a time, I created a program which I’ve now turned into http://www.ReadSpeeder.com. It’s 100% free and can be used with any text. It will automatically find the ‘natural’ phrases in text and present these sequentially. The result is you can quickly grasp the meaning of each phrase without having to think of the individual words. Using it feels like the thoughts are lifted from the text directly to your mind. That’s how it seems to me, but please give it a try and see what you think. It even comes with a bookmarklet so you can use ReadSpeeder directly on ANY web page! Plus you can save any text to be read later, or to be shared with other users, or to be read on a ReadSpeeder iPhone app. I created ReadSpeeder because I really enjoy reading but I’ve always been so frustrated with my reading speed. This really has helped me to read faster and understand what I read better, and to end my habit of saying the words in my head, and going back and re-reading a passage multiple times. Anyway, if you try it, I’d love to hear what you think.

    Reply
  • nickriebeOctober 7th, 2009, 11:24 pm

    I agree with Durbin,

    Isn’t the technique practice speed 2,700wpm for a target rate of 900, not 1,800??

    nick

    Reply
  • Rob — October 8th, 2009, 2:00 pm

    Hmmm….

    I tried the exercise, and while my reading did improve, it was more like 30%, rather than 300%. I wonder if I’ve done something wrong, or if this requires a lot of practice to get to 300%. I know some of the posts say they went up 300% in one session, but that simply is very very far from my experience.

    Thanks.

    Reply
  • Andre P — October 14th, 2009, 7:06 pm

    Wow, Tim! I had looked into lengthy speed reading courses in the past and always thought there was too much of a time investment for something that wasn’t proven. Over the past 20 minutes, I went from 252 WPM to 637 WPM with the same comprehension.
    I wish I had read your book and this blog back when I was in grad school!

    Reply
  • Thomas — October 17th, 2009, 9:11 am

    i am wondering how well that works for books/research papers which are more sophisticated (ie. math, physics, computer science).
    Esp. how well can you remember it? With 3000 words per minute you can probably read the whole linear algebra theory in a week ;)

    Reply
  • NurOctober 28th, 2009, 12:47 pm

    I just started working in a book shop, and I need to read a lot of books so I can recommend them.

    These techniques would help me expand my repertoire..

    (started with 200 wpm
    ended up with 425 wpm)

    Thanks

    Reply
  • Blogg/slaskhink « Träning, internet och annatOctober 29th, 2009, 7:09 am

    [...] Troligtvis kommer det inte bli så mycket egen text utan mer funderingar, korta meningar och länkar. Dock kan det vara bra att vara förbered på att det kanske dyker upp tyngre textstycken. Så passa därför på att läsa Speed Reading. [...]

  • Kyle — November 1st, 2009, 7:35 am

    WOW! I always read slow and there’s a book for school I need to read by tomorrow. Knowing it would take me several hours to finish it at my normal speed, I Googled something along the lines of “how to read faster” and this game up. I started this exercise at 182 wpm, and within 10-15 minutes doubled my speed to 365 wpm! The best thing is, I do not feel like I have uncovered my full speed potential yet. I think that with some more practice I will be able to read at 400-500 wpm.
    Thank you Tim!!

    Reply
  • Louche — November 1st, 2009, 9:58 pm

    I’ve read about this stuff before, though never done these exact technique practices. I think that it has helped me to skim better in the past. I can’t say that the periphery thing has ever helped me much with comprehension speed, and especially cutting off the edges. That just gets me leaving words out and not understanding a thing. Why the heck would you begin reading three words in? You just missed three words. Maybe there’s something I’m not understanding, but you need to explain it better.

    I always get suspicious when the majority of commenters are full of praise, but for something they’re only about to try – later, tomorrow, but certainly not yesterday or last month. Nonetheless, I will keep working on this. It hasn’t improved my reading speech yet.

    Reply
  • Internalizing & Manifesting What We Read | Smart Boy DesignsNovember 10th, 2009, 9:47 am

    [...] has compiled great information in aiding individuals in increased reading speeds. The blog post, Scientific Speed Reading: How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes – is a great [...]

  • Patrick ThompsonNovember 12th, 2009, 4:22 pm

    I just released an iPhone speed reading app called QuickReader. It is currently being featured by Apple on the app store “What’s Hot” list.

    It is a speed reading eBook reader that works very well with the protocol described in this article. Essentially you follow a guide through the full-page text, similar to using a finger or pen, but in this case the guide is a highlight, a long/short underline, or an outline. It allows you to adjust the fixations to one or more fixations per line (called stops in the app) or 1 or more lines per fixation and you have fine control over the guide speed from 100 to 2000 WPM. The guide encourages proper tracking, eliminating regressions and back-skipping. And at anytime you can take a speed test to determine your current reading rate.

    The app comes with 20+ full-length eBooks. You can see a video demo of how it works at quickreader.net/videos.

    Looking forward to the new edition of 4HWW.

    All the best,
    Patrick

    Reply
  • Juan Abello — November 20th, 2009, 1:48 am

    Hi, I have tried this technique and it really works, though I have problems doing it a usual habit: I mean I do it but days later I come back to my usual reading speed. Please recommend a program to make this part of my normal reading speed.

    Juan

    p.s. Tim I love your book it demolished soooo many preconceptions about life

    Reply
  • LorealNovember 25th, 2009, 2:53 pm

    This would be excellent if I could stop sub vocalizing. I cannot for the life of me quiet that internal voice. Any tips?

    Reply
  • Chad BozarthNovember 25th, 2009, 11:38 pm

    I have heard one speed reader explain that he sees text as pictures, ie. when he looks at a page he does not audibly read the words in his mind he just sees the word, etc. What do you think about this? Does your method of speed reading involve audibly saying the word in your head?

    Reply
  • DaveNovember 27th, 2009, 12:22 pm

    Loreal,
    Read by whole phrases. Try http://www.readspeeder.com to learn how.

    Reply
  • Jack — November 28th, 2009, 7:27 pm

    It works, alright! However, my speed increased by 188%, not 300% like the title describes… but still a very effective way to read in my opinion.

    Reply
  • EmilioDecember 3rd, 2009, 3:04 am

    I feel I understand the “big picture” bit it’s kind of hard to get the details.

    PRactice maybe?

    Reply
  • [weekly review] How to Get More Done in Less Time | jiveSYSTEMS BlogDecember 11th, 2009, 11:41 am

    [...] you want to improve your reading speed, you can read this blog post by Tim Ferriss, Scientific Speed Reading: How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes.  I did not make a 300% improvement, more like 50% increase in both speed and accuracy without [...]

  • 5 Ways on How To Read A Book or Get A Book Read — KickAssLifeStyle.comDecember 15th, 2009, 6:32 pm

    [...] Ferriss at FourHourWorkWeek.com has an excellent blog post on scientific speeding reading. I believe its similar to the Evelyn Wood style of speed reading from the [...]

  • SamDecember 22nd, 2009, 2:54 pm

    Great read, reminded me alot of when i did Brian Tracy’s Acclerated Learning Techniques Course. The idea’s for Speed Reading are so helpful.

    Sam

    Reply
  • Marcus U. — December 22nd, 2009, 7:14 pm

    Nice work :)

    I used an online speed reading program from Fastreaders (www.fastreaders.com) several months ago and it helped me read faster. Most of these techniques work but you just have to retrain yourself to read differently.

    Reply
  • Charles — December 28th, 2009, 2:37 pm

    Thanks a lot. This works. I improved my reading speed from 396 to 468 words per minute after the 1st test. I am going to train again so as my brain gets used with this new technical.
    ps: I wonder why we don’t learn it at school.

    Reply
  • Noah Fleming — January 4th, 2010, 12:41 pm

    old post but decided to give it a shot…

    65% increase for me.

    First try and increased from 305 to 504 although I’m sure my comprehension is way down. I’ll def. keep trying and practicing this however.

    Reply
  • Noah — January 5th, 2010, 8:30 am

    Just did the exercise again after doing it yesterday.

    After re-testing I found I was not all the way back to to 305 but faster at around 370.

    I did the exercises again and finished at 540 – 35 more wpm than yesterday.

    I think I’ll keep practicing. If I can read at even 450wpm and comprehend I’ll be flying

    Reply
  • Alex — January 5th, 2010, 11:13 pm

    THANK YOU SO MUCH!
    i was so slow at reading, 145 wpm or something, and now up in the 400s,
    this is great! im working on getting to around 500 and above now

    Reply
  • Noah FLemingJanuary 6th, 2010, 12:42 pm

    Day #3

    Started test today with a crazy speed of 468 right out of the gate.

    Was able to redo the exercises and finish at 612 WPM with pretty good comprehension.

    I’m going to keep practicing daily and updating my progress here.

    Reply
  • [anon]January 6th, 2010, 4:37 pm

    This is a really great article and I can’t wait to start trying it. The problem is I really like listening to audio books but people have told me that it slows my reading speed down. yet on the other hand i heard reading a long with with an audiobook helps speed and comprehension. What should I do? I love how easy it is to listen to an audiobook when i am on the go but i don’t want to hinder me on reading faster and comprehending better.

    Reply
  • Karolien Straetemans — January 9th, 2010, 7:32 am

    Hi Tim, after procrastinating it for way too long, I’ve finally given this a try. I live in Flanders (Belgium) and used the Dutch translation of Peter Senge’s The Fifth Discipline (pages 146-150). It took me about 60 minutes (I’ve counted after each exercise) and it made me read 88% faster. A great accomplishment although it’s still far from 300% :-)
    The difficult part for me was knowing how long one second or half a second takes (reading and counting in your head at the same time is a bitch). I guess the mistake I made is that at first I did not try out how long 1 second lasts (great chronometers online though). I suggest you get comfortable with that before you begin. Question: the book I chose isn’t the easiest one around. Although it’s these kind of books I want to use speed reading on. Do you suggest starting out with something easy or with the material you really want to read?
    Thanks for the great book and blog! I really appreciate what you are doing!

    Reply
  • Noah FlemingJanuary 11th, 2010, 11:47 am

    tested today again after a few days of not testing but lots of reading.

    Started out reading at 416WPM

    Did the exercises and finished at 624 WPM.

    So far not finding much consistency in this but seem to be able to keep bumping things up a bit even though I started slower than last week after 3 days of practicing.

    Reply
  • Daniel Lu — January 11th, 2010, 4:38 pm

    Hmm I tried this but only got 13% increase. I think I’m not using my peripheral vision. Any ideas on what’s could be going wrong?

    Reply
  • NoahJanuary 14th, 2010, 11:36 am

    Made a post about my results on my blog if anyone is interested.

    http://noahfleming.com/blog/speed-read-like-rain-man-75-increased-reading-speed-in-20-minutes

    Daniel, that could be. I find I really have to let go and focus to keep up the faster speeds.

    I find now that if I’m cruising along I almost get into a sort of concentrated zone but lose it often and spend time trying to get back into it.

    Reply
  • Read Faster « Disconnected BitsJanuary 18th, 2010, 8:32 pm

    [...] Have at it. You can also read Timothy Ferris’ technique as described by the man himself on his blog. Either way, get ready for a whole new way to enjoy reading. Possibly related posts: (automatically [...]

  • Noah FlemingJanuary 19th, 2010, 1:39 pm

    Tested again

    Baseline test of 468
    After exercises was at 624

    Reply
  • varun patwardhen — January 26th, 2010, 10:16 am

    Thanks a lot!!
    You rock!

