I have consciously tried to increase my reading speed on many occasions. This is what has helped me get better:<p>- One of the most common technique is to not read every word as such, instead, read a chunk of words together, and don't 'voice' them. It takes some practice to be able to do this, but to check if you are reading correctly, see if you can hear every word in your head while you read it. If thats the case you are doing it wrong. And when you start doing it right, you will notice the change in speed.<p>- I read non-fiction mostly, and find it very annoying when the author beats around the bush before conveying his point. Its a very natural phenomenon among authors to write an entire paragraph, when the point could have been conveyed in a single line. (Infact, I fear I may be doing the same in this comment ... :P). Agreed that most books are proof read multiple times by many people, but some loops still come in the final print.<p>- In most cases, we are expecting something from a book. Either guidance on something specific like finance, or motivation, or something else. There are places in a book where you know for sure that this is not what you are seeking. Skim through that part, and move ahead. Believe me, this will save a lot of your time, and you will come out with the same value in a lot less time.<p>- Writing something yourself also helps to identify presence of the above 2 factors. You will re-read your blog for sure, and most blogging time is spent on deleting redundant parts, than writing. In every iteration, you will find more things to delete. Be ruthless in this process, respect the reader and don't waste his time. Once you do this yourself, you will know whether the author of the article/book that you are reading has done it.<p>- As for your point about retaining what you have read, I wouldn't worry much about that. We feel that most of the information has faded away quickly, when in fact, it just gets filtered, and when a topic relevant to what you have read comes up, you will be able to access what you read, not exactly maybe, but the gist of it. Its a very pleasant surprise when this happens. (Daniel Kahneman has some interesting things to say about this kind of information retrieval)<p>- Lastly, read Paul Graham and Sam Altman's essays. they are precise, no wasted words at all. Also, Ben Horowitz's answers, and his book Hard thing about hard things.<p>- Measure against these benchmarks, and you will realise that you will have to really 'read' much less overall. For the remaining part, employ the advice of @SonOfLilit in the comment below.