How
To Get Full Value From Your Speaker
See Also: (Here's
What Jim Will do For You)
If your speaker truly is a valuable resource and
you've gone to all this trouble to get him/her ready to do a proper
job for you, then perhaps there are several ways to utilize the
speakers' resources on the day of his/her appearance.
In
30 years
of speaking before more than 2,600 audiences I've encountered most
all of the difficulties that a speaker can encounter. I've been
spared a few disasters like having audience members pass away during
my presentation, but overall I would say I've met most of the challenges.
Through my contacts with a lot of very wise meeting planners, audience
members and other speakers, I've identified some of the best strategies
for eliminating the problems and/or dealing with them as they arise.
A description of them follows.
Just How
Much Can a Speaker Do?
A meeting planner asked me sometime ago if I could do five presentations
on one day and three more the following day, all presentations before
different audiences, but on exactly the same subject. When I started
my speaking career I would have answered eagerly, "Yes!," but wisdom
and experience have taught me differently.
What a speaker
does in front of an audience requires just about as much energy
within a one hour time frame, as a typical eight hour day working
in an office. With that in mind there aren't many quality performances
possible from one speaker in a given day. I've found that for me,
even though I have a rather high energy level, I'm only good for
about three separate presentations per day. It's interesting to
me that a speech presentation is similar in many ways to jet travel.
The airplane uses up the majority of its fuel on take-off and once
it's airborne can cruise for tremendous distances without burning
up an excessive amount of fuel.
I figure I'm
capable of three quality "take-offs" per day. The length of each
presentation can vary from 30 minutes to three hours, but it's the
take-offs that burn up the energy. Each time I'm with a new audience
I have to go through a psychological process with them to shift
their thinking to where I need it to be. Also, I need to raise their
energy to a highly receptive level so that they will absorb all
of the information I am bringing and participate, as necessary,
in the program.
Suggestion:
Talk with your speakers, ask them what they feel they're capable
of in a day at maximum energy. You might be able to get them to
do more than the optimum number of presentations in a day, but in
doing so you would be cheating yourself and your audience. After
most of the good energy is burnt up, the speaker will be giving
only token performances for the remaining audiences. Your audiences
deserve more than that and so do your speakers. It's usually better
to assemble your audiences all together and have your speaker address
them as one overall group rather than breaking them up into sub-groups
and repeating the presentations again and again. The larger the
group, usually the more powerful the impact the speaker can have
on the audience.
What Comes
First . . . The Speech Or The Seminar?
If your speaker is doing more than one presentation, schedule the
main event first. In other words, give your speaker a chance to
speak to the largest percentage of your audience first so as to
establish rapport, to psychologically orient the audience to the
speaker's way of thinking and familiarize the audience with the
speaker's material. Then if you offer a seminar by the same speaker,
the audience will already feel connected to the speaker and will
be able to ask more well-educated questions during the seminar.
This also puts the speaker at ease and allows the speaker to enter
the seminar with a lot more preparation.
It's also important, if you're scheduling some guest appearances
by your speaker, to have the main event before the guest appearances.
In this way everyone gets a sense of contact with the speaker and
they look forward to having one-to-one access to that speaker during
the appearances later on. Personally, I don't "do cocktail parties"
very well, I prefer to give my presentation to the group first and
then attend the social events. In that way the dialogue flows naturally
from my presentation, instead of centering around who I am and what
I do. It's also a good idea to require as little as possible from
your speaker prior to the main event. In this way the speaker is
fresh and prepared and able to give you 100 percent rather than
a tired version of their usual 100 percent.
If the Program
is Overtime, Whose Time Do you Cut?
Let's say your program starts late, for some of the many reasons
we all encounter in conventions, and you have on the program a high
priced, well-known celebrity who you booked so that the room would
be full of people and an interesting presentation would be received.
Immediately after the high priced celebrity you have a professional
speaker who was brought in to accomplish a specific objective through
his/her presentation; i.e. opening up the audience to new ideas,
giving them a different point of view, making them feel special
because of their good performance, etc. If the program is overtime,
whose time do you cut? I'd suggest you cut the celebrity's time.
The reason
for this is that the celebrity offers the most value to you simply
by showing up. Their name will draw people to the event and cause
people to enroll, their presence will fill the room and their presentation
will give the audience a special feeling that you have done something
wonderful for them. If the time they present is reduced, it does
not necessarily diminish their impact on your audience.
However, if
the time allotted to the professional speaker is reduced, he/she
may not be able to still accomplish the original goal for their
presentation. Unlike the celebrity, their value is not received
by who they are or the fact that they're there, instead the value
from a professional speaker is received from what he/she does and
how they do it.
Get Them
Ready To Hear Your Speaker
Something that can be done to increase the impact of your speaker
is a "pre-introduction." A pre-introduction could be one statement
or an entire process. It consists of such things as publishing some
articles by the speaker in your company publications in advance
of the meeting. This begins the orientation process of your audience
to the message of your speaker. You can also begin to incorporate
products, i.e., books, tapes, etc. from your speaker into your training
or company meetings in advance of the convention so that the people
feel a sense of identity with the speaker and by the time he/she
arrives at your convention they will enjoy celebrity status. This
makes the appearance even more special to those who are attending.
Another method for the pre-introduction would be to distribute a
tape recording or a copy of the book written by the speaker in advance
of the meeting. This allows the speaker to streamline his/her presentation
to get directly to how the ideas he/she will present will impact
the people in the audience.
Why Not
Get Full Dollars Worth?
It seems a real shame to spend all the time that's necessary to
orient a speaker to your organization, familiarize them with your
products and services, introduce them to your people, educate them
about the business you're in, and then have them leave immediately
after their presentation never to be seen again by your group.
If your speaker
truly is a valuable resource and you've gone to all this trouble
to get him/her ready to do a proper job for you, then perhaps there
are several ways to utilize the speaker's resources on the day of
their appearance. In many cases, the increase in costs will be so
small that it will cost significantly less than bringing in another
speaker even at a lower fee. Here is what we do: When I'm booked
for a keynote presentation, I immediately start reviewing the convention
agenda with the meeting planner in order to determine if there might
be workshops, seminars, or breakout sessions which I might be able
to conduct. If we can schedule the seminar after the keynote speech
the chances are good that the seminar will be full and the people
will be eager to attend.
In addition
to that, while I'm on site I can meet with a specially selected
group for a specific purpose. For example, I can meet with the top
salespeople to help them refine their skills even further, or I
might even meet with some of the salespeople or managers who are
having problems to help them solve some of the problems and overcome
their challenges. All of this without my client scheduling any extra
travel or incurring any extra expenses. Any time you hire a speaker,
you deserve to get a great deal of value from that person. These
ideas should help you work with your speakers in such a way that
they have the maximum possible impact on your audience and provide
the greatest possible service to your organization.
Have a great
meeting!
©1989,
©1998, ©2007 Jim Cathcart, CSP, CPAE
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