Instead of using raw percentages or large figures, use comparisons that people can visualize immediately.

To explain the difference between a million and a billion, imagine a friend who spends $50,000 every day . They would run out of a million dollars in 20 days , but it would take them 55 years to spend a billion.

Mapping the 13.8 billion-year history of the universe onto a 24-hour clock helps people understand when humans actually arrived (the final seconds). Resources for Deep Diving

During the Crimean War, she didn't just say 600 out of 1,000 troops died. She noted the mortality rate exceeded that of the Great Plague of London , immediately conveying the horror to policymakers. 4. Build Scale Models

Instead of saying "A very small percentage of Fortune 500 CEOs are women," say "There are more men named James among Fortune 500 CEOs than there are women ".

The book is structured around four main principles for making data "click": 1. Translate Everything into Human Terms

A great guide for by Chip Heath and Karla Starr starts with their core argument: humans aren't naturally built to understand large or abstract numbers, so we must translate them into instinctive human experiences .