    Reply
  • Eric — January 26th, 2010, 9:19 pm

    Wow Tim, thanks for the article! I have been doing the exercises in a sort of spaced repetition (Before bed, first thing in the morning, mid-day) and have noticed that my starting speed each time has felt slow but is nearly 3x my original speed of 188 without any stress. I have increased the speeds from 60bpm a line and 120bpm a line to 72bpm and 144bpm.

    Also, I am using a metronome to keep my tempo true. MetronomeOnline.com is a simple app that will serve the purpose well. For consistent improvement it is important to have a measurable baseline. If I were preparing a piece of music for speed, I wouldn’t forgo metronome use.

    Cheers

    Reply
  • Aaron McRannJanuary 28th, 2010, 8:54 pm

    Wow… I’m impressed. I started out at 240wpm and after doing the exercises I was at 507wpm. And only after a few minutes… that’s crazy. My guess is that practice will only make you faster…

    Reply
  • The Power of Social Media: Seth GODin is GODlikeJanuary 29th, 2010, 12:58 am

    [...] faster than previous from the help of one of the most influential people in my life, Tim Ferriss (Scientific Speed Reading: How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes), and since I am starting up my own Social Media/Web Consulting Firm, I figured I would also had [...]

  • Starting from scratch « Self Discipline from ScratchFebruary 3rd, 2010, 2:10 pm

    [...] like to bump that number up to 1000.  I will do this using a method Tim Ferris posted on his blog: http://www.fourhourworkweek.com/blog/2009/07/30/speed-reading-and-accelerated-learning/.  I won’t be putting a date on this one since it should just progress [...]

  • Mor — February 12th, 2010, 2:09 am

    although I couldn’t even read at 1 line per second, let alone comprehend, I persisted anyway – just charging along suspeding pessimism. LUDICROUSLY I improved from 209 wpm to 384 wpm. it felt like I’d habituated a faster eye speed, forcing my brain to keep up with rather than dictate my speed… hope this change sticks around as more than an afterglow.. or maybe I could try this exercise briefly before reading until it becomes natural. thankz dude

    Reply
  • Malinda — February 12th, 2010, 8:47 pm

    From 341 to 594.

    Very nice.

    Reply
  • Nick RooneyFebruary 12th, 2010, 9:15 pm

    Thank you for this article. I am going to try it, and will report back with my results… I am a very slow reader. :)

    Reply
  • Guy — February 13th, 2010, 3:06 pm

    Hmm, an average technique, didn’t really work

    Reply
  • Veronica — February 16th, 2010, 8:56 pm

    Hi Tim – thanks for this AMAZING post! I did the exercise and my wpm increased by 137% – I practiced with my neuroscience book (an extremely technical book) and I was able to retain what I was reading while reading much faster. Your technique makes perfect sense – what you are doing is training your eyes to “read” more efficiently.

    I will do this exercise daily for the next couple of weeks to see how much more I can improve.

    Thanks again!
    Veronica

    Reply
  • NathanFebruary 19th, 2010, 10:35 pm

    Hey Tim,

    After listening to the 4-Hour Workweek audio-book recommended too my as part of my reading material for an internship I am part of I remembered hearing about increasing reading speed. I looked it up and found this post. The information here is incredibly helpful as a lot of what I’m doing requires reading and understanding information.
    I hope you don’t mind, but I’ve re-posted this on my blog. There’s a link at the bottom giving you full credit, and I will happily remove the post if you would prefer?
    You’re a truly phenomenal person, and your book is amazing!
    Keep up the good work!

    Regards,
    Nathan.

    Reply
  • Blake W. — February 20th, 2010, 2:40 pm

    Tim,

    I am taking the Earn1K course, and I think you should know that I made you laugh AT LEAST twice the other night. (“**** abandoned us,” for one)

    I am having some difficulty applying the course because I don’t have hard technical skills and I don’t have much experience. (I just graduated college and negotiated a work-to-own for two nearby franchise tax offices. That is going well, but it leaves a lot to be desired in a career.)

    Because I am so close to a university I think it might be worthwhile to apply the Earn1K system to teach speed reading. Are you willing to offer any more material or insight that might help me be successful??

    Remember, I made you laugh.

    Blake W.

    Reply
  • Thrive By 25 » Tim FerrissFebruary 22nd, 2010, 6:26 pm

    [...] best-selling book “The 4-Hour Workweek,” has a blog that can teach you everything from how to read 300% faster to how to control your Facebook obsession. It’s great if you’re looking to hone your [...]

  • IshanMarch 8th, 2010, 3:35 pm

    I will try to keep this comment short – but I doubt that :)

    This is the first time I have come across your blog. I was going to start reading a new book, which relates to quite a boring subject (PMP). I have tried to read this book couple of times eariler, but find myself completely forgetting what I have read, and never progressing beyond first few chapters.

    So, I decided that in my first go I will just finish that book very fastly, and worry about comprehending it in second run. That’s when I started searching in Google for speed reading, and came across this article.

    I followed exercises in this article to the tee, and found myself naturally increasing my reading speed quite a bit.

    After that, I started reading the book very fastly, with the intention of not comprehending it.

    After reading a few chapters, I found that not only had I read those chapters very quickly, surprisingly, I had understood everything and had 100% comprehension. That was quite surprising to me.

    I again started searching on Google, and came across another article which mentioned that if we read slower than our mind can process information, then we are sure to not understand most of the stuff. That would be like watching movie in a slow motion.

    In a nutshell, your speed reading techniques not only increased my reading speed, it also made sure that I was able to comprehend more efficiently, and lesser time.

    Nothing beats that :)

    Thank You. I am a regular reader now. Heading over to Amazon to try out the book as well.

    Reply
  • Sandy — March 13th, 2010, 3:01 pm

    I am a nursing school student and mother-of-two, and completely overwhelmed by massive amounts of text we are required to read. To add to it, I am not a fan of reading to begin with. It is tedious, and I often have to skip back to the beginning of a section because I didn’t quite comprehend what was written. Tedious, and un-fun, to say the least.

    Books on speed reading are still books, and they take time to read. Your post is concise and to the point. Thank you!!

    I tried the assessment exercise, and my eyes are sore (I supposed they didn’t get their mini breaks between the skips). My reading speed doubled with about the same amount of comprehension.

    Your post encourages me to keep practicing, and spend less time reading, and more time with my girls!!

    Thanks again!
    Sandy

    Wow! My eyes are sore after going through the assessment exercises, and I doubled my reading speed, with about the same amount of comprehension!!

    Reply
  • Adrian SimionescuApril 6th, 2010, 12:09 pm

    I’ve been a reader of your blog for sometime now and I would like to personally give my thanks to you Tim. You got me interested in improving my skills in reading, comprehension, recall and memory.

    The thing is I’ve always had problems with attention in school. I was only interested in certain subjects and things. If they where outside this I had a hard time keeping up. Especially with reading and recall. I thought that is it something wrong with me when it came to reading, keeping a focus and remembering things. Well I refused to believe in this :D! I said to myself a couple of years ago that there must be an explanation and something that I can do about my problems with learning, reading, attention etc.

    Anyway to put it shortly I started to research and study what was it that gave me such trouble in these areas and came to find many great sources that helped me ALOT. There are things one can do to improve oneself!!!

    I accidentally stumbled on your book and loved it. Then I stumbled on your blog through your book and loved it even more :D.

    I want to say thanks for your blog and book. Have gotten alot of good info and ideas from it. Especially your blog posts like this one which worked like extremely flammable stuff that sky rocketed my progress. Not that I am a pyromaniac or something like that, just sky rocketed my progress :).

    Thank’s again and hope to see more great posts from you!

    Reply
  • Joshua SMITHApril 10th, 2010, 8:29 am

    The positive side to reading 300% faster is that I cover more during my metro ride to work. The downside is that now I spend nearly 80€/month more on books.

    I hope the ipad makes up the difference.

    Merci pour l’article!

    Reply
  • VASUKiApril 19th, 2010, 8:39 am

    Thanks! I don’t read books just because I don’t have time to read. I wanna read a lot of books. I’ll try to implement this.

    Reply
  • grant spoon — April 19th, 2010, 9:01 pm

    Tim, youre amazing, latest book is a bible of useful insight. As to speed reading…
    I’ve never been a fast reader, prob well below avg. I can now skim at 600 to 800 wpm with around 75% accuracy.
    Full absorption slow reading is probably closer to 450 now. I must say that while it is possible, it has been hard work. This yr 2010, I spent a good 30 min + per day in jan at it with hard won progress. It takes time to retrain not to sub vocalize and to train the mind to capture more. I think you have some good ideas but would caution anyone this is not as easy as you may suggest. A suggestion… treat this like a sport. you know you could run 10 miles, but you also know you need to practice and get in shape first, no different in reading. It does work, but only through persistence and effort. I also recommend researching the low cost software packages out there that DO help. There are some good ones for less than $30 Be Well and at peace.

    Reply
  • Igor Galvão — May 9th, 2010, 2:50 pm

    Hi, Tim. Just read your book and loved it. I’m still implementing and adapting some stuff, but already on my way to less than 10-hours week!

    Anyway, i’m curious about this method. With long readings (more than 20 pages), i’m able to recall info up to one hour latter. But, the day after, i can’t really explain what i read. I’m guessing i’d need other techniques you taught on the seminar.

    To the point: i’m trying to have your full lecture. However, i haven’t found a link or anything like that so that i can buy it. Is it avaible?

    Thanks a lot for the inpiration!

    Reply
  • Mia — May 10th, 2010, 2:32 pm

    Thank you so much for this wonderful oportunity. I went from about 1 page per minute to 2 1/2 pages per minute.

    Thanks again,
    Mia

    Reply
  • Lewis — May 14th, 2010, 4:16 am

    Hi – thanks Tim this is a great article – very interesting indeed. I have just established my base line and carried out all the exercises, but I feel like something is missing… Is there any more information on this that I can get my hands on? I want something really in-depth that I can study and perfect. This, while it is very useful, seems like an overview and it’s teasing me to want more information! Any help would be much appreciated!
    Thanks again!

    Reply
  • AnonMay 19th, 2010, 12:40 am

    I love the detail and precision that has been included in a post of this length. I saw people recommending whole books to be read and followed in the matter. Do you go beyond these measures and focus on other resources to control others? And as Tyler asked what are your thoughts on reading the image?

    Reply
  • The ultimate guide to speedreading | Living a successful college lifeMay 24th, 2010, 2:28 am

    [...] to buy his book in order to learn speedreading, he has published the article on his blog as well! Please read it here, so I don’t need to copy everything (which I just don’t like). The actual training is [...]

  • JFGrissomMay 25th, 2010, 11:17 pm

    Hi Tim,

    189 WPM to 369 WPM.

    Thanks this will be helpful!

    You rock!
    Jay

    Reply
  • Matt Thomas — June 4th, 2010, 7:39 am

    Good morning Tim, new reader here, I’ve only been aware of your existence for a short time but you seem like a very wise man whom I have very much to learn from in the coming months. I was wondering though, can these test results really be accurate? If you’re giving yourself 3 times as long in the final test (3 minutes) versus 1 minute in the baseline opening test, wouldn’t you obviously read 3 times as much? Granted, your technique did increase my reading speed by over 150 wpm in the short few minutes given but it appeared to be a much larger number when compared to the results from reading for one minute in the first test. Wouldn’t a more accurate final test call for the same amount of time as the opening test so your answers aren’t automatically a number three times the size of the first one?

