10 Tips For Marketing Your Business With Public Speaking
10 Tips For Marketing Your Business With Public Speaking
Copyright © 2006 Attractioneering
As a service provider and someone who sells their expertise and know-how, one of the best ways to get your message out to numerous people at the same time is through public speaking. When you speak at networking events, industry associations or conferences, you’re able to position yourself as an expert, gain credibility by “association” (i.e. if the organisation putting on the event has credibility with the audience, then so will you) and get many more people exposed to your message than might be possible by other means.
Public speaking is not for everybody (we’re not all natural performers!), but if you regularly attend networking events, then you may as well gain the much greater exposure you’ll get as the speaker, than if you simply attend and only get to connect with a few people.
Here are 10 tips for maximising this marketing opportunity:
1. Make sure you speak at events that your target market attends
OK, this may seem obvious - but most people get this wrong at some stage. If your target market is large corporations, and you find yourself speaking at an event attended by small business owners, then you’re probably not going to get a lot of good business out of it.
2. Choose a topic that your audience wants to learn more about, and create an intriguing topic title
Design your talks around some aspect of the service that you provide that your audience doesn’t currently understand, but wants to know more about. Create interesting and curiosity provoking titles so that event organisers and attendees alike will be intrigued and want to know more.
3. Educate your audience - don’t try to sell them anything
The worst talks are always those that involve obvious pitching and selling. Not only is this totally transparent to most people, but these kinds of talks are usually pretty boring. I would suggest that you be smarter than that and use “subliminal” selling. This is not as mysterious as it sounds. All you have to do is give enough information to whet the appetite of your audience, without giving away the farm. (Simply stated, this involves you explaining a concept and telling them what to do, but not how to do it). By speaking knowledgably on your chosen topic you’ll be positioning yourself as an expert and the person to come to for advice next time they have a need for your category of service.
4. Keep it simple and interactive
Most of us can only concentrate for up to 20 minutes at a time, and most people are not auditory, so learning through listening can be quite challenging. Therefore you should aim to get across only one or two key concepts in your talk, and make it interactive to keep people’s attention. And whatever you do, please don’t do “death by slides”! Powerpoint slides should be used to clarify your message, not bamboozle or bore your audience to death!
5. Practice, practice, practice
What are the 3 P’s of presenting? Preparation, preparation and preparation! I suggest that you write out your speech in it’s entirety, and then practice speaking it a few times - the cat or dog will probably humour you in this endeavour (or your plants or a long-suffering partner!) Once you’ve rehearsed it a few times, you can list the main points on some index cards, rather than reading a script. This way your talk will seem more natural.
6. Create your own events
To gain even greater marketing leverage from public speaking you can create your own events. Perhaps you can partner with some other business owners who share your target market, but who don’t compete with you, to hold an event that you invite your combined contacts to.
7. If the thought of speaking in front of people terrifies you or if you want to reach a geographically dispersed audience then … do a teleclass instead!
There’s no reason to limit yourself to only those events that you and your audience can physically get to. Setting up a teleclass, teleseminar or webinar is pretty easy and inexpensive these days.
8. Re-purpose and re-use your talk
The mistake a lot of people make is to assume that every time they give a talk, they’ve got to come up with something new. But this is just extra work and extra stress. After all, comedians don’t do a different show at every venue they play at, so unless your audience is the same people, then you don’t need a new talk! Most high-fee earners have a signature talk that they’ve perfected over the months or years, and they’ll be invited to events to give that specific talk.
9. End your talk with an offer
Unless you give talks for the good of your health, you’ll want to motivate your audience to take the next step with you. Most speakers miss the critical step of giving a “call to action” at the end of their talks, or they aim for the immediate sale rather than courting interest that will get them more sales long term. Rather than trying to sell straight away, you should intrigue your audience by offering them a free report or other giveaway in exchange for their business cards and permission to follow up with them. Those who are interested in what you offer or the information you can provide, will give you their contact details and thereby “put their hands up” as being potential candidates for your services.
10. Follow up
Once you have the contact details of your talk attendees, you should follow up with them multiple times with a structured follow up sequence. The easiest way to do this is to ask them to subscribe to your ezine.
