For Speakers: Ten Tips on How to Increase Your Fees
by Catherine Franz
Published on this site: April 2nd, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...
This article is directed more towards speakers, however, these
techniques can also be applied for any type of business.
One of the most important tools speakers use is their FEE
SCHEDULE. Here are ten tips to help you increase your attractiveness
and income, while communicating exactly what you offer and
clarify your fees for your programs, products, and services.
- Change the title. Previously referred as a FEE SCHEDULE.
These two words have gathered a quiet negative energy overthe
years. In order to make your fees more attractive, change
the name. This energizes your attractiveness and shows how
you are different. Here are a few noun substitutes to spark
your brainstorming. Schedule: Menu, catalog, list. Example
Fee Menu, Fee Catalog, Fee List. Fee: Compensation, cost,
rate. Examples: Compensation Menu, compensation catalog,
compensation list, cost menu, cost catalog, cost list, rate
menu, rate catalog, rate list.
- Include your photo at the top of your schedule
- At the top also include an expiration line: Example:
"These fees are good for programs booked before _____date
(or expire on ____)." Expire your schedule frequently
to allow for increases. Ninety days is the normal expiration
period.
- SOMETHING WRONG WITH THE FOLLOWING SENTENCE. We find
that selling time is the easiest way to list independent
professional services offer and listing the length of your
programs and seminars. Example: Up to l hour $____. Up to
2 hours $____. Up to 3 hours (or 1/2 Day) $____. Up to 6
hours (full day) _____.
- Be sure to list all your time or product packages. List
any additional or possible programs for the same events.
Examples: Managers Meetings, Spouse Program, additional
breakouts, vendor education for trade shows at the event.
List any document customization fees and recording rights.
- If you work with meeting planners and bureaus, enlist
their experience and suggestions. Let them review and provide
you with feedback on your schedule. They know the market
and continually compare speakers' schedules.
- Create a PDF file for e-mailing your schedule. Or create
a complete marketing package that includes your fee schedule
and turn into a pdf file.
- When presenting your services to a meeting planner, visualize
that person looking at a giant chart on the wall which lists
all the different times and programs planned at their event,
but that are not yet scheduled. Ask the meeting planner
if he or she has any unfilled time slots available on the
day you are scheduled. Then suggest a second program for
managers or the sales team. This helps them because they
have to book less speakers, cuts their planning time considerably,
and usually saves money on travel expenses and hotel rooms.
- Meeting planners discourage back-of-the-room sales because
they do not want you to use "paid" time to push
those materials. Instead, sell them separately through their
educational materials budget. Add your educational materials
to your schedule (books, workbooks, audio programs, subscriptions)
with any quantity discounts (10-15%). Include special "program
only" package opportunities as well. Place these in
the center of your schedule. List shipping separately in
a footnote.
- Speakers are now asking for a flat fee for their travel
expenses. This provides flexibility for the speaker and
saves the meeting planner time.

Catherine Franz, a Business Coach, specialized in writing,
marketing and product development. Newsletters and additional
articles: http://www.abundancecenter.com
blog:
http://abundance.blogs.com.

|