    Reply
  • George PatrickJune 10th, 2010, 10:55 pm

    Tim,

    Thanks for posting this. I just read about your post on another forum. Been trying to learn speed reading for the last couple of years but to know avail.

    Looking forward to reading the post in more detail and doing the exercises.

    Reply
  • TJ — June 11th, 2010, 8:39 am

    I have been trying your suggestions, but have a question. As a person reads what are they to be thinking while going over the words/sentences? Are they just looking at the words, single or in groups…not sure what to be look at.

    Thanks,

    TJ

    Reply
  • KenJuly 14th, 2010, 8:48 am

    Hi dear Tim,

    a friend gave me your book to read just few days ago. Now I have a technique how to be liberated even faster :) Thanks for both

    ANd this post is superb n awesome!

    Reply
  • Dennis McGrathJuly 24th, 2010, 11:09 pm

    Hi Tim,

    I am always looking for new information to give me inspiration for public speaking and reading has always been a limiting factor for me. I will be keen to see how your techniques help me and other members of our Toastmasters club.
    Thanks a million
    Dennis from Boaters Toastmasters, Christchurch, New Zealand

    Reply
  • Ryan EnglandJuly 25th, 2010, 5:19 pm

    I loved your book. I think I’ve read it four times in the past year. Outsourcing galore. You molded my lifestyle. Actually my first idea to make money came directly from you, mainly from this post. You taught your speed reading class and made $1500 for 3 hours of work. No one can make that much hourly, especially with a traditional job. But you figured it out and did it while you were still in college. Thank you so much.

    Reply
  • Alex — July 26th, 2010, 6:15 pm

    I can’t help but feel like I did it wrong.
    I achieved an increase of 10.71%, which is something, but I think that it’s a lot less than what was expected.
    I’m going to try this again tomorrow and see if I can improve.
    Thank you for uploading this How-To though. I stumbled upon it by accident and it reminded me of the importance of reading. I’ve been having trouble immersing myself in a book because I feel like the speed at which I read is too slow for the novel/textbook to really progress. I’ll keep practising though.

    Again, thank you.

    Reply
  • Bob ShermanJuly 27th, 2010, 11:28 am

    As others have noted, sub-vocalization is a major roadblock to faster reading. While our minds, when focused, can process thoughts at several thousand words a minute, our speaking (even thinking the words) can only produce 200 or 300 words a minute.

    As you mentioned, regression is also a major stumbling block to faster reading. One reason for regression is a wandering mind. Slow reading does not provide the mind with enough new information to keep it occupied. So, your mind wanders and you stop focusing on the text you are reading. Pushing up your reading rate will help keep the mind occupied and prevent it from wandering away from the subject you are reading about.

    Your advice to us a tracker or pacer to push your reading rate up actually accomplishes at least these two purposes:

    1) Reduces or eliminates regression by providing the mind with enough information to keep it occupied.

    2) Reduces sub-vocalization because words are coming in too fast to mentally pronounce.

    And, always pushing your limits helps the mind to learn to process more information and improves comprehension. This is why a good speed reading class will provide the students with motivation to keep practicing and building their reading speed even more.

    Reply
  • Dave EavesJuly 28th, 2010, 3:17 am

    I tried the eye lid exercise as you mentioned and wow – I could immediately notice the separate fixation movements!

    I say there are 3 main road-blocks that can hold people back from increasing their reading speed:

    1) Being to careful with their reading
    2) Mouthing words (even with ones lips) while reading
    3) Going back to re-read passages of material already read!

    Thanks,
    Dave.

    Reply
  • Shennan T.July 30th, 2010, 7:39 am

    I’ve just read this article and am anxious to get started on these techniques. I have a hard time comprehending what I read so most of the time I’m re-reading things. Hopefully this will help me in my decision to go back to college. Great article.

    Reply
  • SamJuly 30th, 2010, 11:10 pm

    I wonder if any of these methods work for older people as well. I am going to try and let you know later.

    Reply
  • Dan Cugliari — August 12th, 2010, 8:07 pm

    Quick tip for Pacing:
    You can use a cheap digital metronome and set it to pace yourself

    i.e. 50bpm = 1 click per line = average of 500wpm (or 100bpm @ 2 clicks per line give you the same speed. Could have each click as 1 fixation)

    60bpm = 600wpm @ 1 click p/line 120bpm = 600bpm @ 2 clicks per line

    etc etc, be creative

    That’s something that has helped me a lot in pacing my reading and giving me a good idea of how fast/slow certain speeds are

    Reply
  • MichelleAugust 15th, 2010, 10:51 am

    This site is quite interesting to me as I’ve been reading (quickly) since grade school with apprehension. I’m now 48 years old and still can remember some books that I read in the 3rd grade (and a brief description of what it was about). I don’t know that I’m a speed reader, but I can go through a 400 page book in one afternoon quite easily.

    I enjoyed reading the posts here. Thanks!

    Reply
  • Tim — August 17th, 2010, 12:50 pm

    Hi Tim, nice name!

    I tried this, and went from 345 wpm to 772 wpm after the first try. Cant wait to teach myself to go even faster.

    Reply
  • FredAugust 18th, 2010, 9:18 am

    Great guide to speed reading. I always wondered how to do it. I’ll have to reference this on our site to help students study quicker and read better.

    Reply
  • introspectiveAugust 19th, 2010, 1:36 am

    This article is great. I am fan of personal development and accelerated reading is one of the biggest personal development goals. This article gave me some information that the books on this subject didn’t. Just keep up with good articles about this topic.

    Reply
  • Stuart DobsonAugust 19th, 2010, 5:30 pm

    I’ve been doing this since I read it in Tony Buzan’s book about 10 years ago. Thanks for bringing it to the public arena. These techniques seem to make your brain work faster if you keep them up. Only problem is, you become a very impatient person!

    Reply
  • Andy in Osaka — August 19th, 2010, 10:11 pm

    Tim,

    A perfect 3x improvement.

    Why the hell didn’t I do it a month ago?! That teaches me a lesson on procrastination.

    Thanks to your book and the fantastic community that you have nurtured around it, I have been taken out of a slump I have been in for the past year. I feel like myself again. Five years spent high school teaching in Japan made me think that I was screwed for a career back at home. But now the entrepreneurial zest has come back in me like my UK student days.

    Instead of seeing my ‘foreignness’ as a burden while living here in Japan, I am going to create my muse and explore the opportunities it presents.

    I’ll get back to you in a month with progress.

    Brilliant! Thanks buddy.

    Andy in Osaka.

    Reply
  • Gabe — August 20th, 2010, 12:51 am

    So after i’ve done these exercises once, what’s next?
    How often should I do them, when should I expect getting solid improvements.
    I’ve done them twice now and my increase is 28%.
    My baseline speed is incredibly slow, 200 wpm.
    Are these the only exercises that you would recommend doing?
    You say it’s a “cursory” overview of speed reading techniques. Where can I get a detailed overview?

    Thanks!

    Reply
  • Nina — August 20th, 2010, 11:36 pm

    I was at a conference in Berlin last month where a researcher did a meta-analysis of all the different techniques for increasing reading speed- they all failed.

    Reply
  • LilyAugust 31st, 2010, 12:34 am

    Do you think reading too fast is like eating ice cream too fast? Brain Freeze!

    Reply
  • Robbie — September 7th, 2010, 8:37 am

    Hi Tim,

    Thank you, that was an extremely interesting post. It just helped me increase my wpm count by 55%, although I do believe my comprehension is not quite as good at the faster speed than at my original speed.

    For the full PX project seminar did the students use these same exercises for 3 hours or were there further more advanced exercises used past the first 20 minutes?

    If you are doing any seminars or public appearances in the UK then please let us (your UK readers) know. I’m a big fan of your work and have found your writing and videos a great inspiration. Keep up the good work, and I look forward to the new book!

    Thanks again.

    Reply
  • [anon]September 10th, 2010, 4:10 pm

    I tried speed reading but just can’t do it. I dont think my eyes are good enough for this :(

    Reply
  • Jake — September 19th, 2010, 12:40 am

    Hey Tim,
    I am very interested in speed reading like this because I am a high school student taking very rigorous courses, and I admit reading is my largest time-consumer by far. I noticed you said that for study to use this technique to read the assigned reading 3 times instead of reading 3 assignments in the time it would take to read one. Is this due to a loss of retention while speed reading? I want to make sure I don’t sacrifice memorization for speed, as although I have been a slow reader, I have always been excellent at retaining information. If I do lose retention, would I end up doing better if I read an assignment twice in order to retain more while still shaving time off?

    Reply
  • GarySeptember 22nd, 2010, 7:53 am

    Great blog. I tried the techniques and the posts are very insightful, especially the deaf person not having that &*#$ voice inside one’s head to slow down reading. My son has been trying to get me to learn your techniques. And yes, he can be impatient with his Mom and me. I will break out of the audio mode of reading yet!

    Reply
  • Brent Van ArsdellSeptember 22nd, 2010, 11:04 pm

    My programmer Chris really needs Speed Reading. While we were doing our language learning software development this summer while in Hawaii (We are into the four hour work week and the good life) he spent all summer reading Atlas Shrugged.

    Now we will have to develop speed reading software for reading Russian!

    Keep up the good work.

    Reply
  • Kumar Gaurav — September 25th, 2010, 11:57 am

    So Tim,
    i think its ur nme……isn’t it! i read article previous year also but did not attempted it but i m in really need of it bcz my classmates r so intelligent that after all studying less hrs in reading than me they score and even perform better than me.
    Can you just help me sending a mail on my this mail id about what to do to increase my this slow reading habit. i will definitely try to follow ur words on this web page but other things like how to commit whatever we think…how will it be possible as i never do what i think really….i always or even daily think of studying whole night as i wish to be 1st in class but i never did not a single time. and this thing always pull me back from what i really wish to be….
    PLEASE HELP ME AS EARLY AS POSSIBLE>>>I…..I WILL BE
    WAITING……
    WAITing……..
    WAiting………
    Waiting……
    waiting……
    and

    Reply
  • Thaddeus Roth — September 30th, 2010, 12:46 am

    Interesting…
    What If I do not wish to mark my novel with a black pen?

    Reply
  • James — October 20th, 2010, 11:26 pm

    This is Great!! I spent less that 15 minutes on your site and In minutes I went from 165 to 330 wpm.

    Although I’m not quite sure if I truly comprehended everything I read in the final step but I’m sure with a little practice I’ll be OK.

    This is Awesome! As far as reading for study or comprehension, even when I read at my slowest (normal) speed I always go back and re-read at least 3 times 1st to kinda scan make sure I know all the words (kinda dumb but..) 2nd. to grasp what’s going on and 3rd for complete comprehension and retention. It’s always worked but very time consuming

    Hopefully Now, I can still do that using your technique.
    I Bookmark you and comeback in a month or 2 with an update.

    Reply
  • Justin Cordingley — October 29th, 2010, 10:02 am

    Sean Ring told a story about a deaf student who read at 1500 wpm because he doesn’t sound words.

    Now bear with me here, this is just a thought… By looking at the way you would teach a deaf person (one who was born that way) to read, and applying that to someone who can actually hear, but doing it with a different set of characters, like some made up characters, would it be possible to learn to read without vocalizing in that different character set? And if so, would that same skill be later transferable to our alphabet?

    I suppose you might be able to do that while studying braille. Maybe learning a kinesthetic language would have some other positive effect. Well, I guess being able to read in the dark is pretty positive.

