But speaking usually doesn’t start as a revenue stream. It starts as an opportunity to showcase your expertise, grow an audience, market your business, and demonstrate you can execute on the stage (virtual or in real life).
Fortunately, you are well prepared to add speaking to your services list. You know your target audience. You already create content. You have a content tilt that differentiates you from everybody else. Those are the main ingredients of every speaking strategy.
Now, let’s go into more specifics to help you land speaking gigs (unpaid and paid).
Identify speaking opportunities. Look for organizations, conferences, groups, etc., that host speakers and have audiences you want to reach.
Think local. A chapter of a business or nonprofit organization or a chamber of commerce can be a good starting point. They usually rely on local speakers who are more likely to understand their audience and don’t require a fee or travel expenses. Even if they don’t offer the ideal target audience, you can gain valuable experience from those stages.
Go where your audience goes. What conferences do they attend? What podcasts do they listen to? What webinars do they watch? Visit the site for each one to assess the speaking opportunities.
Conferences often have a call for speakers posted six months to a year before the event. Mark the dates for their next submission time. Look at past agendas and formats to get familiar with what they look for. Note if they pay for speakers or travel expenses. (Often, the compensation is free admission.)
Listen and watch the podcasts, webinars, etc., to learn if they use a guest speaker format. If they do, add them to your prospect list.
Reach out to land speaking gigs. Outreach typically falls into two categories – direct one-on-one contact and online submissions.
With local organizations and solo and small business platforms, you can usually reach out to their contact with a pitch. In this format, you briefly introduce yourself and your expertise and say something that indicates you’re familiar with their organization/podcast/webinars, etc. Be specific. Saying you think they have a great podcast isn’t helpful. Saying something you learned from a recent guest is specific. Then briefly share an idea of what you could offer their audience. (If they’re interested, you can go into more detail in follow-up correspondence.) Close with your contact information and a promise to follow up. (And make sure to follow up by email or even a phone call.)
Conferences typically fall into the online process. Before you submit, walk through the application and note what information they want, such as the title, description, learning objectives, and takeaways from your presentation. They also will want to know about you – your credentials, existing audience, social platforms, etc. Sometimes, they will ask for references from previous speaking engagements or clips/links to past presentations. (If you don’t have a clip, create one. Host a LinkedIn Live or Twitter Spaces, or book some space at your local library to host a presentation open to the community and record it.)
Don't give up if you don’t secure a speaking gig on your first attempt. Grow your relationship with their organization or business while you build your speaking portfolio elsewhere.
– Ann Gynn
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Recognize your worth: Melissa did brand deals in exchange for product for a couple of years before she realized her expertise deserved something more valuable than Splenda packets.
Don’t give up: Persistence is a requirement. “You actually have to say no to my face for me to stop following up with you,” she says.
See the possibilities: Some early-stage creators can be intimidated by more successful content entrepreneurs. Don’t be. “Find something that sets you apart from other people,” Melissa says. “It’s a big sea out there.”
Unionize: SAG-AFTRA union leader says the guild is using the actors’ strike to recruit more online creators into its ranks. It first allowed creators under an “influencer agreement” in 2021. Creators who work for targeted companies during the strike won’t be admitted later. (Deadline) Tilt Take:Success breeds interest from all facets of the economy who can see a boost from creators. (Read on.)
Create the course: Film and TV studios and producers are scrambling to recruit creators to help fill the content void. And striking actors and writers are experimenting with new ideas on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and Twitch that could result in more than a temporary paycheck. (The Washington Post) Tilt Take:Unlike previous strikes in Hollywood, a strike in this digital era could further revolutionize how content gets made and distributed.
Audiences
Seeing red: Reddit is taking control of nefarious subreddits whose leaders didn’t like its API pricing changes and closed their communities to the public. Most recently, it took back r/malefashionadvice, a subreddit with than 5 million subscribers. (The Verge) Tilt Take:Don’t think you’re exempt from third-party control of your audience because you operate on seemingly open platforms that don’t follow traditional social media routes.
Pledges: Substack says readers pledged more than $1.2M to over 20,000 writers on its platform before those creators turned on their paywalls. Writers who converted those pledges have gone on to earn a collective $8.5 million. (Axios) Tilt Take:Pledges can be a good test if you want to understand if people will pay for your content. Just remember that a pledge isn’t a guarantee.
Tech and Tools
Main help: YouTube now lets creators change its channel permissions in the main app and site. It was previously only available in YouTube Studio. (Social Media Today) Tilt Take:Good news for creators who work with virtual assistants or on multi person teams.
Keep doing: Google’s John Mueller says even though Google changes a page’s title – usually removing the site name from the title – publishers shouldn’t make the same change because it makes it easier to confirm the site name that Google shows above the title. (Search Engine Journal) Tilt Take:Keep your name in page titles.
And Finally
X mark: Twitter’s Elon Musk grounded the blue bird in favor of an X in the platform’s rebranding. (Reuters) Tilt Take:Never rebrand just to have a different look or name. Make sure you have a strategy behind the why and how.
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