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Planning Your Next Event: Can All Speakers Talk?
by My Booking Manager

Published on this site: July 1st, 2006 - See more
articles from this month

Although it was flattering to receive an invitation to speak on his
specialist subject, David Johnson had never presented to a large audience
before. He was nervous, not only about the reception his ideas would receive
but also about his
under-developed presentation skills. The invitation provided him with
no help on either topic and asked only for a written version of the talk
on disk in advance of the event.
Some seminars are simply a list of guest speakers following one another
onto the stage to describe their experiences or to stimulate controversy
with a new theory. Other events will invite a single guest speaker to
add authority to the subject matter and to give the audience a change
of face and a change of pace.
In order to get the best possible performance from your speakers, they
need to be cosseted, spoiled and micro-managed. Those with a top reputation
in their field will be expensive and in high demand so make your booking
really far in advance; twelve months is not uncommon. You may get lucky
with a late cancellation but don't put money on it!
Treat your speakers like the honored guests that they are. Take care of
their travel arrangements, accommodation and rehearsal with enormous attention
to detail. Brief them thoroughly about the event, listen carefully to
their needs, act quickly and appropriately to solve problems and collect
feedback from the audience specifically for them.
When using a series of speakers talking on a specific subject, it helps
if the audience is not exposed to excessive repetition. Take care to produce
a brief for each speaker that considers the subject from different angles
and check that they are not straying too far from their given viewpoint
as they develop their presentations.
To achieve maximum value from their presentations, especially where the
event has scientific or technical merit, it is fairly customary to publish
the proceedings of the event as a complete volume. However to acquire
the narrative of a 30-minute talk may need one or two month's notice to
your speakers followed by a series of regular reminders. Remember that
they will almost all have a real job to do as well as preparing for your
event.
Much better to video record the seminar and make the DVD available to
delegates a week or two later.
The largest assumption and therefore the largest mistake that an event
organizer can make is to presuppose that all speakers have highly developed
presentation skills. Many theoretical experts do not have the flair to
make a talk stimulating, however your event would lose the necessary balance
if some opinions were unrepresented.
For David Johnson, his nervousness was eased greatly by the event organizers.
They called him regularly to check progress and, through informal discussion,
discovered his apprehension about speaking to a large audience. By recommending
a voice and presentation coach who was able to improve his capability
and confidence, the organizers guaranteed success not only for themselves, but for David too.

Published by My Booking Manager. A convenient, professional,
time saving & cost effective way to accept registrations, bookings
& payments for your next seminar, workshop, trade display or membership
event Obtain your free report "20 Steps to Running Successful Seminars
Roadshows Workshops and Events Report" at http://mybookingmanager.com


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