    A note on comprehension: I know you left it open ended here, but on other sources ‘measuring comprehension’ is done by having a test of details within a book that you’re supposed to remember. I just find that kind of test silly. It’s a test of your ability to remember details, not your ability to comprehend the words, individually or as they fit together.
    I’m sure I’m not the only one that has a brain that keeps the details it likes, and throws everything else out.

    Reply
  • Carmen KNovember 19th, 2010, 12:18 pm

    I loved reading this article. I’ve always wanted to try reading faster, and heard of speed reading before. Thanks for the great info.

    Reply
  • TommyNovember 19th, 2010, 3:29 pm

    Nice article. But I still feel that I understand less when I read faster.

    Reply
  • JamieJanuary 12th, 2011, 12:04 pm

    I just did these exercises a few times for my new blog. For the blog my brother and I are doing a new life challenge every week and writing about it. If you want to see the results go to the site my name links to. You rock Tim!

    Reply
  • joy — January 17th, 2011, 3:45 pm

    hey tim,

    I’ve read ur blog and its really helpful. there’s just one thing that concerned me most-

    HOW TO ELIMINATE WORD READING IN MY MIND?

    i’ve been trying different methods already but it doesnt work..
    if you or somebody here could reply as soon as possible, i would be grateful. im catching things up before this week ends my exam. thank you!

    Reply
  • Chris — January 18th, 2011, 8:16 pm

    Wow this really does work im just a kid but i can read so much faster now my grades improve and now im so smart thanks tim you are a cool guy

    Reply
  • fred_jones — January 24th, 2011, 4:03 pm

    tim, where is the source material for this article. any published data on this method or the 3hr cognitive experiment conducted?

    Reply
  • Justin — January 26th, 2011, 7:01 pm

    I know this post is old, but I just did this and increased my speed 460% in 20 minutes. Tim you are the man!

    Reply
  • CD — January 28th, 2011, 10:29 pm

    Hey, I don’t mean to be rude, but sincerly, this didn’t work for me, and I was dissapointed that I not only wasted half an hour, but also that I wasn’t able to increase my speed.

    Reply
    • Jason F. GrissomJanuary 29th, 2011, 10:44 am

      Just some food for thought… not trying to preach…

      If it didn’t work for you, this is pretty simple to reconcile.

      It didn’t work for me the first time I did it, but I went back to it a few times over a few different weeks and ended up having great results.

      If you really “want it”, practice it…

      Things like this require “you to work for it”, not “it to work for you”…
      (Stupid wood stove, give me some heat, then I’ll throw in some kindling!)

      If you don’t really “want it”, move on to something else you do want… and work for that instead.

      Either way you’ll have to work for anything good before it will work for you…

      Reply
  • MichaelFebruary 4th, 2011, 9:05 am

    Amazing! I just read Moby Dick in 12 seconds!

    Reply
  • BrianFebruary 4th, 2011, 3:48 pm

    People spend their entire lives “teaching” themselves to read slowly – then expect to unlearn this bad habit in 10 minutes. It’s like any other worthwhile exercise… you have to work for it people. Some have to work harder than others. If it doesn’t work for you – work harder.

    Reply
  • Andrew BeatsFebruary 6th, 2011, 3:06 pm

    I have to say that I am hesitant to try and read faster because I think it would affect my enjoyment of what I am reading. For the purpose of completing reading assignments in school I can definitely see the benefit though. As a side note, thanks for introducing me to the word “saccadic.” I will have to introduce it into my vocabulary.

    Reply
  • Daniel — February 26th, 2011, 3:34 pm

    Thanks a lot for this tutorial. Is this a technique you should practice everyday to improve your reading skills or should you practice with the comprehension reading.

    Reply
  • Khushali — March 5th, 2011, 9:15 pm

    Hello! I would just like to say that I am SO happy that I came across this blog! I just attempted this technique and it helped me raise over 2x my original WPM. I knew I read slow, but this brought it to my attention that I read waay slower than average (111 WPM). I am hoping more practice with this will raise it even more! I was also wondering the same thing as Daniel, should we practice each piece of the three sections every time or…?

    Thank you so much and keep up the good work!

    Reply
  • JackieMarch 22nd, 2011, 8:52 am

    I have always been a fast reader but it always came natural to me; I never tried by just reading the first and last few words of a sentence before. I find the concept extremely interesting; however it would take a while before I can understand or comprehend anything using this method!

    Reply
  • charles — April 24th, 2011, 10:23 am

    Hi, what would you do to improve more once you’ve done the initial steps given here? I imagine, you can’t get to 3000 wpm with just this

    Reply
  • Paul Ginns — May 13th, 2011, 12:32 am

    Dear Tim,

    I’m running a research programme on gesturing for learning, so was intrigued to see your arguments about using a pointer (pen or finger) to guide attention as part of the PX Project. Would you be able to point me to any peer-reviewed papers about either the principles underlying the programme, or an randomised controlled trial of the programme itself?

    Reply
  • Dima AlmazovMay 22nd, 2011, 4:51 pm

    Hi Tim

    I just tested thoroughly the above exercise.

    I am f-ing amazed, because doing exactly as you reported, I got these results:

    Initial wpm: 230

    Final wpm: 490 ( and I understood everything )

    Thank you!!

    Dima from Italy

    Reply
  • alex — May 25th, 2011, 12:13 am

    hey Tim,

    i experimented on my self earlier when having to read books for school.
    i was reading 50 pages/h in english (im german), but what i noticed is that i wasn’t able to keep my focus for more than 60 minutes sometimes just 20-30.

    does it get easier when performed continously? or do you have special tricks?

    Reply
  • MSDJune 2nd, 2011, 1:43 pm

    There’s some really good ideas here. The only thing I would caution is to use the pen-across-the-paper technique to start yourself off with, but don’t use it as a crutch. I know too many people who have trained themselves too hard with that one tip, and can barely read without it.

    Reply
  • JJ SpeedsterJune 11th, 2011, 3:45 pm

    Awesome pulp fiction reference regarding comment rules. I hope you don’t mind if I use it on my own blog!

    And the advice you give is spot on! So many programs try to sell expensive courses to teach just simple techniques that anyone can practice at home.

    Reply
  • AshishJune 13th, 2011, 10:52 pm

    What a great step by step guide. Loving it. We have to read synopsis and analysis of more than 100 pages everyday and sometimes many per day. This technique should help us decrease our time at it and increase our efficiencies, in turn.

    Thanks.
    Ashish

    Reply
  • JonahJune 16th, 2011, 4:28 pm

    Hi Tim,

    That was amazing! I’ve been a slow reader my whole life, and I just doubled my WPM in 20 minutes. I assume you’ve been a speed-reader for years now — do you have to keep practicing your technique in order to stay fast, or does being speed-reader just become a natural habit over time? If the latter, how long did it take you?

    Thanks Again,
    Jonah

    Reply
    • JosephJuly 25th, 2011, 11:30 pm

      Hey Jonah,

      Practice and with time you will get your speeds up. I teach speed reading and the only students I find that excel dramatically in one class are those that read 8 hours a day for their jobs. The speed will come with time.

      Reply
  • GuyJuly 4th, 2011, 7:09 am

    this technique cuts ones time, in a big way… this is great for studying, one has more time to do much much more!

    Reply
  • Leelo Bush PhDJuly 4th, 2011, 4:05 pm

    I can see where these techniques will take practice. As one who creates training programs for a Christian coach training school, I read continually. I can see where these techniques are going to be very helpful to saving time. Thanks for posting this information.

    Leelo Bush, PhD

    Reply
  • Simon — July 9th, 2011, 1:13 am

    I can type faster than I can read…

    Reply
  • SJK — July 24th, 2011, 1:59 am

    Hi, I will be a Junior in high school after the summer is over. I am a very slow reader and I would like to work on increasing my reading speed. It would help me not only for reading materials for school, but also for reading for pleasure.

    I have one question on the technique you’ve described. When you said to use a pen as a tracker or pacer and underline the text while maintaining your focus on the tip of the pen, are you suppose to “track” or follow the tip of the pen with your eyes? If that is the case how does fixation work? Isn’t fixation focusing on one place and then jerking your eyes to the next point? If you focus on the tip of the pen, your eyes will naturally follow the pen and it will be more like scanning or skimming the line with your eyes than fixing your eyes on one point than another.

    Reply
    • JosephJuly 25th, 2011, 11:27 pm

      It’s about adjusting the speed of the pen so that you are able to go faster but not too fast to the point where you are not able to take in the words with comprehension. Try increasing the speed gradually. I read at about 600wpm but it comes with practice

      Reply
  • JosephJuly 25th, 2011, 11:31 pm

    Hey Tim,

    This is a great article, being a speed reading instructor, I can vouch for this stuff, it works!

    Reply
  • kartik — August 2nd, 2011, 7:58 am

    Tim,
    Can I call you guru-gal {meaning teacher in Sanskrit}; and why not because you taught me so much about how to read. These days I started to feel that I was dyslexic, because I couldn’t understand a sentence though it was a very simple sentence, which even a below average student could understand easily. Being a topper, I had to perform well to live the expectations of my teacher and my parents. You helped to cope with this problem {though I continue to face this problem a little bit}. Thanks a lot for that. But still I need your solutions because the problem is not yet solved. Hope, you are gonna help me.
    Yours obedient

    Reply
  • Paul Kreitz — August 2nd, 2011, 6:38 pm

    But how does one increase comprehension rate? Does it come naturally with better technique and scanning speed, or are other faculties involved?

    Reply
  • davidAugust 9th, 2011, 12:52 pm

    great post thank you

    now to test this out

    Reply
  • GabyCR — August 25th, 2011, 3:58 am

    Hi!
    This is just to thank you, U didn’t change my life because the only person u could change my life was myself, but u show me there was a way. Ur books came into my life when I left everything back in Costa Rica and came to China, to start everything all over again, from learning the language to remind myself that my mommy was not around and what do I buy in the supermarket now??? Exciting at the beginning but when the days start going by without progress u freak out and ask “what the hell did I just did?”
    China is difficult but great, and I have the impression from what I read and see that u like it. Hunan, where I live, it’s great too, u should try it, it will be nice to seeing u around.
    Keep going Tim, Pura Vida,
    Gaby

    Reply
  • Lily AlexSeptember 8th, 2011, 9:54 am

    Wow! That was awesome to read the science behind the speed reading.I have checked a few sites regarding this topic but couldn’t be able to apprehend most of the points that were mentioned but I must say your post is certainly very comprehensive and it actually works as I have practiced for a short.In short,thanks!

    Reply
  • asrockw7 — September 17th, 2011, 3:56 am

    I went from 120 wpm to maybe 200, mostly depends on the text. The first time I tried it I felt like a genius. Looking back it felt as if I was reading at 350 wpm. I could read groups of words at once. One line only needed two glances. I suddenly just had the urge to drop the pen then I read fluently with good comprehension, however it seems to be something I can’t really call upon whenever I want to.

    Maybe some practice would be needed to be able to accomplish my 350 consistently, or at least be my normal speed. If you would add more tips it would really be appreciated. My normal reading seem to be still a word-per-word thing however gotten a lot faster and I still need to exert some effort to achieve 200 wpm from 120.

    Reply
  • RobertSeptember 17th, 2011, 6:17 am

    Hi Tim!

    This post is very interesting, about your book, there is a version in Spanish?

    Reply
  • Jyl — September 23rd, 2011, 10:19 am

    Hi, how many times are you supposed to do the exercises to keep up your reading speed? Every day, before each reading session?