And remember this - those who succeed through public speaking and media exposure are not necessarily any better at what they do than you are. The only difference is that they’re better at getting themselves into the limelight and then leveraging that to their advantage. Whilst you don’t have to become some media-hungry pseudo-celebrity, you can leverage all of your public speaking opportunities to build your credibility, increase your exposure and create an audience interested in what you have to say on your area of expertise.
------------------------
Jane Hendry helps professionals, consultants and coaches to create marketing systems that easily and consistently attract their ideal clients. To get your free Attraction Marketing Starter Kit please visit http://www.attractioneers.com/
10 Tips For Marketing Your Business With Public Speaking - To learn more about this author, visit Jane Hendry's Website.
Like this article? Share it with your friends
10 Tips for Marketing Your Business with Public Speaking
Copyright © 2006 Attractioneering
As a service provider and someone who sells their expertise and know-how, one of the best ways to get your message out to numerous people at the same time is through public speaking. When you speak at networking events, industry associations or conferences, you’re able to position yourself as an expert, gain credibility by “association” (i.e. if the organisation putting on the event has credibility with the audience, then so will you) and get many more people exposed to your message than might be possible by other means.
Public speaking is not for everybody (we’re not all natural performers!), but if you regularly attend networking events, then you may as well gain the much greater exposure you’ll get as the speaker, than if you simply attend and only get to connect with a few people.
Here are 10 tips for maximising this marketing opportunity:
1. Make sure you speak at events that your target market attends
OK, this may seem obvious - but most people get this wrong at some stage. If your target market is large corporations, and you find yourself speaking at an event attended by small business owners, then you’re probably not going to get a lot of good business out of it.
2. Choose a topic that your audience wants to learn more about, and create an intriguing topic title
Design your talks around some aspect of the service that you provide that your audience doesn’t currently understand, but wants to know more about. Create interesting and curiosity provoking titles so that event organisers and attendees alike will be intrigued and want to know more.
3. Educate your audience - don’t try to sell them anything
The worst talks are always those that involve obvious pitching and selling. Not only is this totally transparent to most people, but these kinds of talks are usually pretty boring. I would suggest that you be smarter than that and use “subliminal” selling. This is not as mysterious as it sounds. All you have to do is give enough information to whet the appetite of your audience, without giving away the farm. (Simply stated, this involves you explaining a concept and telling them what to do, but not how to do it). By speaking knowledgably on your chosen topic you’ll be positioning yourself as an expert and the person to come to for advice next time they have a need for your category of service.
4. Keep it simple and interactive
Most of us can only concentrate for up to 20 minutes at a time, and most people are not auditory, so learning through listening can be quite challenging. Therefore you should aim to get across only one or two key concepts in your talk, and make it interactive to keep people’s attention. And whatever you do, please don’t do “death by slides”! Powerpoint slides should be used to clarify your message, not bamboozle or bore your audience to death!
5. Practice, practice, practice
What are the 3 P’s of presenting? Preparation, preparation and preparation! I suggest that you write out your speech in it’s entirety, and then practice speaking it a few times - the cat or dog will probably humour you in this endeavour (or your plants or a long-suffering partner!) Once you’ve rehearsed it a few times, you can list the main points on some index cards, rather than reading a script. This way your talk will seem more natural.
6. Create your own events
To gain even greater marketing leverage from public speaking you can create your own events. Perhaps you can partner with some other business owners who share your target market, but who don’t compete with you, to hold an event that you invite your combined contacts to.
7. If the thought of speaking in front of people terrifies you or if you want to reach a geographically dispersed audience then … do a teleclass instead!
There’s no reason to limit yourself to only those events that you and your audience can physically get to. Setting up a teleclass, teleseminar or webinar is pretty easy and inexpensive these days.
8. Re-purpose and re-use your talk
The mistake a lot of people make is to assume that every time they give a talk, they’ve got to come up with something new. But this is just extra work and extra stress. After all, comedians don’t do a different show at every venue they play at, so unless your audience is the same people, then you don’t need a new talk! Most high-fee earners have a signature talk that they’ve perfected over the months or years, and they’ll be invited to events to give that specific talk.
