The Secret Formula For Getting Business From Speeches - Brass Tack ThinkingI’ll give you a hint.

It has nothing to do with working a pitch into your talk. We all know that guy or girl. The first five minutes is their personal resume, there’s a few slides that look like a presentation but are really blinding, cramped marketing materials, and the last 10 minutes is a sales pitch for their company or product.

Hopefully they’re reading. (If that’s you, we won’t ask you to out yourself, but please keep reading. You don’t have to keep doing it that way.)

Want the secret sauce? It’s as simple – and not so easy – as this.

1. Make the speech relevant to your audience.

It’s fine if you have a framework you use for a standard speech. But for heaven’s sake, pay attention to who you’re talking to. If it’s a small business conference, find examples that reflect the challenges of small business. If it’s women, accountants, dinosaurs, you best have your well-practiced, stock presentation reflective of your understanding of their unique point of view. You should present as though you’re one of them sharing your best secrets, rather than an outsider telling them what they ought to be doing.

If you’re not familiar with the nature of the audience, do some research. Ask the organizers why they chose this session/topic for this group and what they know or believe they’re hoping to learn. Tap your online networks in advance and ask people in that industry or category to help you understand what about your topic is interesting to them.

2. Fill it full of valuable information. (Don’t worry, you aren’t going to give it all away).

Bring the best of your knowledge. Share the good stuff. Share successes, details, mistakes, shortcuts, whatever *you* would find useful if you were sitting in the audience. Most standard talks are 30-60 minutes long, which is about enough time to get across a few high level concepts to illustrate the “why” and some sketches about the what and how of execution, if your session is intended to be instructive like that. I promise you there’s no way someone’s going to steal your secret sauce from a slide deck.

If your talk is nothing more than a thinly veiled “hire me to get the good stuff” thing, it’s going to turn people off. They likely paid to come hear you and learn something. Besides, if your entire value as a professional is wrapped up in a single conference session presentation, you’ve got bigger issues to address.

3. Prepare. Relentlessly. And leave time for Q&A.

It’s so obvious when someone has their presentation nailed. You can tell that they’re prepared and fluid. That they did their homework and their research, and that they understand the audience. The real secret though? Anyone on earth can learn to recite the script behind a carefully architected presentation. The outstanding pros show their stuff during Q&A. Unless you’re doing a keynote, Q&A is something that most organizers and attendees alike will welcome, and it’s often where the best stuff happens.

Someone who has only memorized a deck won’t be able to provide a ton of value in response to questions that are impromptu. But if you *really* know your stuff, you’ll shine when you’re contributing your expertise to the questions and challenges that are on the minds of the audience. If you can, always leave 15 minutes give or take at the end of a talk to answer questions.

4. Make yourself accessible afterward.

After most conference sessions, there’s a stack of people that will immediately come up to the stage and ask follow up questions, ask for your business card, or give you theirs. If you have to follow up on something, be sure you scribble a note on the back of the card to remind yourself. And follow up.

Have your contact information on at least the first slide and the last, and if you can do it tastefully, stick your Twitter handle or your email address on other slides, too. Come with plenty of business cards. And if you can, be present at the event before and after your speech. Some folks won’t approach you in the midst of the post-speech rush, but will say hi later if you’re around and not surrounded.

How do I know it works?

If after the speech, people come and talk to me, ask for my card, give me theirs, and want to continue a dialogue. The goal is not an immediate “hire me” instantly. The goal is to move that person one step closer to being interested in my expertise and capabilities. The business might pay off in a week or a year. Sometimes it won’t go anywhere at all, but many times, it does. Many folks don’t connect immediately, but later remember your speech, and drop you an email because when they needed something that you do, you were the first person that came to mind.

I’m sure one of my analytics friends will tell me that I should be relentlessly tracking funnel stages and lead close rates so that I can properly quantify ROI of my speaking engagements. They might be right, and if that’s something that’s incredibly important to you, by all means do that.

But you know what? I’m not that rigorous, personally, because I’m comfortable with my anecdotal experience confirming my hypothesis enough to keep doing it.  My company can probably tell you how many I send them directly after an event or a speech, as I usually gather up a bunch of those business cards and get them to the right person. And I’m sure there’s many more that end up there but that I don’t know about.

I do know, however, that these connections are valuable to me on levels beyond just the lead, simply in the quality of my network, the diversity of the connections, the experience of learning from and with other people, and the joy I get when someone tells me that I actually helped them think about something in a new way.

In Closing…

The truth is this: no one comes to hear you speak so that you can market to them. Period.

Good presentation skills *are* marketing in their own, more indirect way. People say “Gee, she knows her stuff. Maybe I should work with her, and maybe her company is as smart/helpful/useful as she is. I should check them out.”

But the goal of the presentation is not the pitch. You don’t have to do that, I promise. People are smart. They can find your website and if you give them a great talk, they will.

The goal is the information sharing, the knowledge transfer, the contribution to something bigger than you. And I’m in full support of speaking being an outstanding way to develop business, as I’ve done it successfully for many years in several different industries. But the business you earn is the result of the effort you put in, not an entitlement just because someone handed you a stage. Business doesn’t work that way. It never has. And if that’s the way you approach it, you’ll likely burn more connections than you make.

I’m eager to hear if you agree.

What bugs you about seeing blatant pitches on stage? What makes you want to learn more about a speaker or give them your business? What have you learned as a speaker about the correlation between your presentations and earning new business?

image credit: Dave_Murr