    Reply
  • Kevin Patrick — September 28th, 2011, 7:26 pm

    Tim,

    I went from reading 300 wpm to 710 wpm! After about 45 minutes of practice. But that was maybe 70% comprehension. I’ve settled down to a comfortable 640 wpm, and that seems somewhere like 90-95% comp.

    Thanks!

    — KP

    Reply
  • Zeth AddingtonOctober 2nd, 2011, 4:05 am

    I just doubled my reading speed! Thanks!

    Reply
  • James SchudelOctober 8th, 2011, 2:53 pm

    You should make an instructional video on this technique. I re-read it a couple times to understand some of the methods. This is great though. Thanks.

    Reply
  • Jack — October 25th, 2011, 1:47 pm

    A ton of fluff, fillers and introductions. I read a lot of this piece and still got nowhere near what you’re trying to say, which is probably near the end I guess. This isn’t a book; it’s the net. Internet articles should be short and straight to the point. No one is going to read all this. Thanks anyway for trying at least.

    Reply
  • Julius — November 4th, 2011, 5:53 pm

    Thanks for the information. Now I learned how to read fast…

    I think I can read faster now… hehe

    than you very much and God Bless…

    Reply
  • Paulo — November 19th, 2011, 9:24 am

    Great post. Very inspiring. I’m amazed at the results. I’ve been practicing this over the past months and it’s doing wonders. I’ve literally found a better new job because of this read and reread technique that you mentioned near the end. I’m finally being able to understand articles about electronics, science, sports, etc because of this. It also increased my ability to make complex structures of phrases tenfold. You should be awarded a prize for this man!

    Reply
  • Jannet — November 23rd, 2011, 6:40 am

    Hi guys, does this actually work? like, how quickly could you read before and how quickly can you read now?

    Reply
  • how to beat depression — December 19th, 2011, 1:31 pm

    I don’t know whether it’s just me or if perhaps everybody else experiencing problems with your website. It seems like some of the written text within your content are running off the screen. Can somebody else please comment and let me know if this is happening to them as well? This could be a issue with my browser because I’ve had this happen before. Kudos

    Reply
  • rosyuaJanuary 15th, 2012, 11:45 pm

    Hii Tim,

    Impressed by the speed reading techniques in your article..
    Particularly interested in increasing my visual span..
    You have not mentioned , as to how long does it take to develop this skill?
    How often and and how long one must practice to see a decent result..
    Looking forward to your reply..

    Rosy

    Reply
  • Amit Amin — February 9th, 2012, 11:03 pm

    Hm… Funny how this post is called the science of speed reading, but mentions or references no scientific studies. I really want speed reading to be more than a myth, which is why this post excited me, but after spending a few hours researching what literature is available on this topic, it really doesn’t seem that convincing. That’s too bad, people could do with more knowledge in their heads from being able to read faster.

    Reply
  • AntMarch 8th, 2012, 9:17 am

    AAAA! why didnt i find this earlier! i have been trawling through research articles on pubmed and its taking forever. This might actually mean ill get a nights sleep today.

    Thanks

    Reply
  • James — March 9th, 2012, 2:47 am

    Can i apply this technique to e-books?

    Reply
  • MadhushanMarch 9th, 2012, 5:22 am

    This system doubled my reading speed. At now I read 600 words per minuite

    Reply
  • daiMarch 19th, 2012, 11:45 am

    Thank you for the informative tips and exercises. I just started this exercise and my eyes become a little sore/numb the next day. A reader has mentioned using a software as a course to keep track of their progress. I wanted to take it further so I went ahead and used ace reader. Will let you and everyone know if a paid software is worth it or just stick to your method.

    Reply
  • Liam CavanaghMarch 24th, 2012, 3:37 pm

    Went from 240 to 960. That’s huge!! Thanks man!!

    Reply
  • TedApril 8th, 2012, 11:46 pm

    Very, very interesting and detailed points given here. All of your points are well explained and specific, unlike most of the speed reading articles which are too common and general to read. Should have stumbled your site much earlier! :D

    Reply
    • Liza — April 27th, 2012, 9:56 am

      603 to 1575! God I wish I looked at this sooner since I was skeptical about speed reading and felt like I had to read every single word in my textbook.

      I have large medical textbooks to read for school. I was on a flight and my carry-on baggage weighed too much. After removing my book, my bag was 11 pounds lighter.

      I can’t wait for school to be over. In the meantime, Tim you’ve always inspired me with your style of experimentation and pursuit of efficiency. It’s really attractive and energizing!

      What are everyone’s opinions on using bookstands while speed reading? I still feel my neck cramping and my cervical spine best awkwardly forward. Maybe my head is just too heavy!!

      Reply
  • WhiteboxMay 16th, 2012, 2:07 pm

    I started up pretty slow. My initial speed was 158 WPM, which is lower than the average. Now I have determined to take it to at least 600WPM and then further.

    Your article is going to help me a lot, not only in increasing speed, but also to understand the whole mechanism, which was very informative.

    Just wish me luck to reach my goal.

    Reply
  • laura — May 22nd, 2012, 4:55 pm

    Hi Tim,

    Speedreading on pdf’s and Kindle? Is that possible? Where can I learn this?

    Reply
  • CodyMay 24th, 2012, 11:54 pm

    Very excited to come across this article and even more excited to utilize these principals now and in the future. Thanks Tim!

    Reply
  • Prabu RajasekaranMay 27th, 2012, 12:24 am

    Oh, well, I increased my reading speed by 175% after reading and following the strategies in this article.

    Thank you, Tim, and all of you awesome commenters.

    Reply
  • Richard — May 31st, 2012, 9:03 am

    Hi Tim,

    I am taking the LSAT in October and thus I need to read quickly and understand structure as well as content. The major issue with the LSAT is the time associated to read and select the correct answer in the alloted time period, usually under a minute per question. Any advise or method that could assist in reading fast but capturing key structural and content indicators. All are welcome to comment. Thanks

    Reply
  • Luke — June 3rd, 2012, 2:04 pm

    I am have never been the fastest reader, but I love reading anyway for enjoyment and enlightenment. After doing Tim’s simple steps i went from 192 wpm to 328 wpm. And I will keep on going! Thanks Tim

    Reply
  • Speed Reader — June 27th, 2012, 4:40 am

    Great list , thanks for useful info

    Reply
  • ritesh — July 2nd, 2012, 10:34 pm

    thank u so much………tommorow is my exams….today i started reading ,hope this will help me……

    Reply
  • AH — July 7th, 2012, 10:01 am

    I’m having trouble figuring out the meaning of when it talks about saccadic movements. If you don’t need to read in a straight line what is then the technique? Going back and forth? Peering ahead?

    Just require some clarification.

    Many thanks

    Reply
  • Lucy — July 9th, 2012, 8:17 pm

    Thank you…I must try I am 50 years old and I started to read more now that I have more time. Children are all grown and moved out I have a collection of books I wanted to read I will definitely try this.
    Thanks for posting.

    Reply
  • Adrianna — July 16th, 2012, 11:14 pm

    I just did this and it only helped a little. If I’m going to increase my wpm by 300% I think it’s going to take implementing these techniques every day for a couple weeks, not just reading this article and a few pages out of a book.

    Reply
  • Neco Pagon — July 23rd, 2012, 1:47 pm

    Hi Tim,

    This is a very interesting post and I will be implementing it for this summer or what is left of it. I need to step up my game for my final year at law and I’m sure that this technique if applied correctly by me will do the trick.

    Regards,
    N.P

    Reply
  • Christopher — July 26th, 2012, 12:39 pm

    This didn’t work for me. I really wanted it to work. I don’t even know what I’m doing wrong. The first time I tested my WPM, I got 418 WPM and after the 20 minute exercise, I got 440 WPM. Most people are saying it worked on their first time trying this. I think I need a teacher for this. Maybe I’ll try it again some other time and see if I have better luck.

    Reply
  • Christopher — July 26th, 2012, 12:39 pm

    This didn’t work for me. I really wanted it to work. I don’t even know what I’m doing wrong. The first time I tested my WPM, I got 418 WPM and after the 20 minute exercise, I got 440 WPM. Most people are saying it worked on their first time trying this. I think I need a teacher for this. Maybe I’ll try it again some other time and see if I have better luck.

    Reply
  • Alex — August 10th, 2012, 10:22 am

    This worked far better than I was expecting. I have tried to use other speedreading programs, but because the technique was astronomically different from my own, I had an almost 230 wpm drop. This technique took my 681 wpm reading speed an rocketed it to almost 2500, precisely 2473 wpm.

    Thanks Tim

    Reply
    • Alex — August 10th, 2012, 10:27 am

      I should probably say that I was using this technique for about 7 hours before my reading speed got above 2200.

      Reply
    • Jack — September 17th, 2012, 1:59 pm

      Hey Alex,

      When you read, do you pronounce every word in your head? Or, after scanning the words by keeping the pace, do the words eventually stay in your memory?

      Reply
  • randhir — August 11th, 2012, 12:15 am

    Dear Tim,

    it is good tecnique but fast reading will impact your understanding. Good struggle to this side but not more useful.

    i have read about Vivekanand who could read one page just in 2-3 second but ability to understand and remember was also there.

    i am not underestimating your work whatever you did is well

    thanks,

    Reply
  • Gama — August 16th, 2012, 6:53 pm

    I came to this to read 15k wpm, cause I already read about 5k wpm. I can because my brain/eyes do not register as twitches of the eye, but rather smooth movements to gaze over the article. Because of this, my brain has developed the ability to register up to entire paragraphs at once. It’s like my brain sees it as one word.

    Reply
  • Dashaun Carter — August 18th, 2012, 11:45 am

    This is a pretty great article. I’ll definitely be using the pointer technique.

    I also recommend this software called “7 Speed Reading.” I have no affiliation with them whatsoever. I did however use this software to increase my reading speed from 230 wpm to over 800 wpm in only 30 minutes. I’m looking to go even faster. Interestingly enough, some of the techniques you mentioned are also contained in the software.

    Reply
  • Enzo — August 28th, 2012, 5:53 pm

    Awesome post. For practice do you recommend doing the whole exercise regularly or just the last part using the peripheral drills?

    Reply
  • Daragh B — September 1st, 2012, 8:14 am

    What should I do after the first time?? My wpm increased by over 140 wpm but the second time it only increased by 44 wpm can someone please help?? I want to get around 450 wpm I currently read at 341 wpm.

    Reply
  • Daniel CabralSeptember 9th, 2012, 7:07 am

    Hi Tim,
    I see this a very popular post with lots of comments so I tried to find the answer in the comments before asking this and could not find the answer:

    Would you mind to suggest a daily practice schedule for us?
    Something like: 1 hour per day or two sets of 30 minutes of practice… Etc…

    Obrigado,
    Daniel

    Reply
  • Jack — September 17th, 2012, 1:47 pm

    Hey Tim,

    For the two minute trial, when using a tracker and pacer, you said to not comprehend the context, just keep the flow. If I’m trying to pronounce each word from each line in my head, how can I do that, even without comprehending the context, if the speed is 1, 1/2, 1/4 seconds per line? Are you simply saying to scan the lines and get the most out of it that you can, during the motor exercise, in order to eventually pick up every word of every sentence and understand the context, thoroughly, with complete understanding? So, scanning at first just to keep an efficient pace, then words will soon make their way into memory in full comprehension (given we think faster than we read), once the pace is further developed?

    Thanks,
    Jack

    Reply
  • [email protected]September 21st, 2012, 2:28 pm

    Thank you Tim! I was in the special classes for reading in elementary school and have always struggle with reading speed. I did these exercises once, and did get some results! But I’m one of those “some people won’t be able to comprehend”, so I am going to repeat until I do dag-nab-it!