9. End your talk with an offer
Unless you give talks for the good of your health, you’ll want to motivate your audience to take the next step with you. Most speakers miss the critical step of giving a “call to action” at the end of their talks, or they aim for the immediate sale rather than courting interest that will get them more sales long term. Rather than trying to sell straight away, you should intrigue your audience by offering them a free report or other giveaway in exchange for their business cards and permission to follow up with them. Those who are interested in what you offer or the information you can provide, will give you their contact details and thereby “put their hands up” as being potential candidates for your services.
10. Follow up
Once you have the contact details of your talk attendees, you should follow up with them multiple times with a structured follow up sequence. The easiest way to do this is to ask them to subscribe to your ezine.
And remember this - those who succeed through public speaking and media exposure are not necessarily any better at what they do than you are. The only difference is that they’re better at getting themselves into the limelight and then leveraging that to their advantage. Whilst you don’t have to become some media-hungry pseudo-celebrity, you can leverage all of your public speaking opportunities to build your credibility, increase your exposure and create an audience interested in what you have to say on your area of expertise.
------------------------
Jane Hendry helps professionals, consultants and coaches to create marketing systems that easily and consistently attract their ideal clients. To get your free Attraction Marketing Starter Kit please visit http://www.attractioneers.com/
10 Tips For Marketing Your Business With Public Speaking - To learn more about this author, visit Jane Hendry's Website.
Like this article? Share it with your friends
![]() | |
| |
No article feedback found. |
| |
Leave Your Feedback |
|
| |
| |||
Jeff FosterWebBizIdeas.com is a Minneapolis website design company founded to help people start an internet business by providing them with website, business, and internet resources that help foster the growth of successful online businesses and develop innovative Internet business ideas. We specialize in internet consulting & internet marketing. - Visit Jeff Foster's Website |
|||
Dave KurlanDave Kurlan is the founder and CEO of Objective Management Group, Inc., the industry leader in sales assessments and sales force evaluations, and the CEO of David Kurlan & Associates, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in sales force development. Dave has been a top rated speaker at Inc. Magazine's Conference on Growing the Company, the Sales & Marketing Management Conference and the Gazelles Sales & Marketing Summit. He has been featured on radio and TV, including World Business Review with General Norman Schwarzkopf, in Inc. Magazine, Selling Power Magazine, Sales & Marketing Management Magazine and Incentive Magazine. He is the author of Mindless Selling and Baseline Selling – How to Become a Sales Superstar by Using What You Already Know about the Game of Baseball. He created and wrote STAR, a proprietary recruiting process for hiring great salespeople, and he writes Understanding the Sales Force, a popular business Blog and is a contributing author to The Death of 20th Century Selling and 101 Great Ways to Improve Your Life, Volume 2. - Visit Dave Kurlan's Website |
|||
John PowerJohn Power, founder of Biltmore Franchise Consulting, has extensive experience developing and marketing franchises and business opportunities. He has been in and around franchising for over twenty years. From 1980 through 1990 he conceptualized, organized, and developed the American Video Association. He grew AVA to 2,000 national members, before selling the company it 1990. It was later merged into another home video marketing company. From 2000 to 2005 he worked as a contract marketing and human resources consultant to several local and national companies. In 2005 Mr. Power began working as a franchise development consultant on a full-time basis. Since that time he has helped more than three dozen companies initiate and develop their franchising program. He notes that there are many companies interested in developing a franchise program, and who need his specialized assistance. Mr. Power is a “hands-on” franchise consultant. He said, “I am the ‘nuts and bolts’ person who tends to the details for my clients.” Mr. Power holds a B.S. degree with a major in Marketing. See: www.biltmorefranchise.com You may contact Mr. Power at: jpower@biltmorefranchise.co - Visit John Power's Website |
|||
