Three general effective strategies are shown to mitigate nonradiative losses in the superradiant emission from supramolecular assemblies. J‐aggregates of 5,5′,6,6′‐tetrachloro‐1,1′‐diethyl‐3,3′‐di(4–sulfobutyl)‐benzimidazolocarbocyanine (TDBC) are used to elucidate the nature of nonradiative processes. Self‐annealing at room temperature (RT), photo‐brightening, and purification of the dye monomers are shown to all lead to substantial increases in emission quantum yields (QYs) and a concomitant lengthening of the emission lifetime, with purification having the largest effect. Structural and optical measurements are used to support a microscopic model that emphasizes the deleterious effects of a small number of impurity and defect sites that serve as nonradiative recombination centers. This understanding has yielded a molecular fluorophore in solution at RT with an unprecedented combination of fast emissive lifetime and high QY. Superradiant emission with a QY of 82% and a lifetime of 174 ps is obtained from J‐aggregates of TDBC in solution at RT. This combination of high QY and fast lifetime at RT makes supramolecular assemblies of purified TDBC a model system for the study of fundamental superradiance phenomena. High QY J‐aggregates are uniquely suited for the development of applications that require high speed and high brightness fluorophores such as devices for high‐speed optical communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]