    This kind of skill will be huge in helping me with research on my blog.

    Best,
    TJ

    Reply
  • Boris spasskySeptember 23rd, 2012, 3:57 am

    This is an memory game just like chess . speed reading is really save my time

    Reply
  • Dr Ali Alkhabti — September 28th, 2012, 10:26 pm

    Very nice

    Reply
  • Shawn — October 6th, 2012, 11:54 am

    Thanks Tim!

    I found these exercises to be very helpful! I was Valedictorian of my class, yet I thought that reading was a struggle for me. However, after trying these methods out I found that after spending around half an hour reading comments and completing the exercises that my wpm jumped from 228 to 408!! turns out I’ve been wasting a lot of times in the margins and rereading stuff I thought I missed but I subconsciously remembered.

    Reply
  • ChristelleOctober 8th, 2012, 7:09 am

    Nice introduction to this technique. I’ve always been curious about speed reading so I tried what you teach, I went from 290 to 600wpm, not bad. I’d stil like to learn about Photoreading though.
    Thanks,
    Christelle

    Reply
  • NicOctober 8th, 2012, 9:02 am

    Thank you for the article. I’m starting today.

    Reply
  • Nadeem — October 9th, 2012, 7:17 am

    This is a great article.

    I am a college student. I am very slow at reading. A chapter of 30 pages takes about 1.5 hours.

    I’m blind in one eye (left). Will this work for me?

    Thank you

    Reply
  • Tenzing — November 1st, 2012, 8:03 am

    Can anyone please tell me if they know of a speed reading course that I can take that teaches Tim’s method or is close to it. I find it easier to practice and learn in a controlled environment than to time and assign reading material to myself at home, Tim if your there any ideas, (I’m based in London) although any school close to Tim’s method may help. Thanks.

    Reply
  • Ethan — November 9th, 2012, 11:39 am

    I already read pretty fast. I’m going to test this technique later.

    Reply
  • Addi — November 13th, 2012, 11:24 pm

    WOW. so i am a slow reader at 247 wmp and after this i was up to 635wmp! i am really exited because i bet if i keep practicing this technique i could get up to 1000!!! thanks! :D

    Reply
  • Molly — November 16th, 2012, 10:35 pm

    Amazing! What used to be 290 wpm is now 1010! Thank you so much, this will be great for debate and the SATs!

    Reply
  • Jeff Beal — November 21st, 2012, 8:33 am

    Hey Tim,

    Thanks for the advice. You’re always the teacher.

    Keep rockin’!

    JB

    Reply
  • Branded Logos — November 22nd, 2012, 4:09 am

    Tim,
    I found your post very useful for me and i am glad to thank you.

    Regards
    George Alberto

    Reply
  • Ali — November 26th, 2012, 8:03 am

    hi
    english is my third language and im reading 2 book that are more than 600 page (english language)
    every page take me 5-4 min !!! (sometimes i need to use dictionary!)
    guys do u have any tips to help me improve my speed too ?
    i mean 5 min per page is just too much!

    Reply
  • Fabricio Soares — December 2nd, 2012, 7:41 pm

    HeHello tim , r u a capoeirista ??? I see ur t shirt and that head stand
    Take care
    Axe

    Reply
  • BadassDecember 5th, 2012, 7:27 am

    Hello! Great post Tim, I usualy read like that but I wasn’t aware untill I saw your post. It seemd to me very strange that people always tell me that I read too fast. Usefull article. Thank you!

    Reply
  • Rishi — December 6th, 2012, 7:23 am

    Went from about 450 to almost 600 wpm …. cool
    The biggest change I found was that there was much less ‘going back’ and re-reading stuff.

    Reply
  • Richard — December 8th, 2012, 9:36 am

    Hi. I just want to know how frequent should I practice the exercises mentioned in this article? Should I practice more than once in a day?

    Reply
  • linh — December 9th, 2012, 4:29 am

    Hi every body,
    I am very interested in the method” speedreading”
    I wonder if any course to teach about this?

    Reply
  • SoniaDecember 9th, 2012, 11:12 am

    I’ve been using your speed reading tips since I first read your book. One of the best time-savers I’ve implemented over the years. I don’t know what my wpm is, but it doesn’t matter. I just know I’m able to read something faster whenever I want.

    Reply
  • Jeff Bartel — December 24th, 2012, 5:33 pm

    I went from ~342 wpm to ~418 wpm.
    I was skeptical at first and even more so now, but I’m wondering if it’s my fault. I was going slightly slower than 1/2 sec/line on the speed portions, but I was at the same time picking up on many of the words.
    Should I have picked up my speed and disregarded understanding any of the words, just focusing on the area just above the tip of my pencil?
    I’m confused, because for 1) on the first part Tim says “DO NOT CONCERN YOURSELF WITH COMPREHENSION.” but in the same paragraph says “Read, but under no circumstances should you take longer than 1 second per line.”
    Which is it? Try to understand as much as permitted under time restraints or focus PURELY on speed in these drills?

    Reply
  • SR — December 25th, 2012, 9:38 am

    Tim, I just started digging into your book…its fantastic, unfotrunately I am a slow reader…When I came across your speed reading excersises I jumped right on it. Two questions:

    1) I always seem to read to myself and after practicing the excersises that voice just seemed to read faster…kind of feeling like a sprint and almost becoming exhausting…any suggestions here (obviously this sounds pretty out there).

    2) My WPM definitely improved nearly doubling and although I was able to comprehend the general message of the text, I feel I missed some important details…how often do you suggest practicing these excersises to truely be able to master speed reading and comprehend everything you have read?

    Reply
  • Brian C — December 31st, 2012, 1:07 pm

    Just completed my first go-through, and I only marked up 275% :(

    (thank you!)

    Reply
  • Geoff — January 1st, 2013, 10:07 am

    As embarrassed as I am about my baseline and even my subsequent reading speed, I feel I should post and thank you Tim.

    Although I have an IQ of 140 (genuinely tested, not some BS internet test), I have a VERY bad reading and writing ability.

    I’m pretty dyslexic (Baseline of 162 words a minute) but have been able to hugely increase my reading, although still a drop for an average person, my reading is now around 260ish WPM.

    Loads of people might laugh, but I just want to say Thanks Tim. Really appreciate it.

    For those that laughed, well done, you can read faster than me. You should be proud and make the most of it. I stay up an additional 3 hours a day to make up for it (thanks for the Sleep Hack in 4HB Tim!!!).

    Reply
    • Ryan — January 17th, 2013, 10:09 am

      Keep it up man! your wpm now is a huge step up from before, don’t feel embarrassed, an improvement is an improvement, no matter what..

      Reply
  • Kumar — January 4th, 2013, 9:33 pm

    It would be helpful, if you post a video for this excerise in youtube. It will be helpful for evey one.

    Reply
  • Lars — January 6th, 2013, 1:23 pm

    hi Tim

    thanks for your inspirational work (your books, your blogs, your videos…)!
    in addition to faster reading, do you have any tips for better comprehension, and especially, better memorization of texts?

    Lars

    Reply
  • Ryan — January 17th, 2013, 10:07 am

    My wpm before this was 299, after doing each exercise through once, I was able to read 572 wpm. Not as high as some, but I was impressed. I’m doing this to help speed up the limited time I have to read a novel for school. I assume my wpm time will increase the more I practice these exercises?

    Thank you!

    -Ryan

    Reply
  • Vik — January 21st, 2013, 1:02 pm

    K, this works I read faster, but I lack compreshension of what I read, meaning that you have to be 100% focused to really understand what you read, isn’t there a method to be focused, also ?

    Reply
  • alex — January 22nd, 2013, 2:04 pm

    GREAT
    my normal wpm is 275-ish
    i was already a reasonable speed reader with a 800-ish wpm when i tried
    after this my wpm is 1100-ish when i speed read
    HELPED LOADS
    I RECOMMEND THIS TO ALL WHO WISH TO SPEED READ

    Reply
  • Abhishek — January 23rd, 2013, 12:29 am

    Wow! 63% improvement after just 20 mins…
    been trying to improve my reading speed for ages without tangible results and now for mins of effort I have this to show..
    But i don’t want to stop here.. how can I further accelerate cognition?
    does anyone know some resources for that?

    Reply
  • ECS — January 24th, 2013, 12:26 pm

    Thanks for this! I went from 234 to 494 wpm during the exercise! I read tons of books from the library, so I wanted to increase my speed.

    Reply
  • JK — January 25th, 2013, 11:44 pm

    Hi! Stumbled across this post, and tried it out since I’m SUCH a slow reader. It was a cool exercise and I improved by just a little. (Admittedly I did the exercises a bit lazily.)

    But what I want to ask is, in using this new technique, I find it kind of tiresome. A feeling as if I’m holding my breath. I can’t imagine getting through a whole book reading this way. Any suggestions as to what I’m doing wrong?

    Reply
  • Jarred — January 26th, 2013, 11:36 pm

    Maybe I didn’t do this right, or just need to practice more, but my time increased by 70%, not 300%. And I didn’t comprehend half of what I read after I did the test. It went from 130 wpm, to 190 wpm read. Or maybe its just because I’m Dyslexic (I really am), and didn’t read the instructions right… Is there anything else I can practice to help with reading for comprehension, and still do it faster? Thanks!

    Reply
  • Luke Menniss — January 28th, 2013, 3:14 am

    Glad I did this. 330 wpm to 660 wpm. For a dyspraxic!

    Reply
  • LawsonJanuary 30th, 2013, 10:06 pm

    i went from 250 wpm to 616. INSANE!!!

    Reply
  • joe arrigoFebruary 7th, 2013, 1:43 pm

    Years ago I took the Evelyn Wood speed reading course. So I’m familiar with the technique of forcing yourself to raeding faster, taking in larger swaths of words, and the comprehension comes later.

    I found this summary somewhat confusing.

    Reply
  • charles — February 10th, 2013, 4:10 pm

    Tim, is there any way to improve peripheral vision? I like this article but I can’t figure out how to read the first 3 words starting in the fourth letter. Reading the first two while starting in the third is okay, but not the first three.

    Any tips?

    Reply
  • AnonFebruary 17th, 2013, 3:24 pm

    “…you will need to practice technique at 3x the speed of your ultimate target reading speed. Thus, if you currently read at 300 wpm and your target reading speed is 900 wpm, you will need to practice technique at 1,800 words-per-minute…”

    Three times 900 is not 1,800…

    Reply
  • Rich — February 19th, 2013, 10:18 am

    i really dont understand how exactly i should do it,if its possible please explain.

    Reply
  • Krzysztof Byczkowski — February 25th, 2013, 5:18 am

    Hi, Tim!

    It’s my first post on your blog. I want to thank you :) It’s the first time I’m trying to do something about speed reading. My measured speed rate at the beginning: 207wpm. After 20 minutes I can easily read the same book (in my case biography) at average of 380wpm with relatively the same comprehension (sometimes I reach even 410wpm). It’s about 83,5% faster!

    Thanks to this I want to learn how to read faster. My first goal is to reach 600wpm, and finally I want to achieve the magic 1000wpm :)

    It is harder for me to read about 500wpm and above, but with some training I think I can make it :)

    Thank you, again! This post made me very interested in this topic :)

    Reply
  • Alex LeeMarch 2nd, 2013, 1:59 pm

    I went from 156 words-per-minute to 828 wpm, a 430% increase in change. But my question is how do you retain the words you have just read? Practice? :P

    Reply
  • Lan — March 4th, 2013, 6:47 pm

    You are my hero.

    Reply
  • Pratik — March 5th, 2013, 7:48 am

    Dear all

    Please provide your feedback on the following challenges to help me overcome them.

    1. everytime i start in from the third word i.e. trying to use more of the peripheral vision, i get so conscious that it affects my speed and comprehension negatively

    2. i’ve pleatued at around 270 wpm.

    please help
    thanks :)

    Reply
  • Robert — March 5th, 2013, 10:38 am

    Hi. I have a question. In the end, after this tutorial, do I still have to use a pen as a tracker and pacer or I can read without any tracker just looking at the text (I am pretty bad at explanations). Any way good job!

    Reply
  • EddieMarch 7th, 2013, 9:22 am

    This is the first time someone mentioned the fact that it also increase your reading speed on a computer screen.
    With most of the people reading on either a computer,table or any other device I have up to now newer read something about that point.
    This is a clear explanation with examples how to increase your reading speed.
    Thanks for sharing this.
    Ed

    Reply
  • Daniel Sandoval — March 8th, 2013, 6:08 pm

    Great article on speed reading. Thank you Tim for sharing with us.

    Side note: I’m glad that I can scroll through the comments and see intelligent thoughts, debate and constructive criticism.

    Reply
  • Marshall — March 16th, 2013, 2:25 am

    Thanks,very useful technique .
    But what if I do not understand the passage after finishing reading it?yes,I can speed up reading,but it means nothing if I did not understand it.

    Reply
  • bh — March 19th, 2013, 10:25 am

    too much to read for dyslex

    Reply
  • joseph — March 21st, 2013, 9:04 am

    Being in the digital era, are there any techniques that can help for reading on a computer screen? I knwo that the peripheral field training would help but is there anything else that we can do such as some other method for tracking and pacing?

    Reply
  • Al Coleman — March 21st, 2013, 12:32 pm

    Tim,

    This is an incredible article. I really appreciate it.

    Because this seems to be a drill, is one supposed to use the “pacer” forever or is it just for drilling purposes only?

    Al

    Reply
  • Kyle — March 22nd, 2013, 7:20 pm

    Thanks Tim. You helped not only me, but also many others succeed through speed reading. I have looked for several months, searching in YouTube and other multimedia websites. None helped me. Thanks once again.

    Reply
  • Zaine — March 24th, 2013, 8:08 pm

    All I achieved was an insane headache :(

    How are we supposed to use the pen? Moving it from left to right while reading above it….or leaving it stationary to mark the bottom of the line…then read the line?

    At 2 lines per second my eyes ached and i couldnt even read 1 word per line.

    Reply
  • Mike DavisMarch 28th, 2013, 6:20 pm

    Amazing. While I “only” got a 72% increase, that’s pretty amazing for 20 minutes. I will go through the steps again as I am very confident that a little more practice will produce a greater result.
    Thanks!

    Reply
  • BennyApril 1st, 2013, 6:10 am

    This will help me with all those textbooks and articles I need to read before exams start.

    You know, cause I’ve been busy with 4-Hour Work Week!

    Thanks Tim!

    Reply
  • Bibek — April 4th, 2013, 3:29 am

    well, a brilliant and exciting scientific research. can we later on read the same stuff without the user of tracker? it will seems quite boring to read all the time with the tracker for the maintenance of the speed. Thanks for the tip.

    Reply
  • Raul R — April 18th, 2013, 4:41 pm

    when it says taking the steps and doing what its asking am i suppose to be rereading the same wording over and over or am i continuing reading after i do every exercise?

    Reply
  • Coach Anne ArvizuApril 23rd, 2013, 8:17 am

    In today’s day and age with time being the most valuable commodity, any technique we can use to shave a few moments here and there is worth doing. ONLY if we use the time we gain by being more efficient towards something important, something that is of value to us. Being quicker so we can cram more busy tasks into our day is not how to live life. I have been a big fan of 4 Hour Work Week since it first came out. So far I am at 38 Hour Work Week! :-)

    Reply
  • Michael SnyderApril 26th, 2013, 7:09 am

    CHALLENGE FOR YOU TIM:

    HIGH SPEED MORSE CODE RECEPTION 50+ WPM

    HEAD START: http://www.tasrt.ca/TASRTVersions/TASRT.pdf

    Report back to me.

    Mike, KN8J

    Reply
  • Tim WalkApril 28th, 2013, 5:44 pm

    I loved this! I’ve been wanting to speed read for months and this actually helps me do it with tips that are logical. Thank you!

    Reply
  • Daniel McClureApril 30th, 2013, 8:08 am

    Just increased my reading speed approx 283% from 299 wpm to 1144 wpm with this article!

    Reply
  • blanche — May 6th, 2013, 11:39 am

    Amazing. I increased my speed by 45%. Is it permanent, or do you have top practice the technique over period of time to maintain the increase in speed? If yes, how often to maintain?

    Thanks,
    Blanche

    Reply
  • Juan — May 7th, 2013, 8:27 pm

    This is amazing. I did not know i could read this fast.
    Thanks

    Reply
  • Brendan Iwashko — May 13th, 2013, 5:25 pm

    Not bad at all 210 to 530

    Reply
  • Nicholas — May 15th, 2013, 5:39 pm

    I would like to say that this DOES WORK. I spent one night practicing, and the next day read a novel I had not read before. Previously, the book of its length may have taken a day or two to finish, now I finished it in a matter of hours. I went from 228 WPM to 877 WPM.

    The most encouraging aspect: I could still comprehend the story, the character’s motivations, and appreciate the language.

    The hardest part was shutting out the “voice in the head”, or hearing myself speak the words while I read, that’s what slowed me down before. Other than that, I think with further practice, anything is possible.

    Reply
  • Oscar — May 24th, 2013, 8:10 pm

    I thought my initial suspicion was vindicated by comparing the control wpm test with the final wpm test. It’s not hard to see how you would get different results comparing your natural reading speed with your “fastest comprehension rate”, but after doing the excersises it becomes clear that “Read at your fastest comprehension rate” actually means “Slow Down!”

    Reply
  • Anurag Jain — May 24th, 2013, 11:03 pm

    This is really amazing..Wondering why I didn’t look for this earlier..Thanks a lot..

    Reply
  • Romuald BrilloutMay 25th, 2013, 8:21 am

    Awesome stuff! I just found a really nice Timer and I’m using it to determine the wpm; http://www.timer-tab.com

    Reply
  • Brett — May 30th, 2013, 12:16 pm

    Very helpful! Do you have a product you recommend to take it to the next level?

    Reply
  • dog — May 31st, 2013, 11:42 am

    “approx. the size of a quarter at 8? from reading surface”

    What does “8?” refer to? Typo? Sorry, I am not English. I lost the line right there. Thanks.

    Reply
    • Tim FerrissMay 31st, 2013, 6:29 pm

      I’m guessing that’s supposed to be 8 inches (8″). I’ll check out.

      Reply
      • dog — October 29th, 2013, 3:27 pm

        Thanks Tim for fixing,

        However, these two sentences are still not clear:

        “Each of these saccades ends with a fixation, or a temporary snapshot of the text within you focus area (approx. the size of a quarter at 8 inches from reading surface). Each fixation will last ¼ to ½ seconds in the untrained subject.”

        1st sentence, my guess:
        “Each of these saccades ends with a fixation, or a temporary snapshot of the text within you -> YOUR focus area”

        2nd sentence:
        maybe it means “for the untrained eye?’
        Just guessing, I have no idea what do you mean by this sentence.

        English is not my native language, though I assume I have a pretty solid understanding of it when it comes to even well edited academic texts.

        This article still comes up high on Google for the term speed reading, maybe it would be worth editing it thoroughly for the benefit a humankind.

        Thank you, in the name of the ‘English as a second language’ crowd.

        Hopefully I don’t have to come back here asking for meanings sentence after sentence, edit after edit. I mean I read your book, I had no problem understanding it. ;)

        Reply
  • Collin — June 5th, 2013, 12:20 am

    I may be four years late to this party, but I feel this comment is necessary.

    First off, Tim, thank you so much for this post. I found instant success after completing the exercises. However, my skills can still use more practice and drilling to reach my pinnacle (the wrestler’s mentality hehe). I greatly admire and appreciate all of the information you post! The knowledge on this site seems to “enlighten” me on many subjects and it is all FREE.

    Secondly, thank you to the four hour community for sharing thoughts ( I loved reading Sean’s comment about the deaf) and providing more insight.

    Thanks again,

    Collin

    Reply
  • SherifJune 16th, 2013, 12:15 pm

    We are comparing normal comprehension speed in step 1 to fastest comprehension speed in step 4. Isin’t it better to be comparing fastest comprehension speed at both step 1 and step 4?

    Reply
  • Phil — June 20th, 2013, 9:51 am

    I increased my speed “reading” by 3x, however I think I killed my comprehension by 50% :(

    Need to pause and absorb the information.

    Reply
  • isaac acheampongJune 24th, 2013, 10:47 am

    i like reading and also read fast.
    i sometimes get bored when reading. i want to know how i will not feel dizzy when reading.
    i also needs more books to improve my reading ability.
    Thank you.

    Reply
  • Rithesh — July 2nd, 2013, 11:31 pm

    Hello Tim,

    I am really impressed by all of your work. I am following your blog regularly since 2 months.

    I have been a slow reader since my school days and have been attempting to increase my speed for a long time now but never could achieve it.

    After reading this article I took the 20 mins test and this is what I could find.

    When started I was 161 words per min.
    When I finished the the drill I was 414 words per min.

    I was surprised that I achieved a 156% increase in my speed.

    Really amazed with my self and thank you very much for sharing this.

    Regards,

    Rithesh R

    Reply
  • Julian — July 7th, 2013, 10:40 pm

    I’m going into college next year and think developing this technique will be quite helpful. One thing that’s still a bit unclear for me though is the matter of comprehension. I’ve heard that speed reading isn’t worth it due to the loss of comprehension, that one should read things multiple times if speed reading to make up for comprehension loss, and that speed reading actually increases comprehension. Is one of these correct? Is something else? Any clarification would be much appreciated :)

    Reply
    • Ed CaldwellJuly 11th, 2013, 12:26 am

      you just go reading of news paper and software which can improve your skills.

      Reply
    • Sandeep — October 14th, 2013, 2:12 am

      I am concerned about Comprehension as well. Can somebody, who has benefited out of this technique, kindly clarify if you are able to understand things perfectly or are you reading at the cost of comprehension. It does not augur well for exam preparations then. And then what about retention ? If this technique is only about reading fast with little comprehension and little retention then the latter would need the same old reading-word-to-word technique.

      May be I haven’t understood the technique because I need more clarity. But someone please help me on this. I have very critical exams coming ahead !

      Thank you.
      Warm Regards.
      Sandeep.

      Reply
  • samuel — July 10th, 2013, 4:51 am

    i can now read fast

    Reply
  • Alex — July 12th, 2013, 11:08 pm

    It took me about 30 to 40 minutes to double my words per minute! Sweet, thanks Tim!

    Reply
  • ping — July 14th, 2013, 9:10 pm

    This is shit.

    Reply
  • Yi TaylorJuly 22nd, 2013, 6:41 pm

    Amazing amazing amazinggggg! I almost trippled my rate from 324 to 948 WPM! This is so inspiring! For 20 minutes? I will do the drills everyday for the next one month and I am very excited to see where that will get me. Please do yourself a favor and try this people! Thank you for sharing Timothy!

    Reply
  • Tim — July 23rd, 2013, 6:01 pm

    This suprisingly actually works! I went from 110 words per minute to 220 words per minute. In just 8 minutes or so! And I’m not an ad or computer saying this!

    Reply
  • Spencer — August 3rd, 2013, 11:37 pm

    Wow! I know most of these websites don’t give much detail, but I found this one very detailed and astonishing. I went from 267 WPM to 936 WPM! Thank You so much! :-)

    Reply
    • Luke — August 5th, 2013, 5:21 pm

      Anyone else feel like instead of speed-reading they are just bypassing words? I am trying so hard to actually read the entire line but only move my lines from three words on the left to three words in on the right, but I think I am actually just skipping words. Glad it is working so well for everyone else!

      Reply
  • AmanAugust 9th, 2013, 7:06 am

    Hi Tim

    thanks for your inspirational work (your books, your blogs, your videos…)!
    in addition to faster reading, do you have any tips for better comprehension, and especially, better memorization of texts?

    Aman

    Reply
  • Jacob W — August 16th, 2013, 9:10 am

    WOW! This is amazing! I can’t believe how well it worked! I’ve more then doubled my previous reading speeds thanks to this, before I started I was at a pretty slow 231 wpm and now I’m at 506 wpm with full comprehension! I wonder if trying this again and repeating the process will increase my speed even more!

    Reply
  • Simeon HanksAugust 17th, 2013, 4:02 pm

    Thanks so much for this resource! It provided a great capstone for my introductory speed reading blog post http://shanks-blog.com/?p=64 , I hope you don’t mind the pingback :-) Thanks again for all your hard work putting this out for us.

    Reply
  • Tiffany — August 19th, 2013, 3:33 pm

    So I’m not the fastest reader, but this helped increase my comprehension rate from 220 wpm to 517 wpm. Very satisfied(:

    Reply
  • Geoffrey Levens, L.Ac.August 20th, 2013, 8:27 pm

    Um…Evelyn Woods Reading Dynamics-late 60′s.

    Reply
  • Kyle — August 21st, 2013, 3:39 pm

    Wow, this really works. I cannot believe that I just came across this. I went from 350wpm to 760wpm.

    Reply
  • Carlos — August 21st, 2013, 5:32 pm

    I don’t think I’ve ever felt such a wide range of weak and empowered in a 20 minute time span. I’m 23 years old, in college for music, and have always been the bottom of the curve because of my below-average 112 WPM. 20 minutes later, I am at 280 and I’m repeating the process whenever I can so much as get a magazine in my hands.

    It’s AMAZING! And especially fun to read to fast background music, reading a line for every 2 beats, just as a way to keep track of my eyes. I’ll be trying with a metronome soon.

    Thank you for this gift,
    Carlos

    Reply
  • Dennis — August 25th, 2013, 5:28 am

    Wow, I went from 350 to 620 in just 20 minutes, thanks a lot!

    Reply
  • Jack Langworthy — August 29th, 2013, 3:30 am

    Am I crazy or is there a crucial arithmetic error in your section “The Protocol”? It says to practice technique at 3x your target reading speed (TRS) and then uses the example of a 900 WPM TRS. Then it recommends practicing at 1800 WPM, which is only 2xTRS. I believe you meant to use 600 as a TRM example, but it’s unclear where the typo is.

    I love all things 4 hour! Thanks Tim!

    Reply
  • Jatin — September 2nd, 2013, 9:55 am

    The technique is really when you are reading the hard copy, but i generally read ebooks, so can you please suggest some tip to improve the speed while reading on computer.

    Thanks!

    Reply
    • Carlos — September 7th, 2013, 5:59 pm

      The technique is only easier to practice with hard copies, but the act of teaching your eyes to scan faster carries over to all reading you will do.

      A previous post by a Diego Scataglini (please feel free to search his name on this page with ctrl-f for the full quote) recommends the use of some online software he made himself to exercise these same principles. It uses highlighting instead of a pen. http://www.eyercize.com

      Another interesting one is http://zapreader.com/
      It allows you to copy and paste the text OR the link to the article you want to speed-read.

      Both are excellent tools!

      Reply
  • Noah — September 5th, 2013, 2:32 pm

    This might save my butt this year. I’m going to be a Junior in highschool, with a heavy schedule ahead of me. I’ve never even taken an honors or advanced course, and yet I’ve got two A.Ps on my schedule this year, with A LOT of reading to do. And that’s not even why I’m here. i’m here because I’ve got a book to read, along with other summer homework for A.Ps due in 4 days that I’ve barely started.

    Reply
  • Rose L. — September 29th, 2013, 5:20 pm

    Wow, I’m using this technique from now on. I took a reading speed test and went from 478 wpm to 1,104 and still got 5 out of 6 comprehension questions right (I missed one question the first time, too. Oh well.)

    Reply
  • Lisa PecuniaOctober 5th, 2013, 12:30 pm

    I just did these exercises over two days and more than doubled my reading speed. I do think there was a reduction in comprehension, but not by as much as you might expect. I think with practice this will become very handy, because I read a LOT :-).

    Thanks Tim.

    Reply
  • Clytie M,October 6th, 2013, 9:33 pm

    I cannot wait to try this out! I am such a slow reader, and I hope this can change that! It sounds like (from other comments) that it does!

    Reply
  • Ben Hilton — October 7th, 2013, 12:00 pm

    It increased mine by 225% – Still my comprehension at the faster speed is crappy

    Reply
  • Madision, QLD — October 13th, 2013, 7:26 am

    Wow, this is amazing. I did a quick google search, “improve reading speed” in order to read faster for a tough exam coming up. It honestly works, and I have to say, I expected it not to. I went from 120 words per minute (extremely slow) to 440 words per minute, which is absolutely astounding for me. Thank you for doing this! I will definitely be trying this out over and over to continue to improve! :D

    Reply
  • mutwaly — October 14th, 2013, 10:34 am

    i could not understand how to do the techniques

    Reply
  • rola — October 17th, 2013, 1:04 pm

    It is very useful , but I want name some of books talk about speed reading

    Reply
  • Kat — October 18th, 2013, 6:57 pm

    Thanks for this great post! I’m just wondering: what’s the best way to practice your suggested reading scheme to be the most effective?
    Ie: how often do I do the 2 min vs 3 mins reading, and then the 1st word, 2nd last word etc…? Do I repeat the sequence again after I finished the first cycle?

    Thanks

    Reply
  • Thiyagarajan.M` — October 26th, 2013, 5:06 am

    A good evening to you sirs/madam. I am a B.A English literature,final year college student.
    I have a very will to read many books. But after sometime, I feel sleepy or boredom after finishing some(few) pages in the book.

    so, my query is what can I do for this?
    I want to taste many many lots of books …pls, help me.

    Reply
    • Taylor — December 6th, 2013, 10:21 am

      Sit at a desk, use the methods in this article (don’t forget the tracker or pacer), read interesting stuff, and drink a frap :)

      Reply
  • Pat — October 28th, 2013, 8:28 pm

    I just increased my read speed by almost 75% in just one round of training!

    Reply
  • Joshua — October 30th, 2013, 5:03 pm

    Hey thanks so much for the tips and help on how to read faster. I am trying to increase my reading speed and comprehension as I prepare for MCAT. I am finding that I am running out of time during my verbal practice. But just in the time I spent practicing my reading I think that it is helping me. The pen as a ticker is such a great idea.

    Thank you.

    Reply
  • David — November 9th, 2013, 11:31 pm

    Brilliant! I read the article on The Art of Manliness to draw me in, get the basics, then pasted this article into spreeder, it was amazing! Having primed the content with the other shorter article, it helped me get through this longer one quicker, and still comprehend it all while practicing the concept. This one was definitely better in the long run as it hard far more detail and practical exercises. Beautiful. I’ll keep at it, thanks for the article!

    Reply
  • Jason Kwan — November 10th, 2013, 7:16 am

    Nice step by step instruction

    Using the techniques to read 4HWW

    LOL

    Reply
  • Patrick — November 18th, 2013, 10:13 pm

    Trying to speed read this article…

    Reply
  • Klythe — November 20th, 2013, 3:00 am

    God, i love you! I just increased my wpm by 150% in half an hour, up from 400. Awesome stuff.

    Reply
  • Satisfied Reader — December 5th, 2013, 4:29 pm

    I increased my wpm from 230 to 810! This really works! Thank you so much! I’m reading a book for a report and this is really helping!

    Reply
  • Taylor — December 6th, 2013, 10:18 am

    Good stuff. My reading went from 315 wpm to 730 in about twenty minutes. This is gonna save me a ton of time for speed reading in the ACT Reading section.

    Reply
  • Harry — December 23rd, 2013, 3:24 am

    Thank you so much! I almost gave up on reading.. I was reading at about 150wpm and it was torture. After going through this guide it boosted my wpm to 341!

    Reply
  • junn lagud — January 4th, 2014, 2:40 pm

    This is great!

    Reply
  • Emma — January 11th, 2014, 3:55 pm

    Wow, it actually worked! I’m reading a very hard book so my original wpm was 145.6… now it is up to 343.2! Really almost exactly a 300% increase! Thank you so much!!

    Reply
  • Eric RidleyJanuary 13th, 2014, 11:45 am

    Hey Tim,

    Your technique probably appears to be more complicated than it actually is. It’s also a good candidate for a web app – having some automated way to test reading speed and provide feedback would be awesome.

    Reply
  • Alex Christine — January 14th, 2014, 7:11 pm

    Wow. This is incredible. I still have a lot of work to do but this took my words per minute from 436 to 756 in 10 minutes. Incredible. Thank you very much

    Reply
  • Nawal — January 15th, 2014, 9:09 pm

    Thanks so much for the great tip. Went from 312 wpm to 864 wpm! Need more practice though…..

    Reply
  • Karl Craig-WestJanuary 20th, 2014, 7:16 am

    HUGE thanks for this.

    In just 15 minutes I upped my reading speed by 50%. I’ll keep practising and look forward to getting faster.

    cheers,
    Karl

    Reply
  • Joshua — January 23rd, 2014, 2:45 pm

    Thank you. Seemed to help a little. I improved by 60 wpm.

    Reply
  • RishiJanuary 28th, 2014, 7:59 am

    Fantastic article. I have always been searching for speed read and how to speed read but this one takes the cake, mainly because of how feasible it is to do and the fact that it just takes less than an hour. The ones I’ve come across had the attitude of completely revamping your reading style which does take quite a lot of time, and effort. Tim this is fantastic!

    Reply
  • Ridwan — February 1st, 2014, 12:57 pm

    I am extremely slow. I used to read 93 words per minute and now I read 160 words per minute. Still, an improvement ^^.

    I will keep working on this so hopefully I’ll be able to someday read 300 words per minute.

    Reply
  • Bianca — February 5th, 2014, 9:25 pm

    Hey Tim,

    About the photoreading, I believe it has to do with your memory. If you have good memory concerning the recollection of images, I think it would be easier to remember what is written on it.
    Thanks for this article by the way, I’m really pumped to do this!

    Reply
  • ank — February 6th, 2014, 7:42 pm

    OMG!!!!!!!! This really works. My reading rate doubled and I did the excersise only once!!!!!!!!!1

    Reply
  • Mim — February 13th, 2014, 10:19 am

    Hello,
    Im doing it, but with zero comprehension. Is this normal?

    Reply

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