George LudwigGeorge Ludwig is a recognized authority on sales strategy and peak performance psychology. An international speaker, trainer, and corporate consultant, he helps clients like Johnson & Johnson, Abbott Laboratories, Northwestern Mutual, CIGNA, and numerous others improve sales force effectiveness and performance. Though it's George's strategies and processes that help corporations increase productivity and performance, it's his tremendous energy and dynamism that spark the transformation. Again and again, clients remark on his amazing ability to unleash human capacity and inspire men and women to break out of their comfort zones. The result is a whole new type of salesperson. His customized presentations teach achievers to make stunning advances in their lives. From helping salespeople realize cherished dreams to helping corporations exponentially accelerate revenue streams, George Ludwig leaves audiences and individuals empowered, emboldened, and clamoring for more. George is the best-selling author of Power Selling: Seven Strategies for Cracking the Sales Code and Wise Moves: 60 Quick Tips to Improve Your Position in Life & Business. - Visit George Ludwig's Website |
|||
Stephanie RobeyStephanie Robey is President and CoFounder of Pivot Positive, LLC - an Internet marketing business focused on helping people start work at home ventures. Previously, she was employed at The Search Agency with over 20 years experience in graphic design and 10 years experience in online marketing. She was responsible for launching the Conversion Path Optimization (CPO) unit where she and her team have conducted hundreds of optimization tests for online companies across multiple verticals. She is a successful entrepreneur having started and sold 2 companies and remains on the board of directors of the third, PhotoSpin.com Stephanie began her career in the direct marketing realm creating and producing direct mail for many of the major cable television companies and directly attributes her understanding of Internet marketing to those early offline experiences. Stephanie is a graduate of San Diego State University with a BFA in Graphic Arts and also holds an Executive MBA from the Graziadio School of Business and Management at Pepperdine University. Read Steph's Blog Meet Steph and Dave Sign up for our Free 7-Day BootCamp: Self Employed & Rich - Visit Stephanie Robey's Website |
|||
David AchesonDavid Acheson is the founder of DCJA Consultancy. DCJA Consultancy is a management consultancy business specialising in B2B sales consultancy. They offer bespoke and packaged sales consultancy including Sales Optimisation Review, Interim Sales Management, Sales & Marketing Review, 1:1 Sales & Management Staff Analysis, Management Training, Solution Sales Training, Creation of New Pay Plan, KPI's, run Customer Feedback Campaigns, assist with Recruitment, Coaching, Appraisals and set up Strategic Marketing Campaigns. David spent his early career in accountancy and then moved into sales in 1982, working in Office Equipment, IT, Advertising, Training, Outsourcing and Consultancy. He has held many Senior Positions in SMBs and Global Organisations including Head of Sales Operations & Head of Business Development. His knowledge, skills and great experience of the Sales Industry has led to David making keynote speeches and running educational sessions to key businesses through organisations including The Chamber of Commerce and Business Link. - Visit David Acheson's Website |
|||
Anne BarrAnne Barr has over 26 years experience in sales and marketing, six years as a franchisee. She has assisted over 367 business owners and purchasers to achieve their goals in career change, transition and exit strategy. She holds the designation of Certified Franchise Executive from the International Franchise Association, Certified Business Intermediary from the International Business Brokers Association and Board Certified Broker from the Texas Association of Business Brokers. Anne is active in professional organizations, networking groups and volunteers for non-profit entities. As owner/operator of four successful businesses, Anne has proven people skills and enjoys helping clients find the right "fit" in business ownership. Visit www.FranchiseOpportunitySpecialist.com for more information about me and my company. - Visit Anne Barr's Website |
|||
Joe DagerJoe Dager is President of Business901, a progressive coaching company providing no-nonsense direction in areas such as Lean Six Sigma Marketing and organized referral marketing. What others say: In the past 20 years, Joe and I have collaborated on many difficult issues. Joe’s ability to combine his expertise with “out of the box” thinking is unsurpassed. He has always delivered quickly, cost effectively and with ingenuity. A brilliant mind that is always a pleasure to work with.” - James R. If you want to learn more about Business901, start a conversation with us. We can be found @ Web/Blog: Business901.com Web/Blog: FundingYourNonprofit.com LinkedIn Profile Follow me on Twitter - Visit Joe Dager's Website |
|||
|
To learn more about the Evan Elite Author Program please contact us. | |||
![]() | |
![]()
| |
![]() | |
|
| |
![]() | |
|
| |
![]() | ||||||
|
![]() | ||
|
| ||
![]() |
| Have you written articles that would be of value to entrepreneurs? Become an expert on our site by publishing them! Expose yourself to a wide audience, drive more traffic to your website and get more sales! Click Here for details. |
|
|
![]() |
| Modeling the Masters: Learn the true secrets behind Walt Disney's business success factors & grow your company! Video produced by Phanta Media |
|
|
![]() |
"Learn straight from Evan how you can Make a Full Time Income (And More) from a Website"
Click Here To Learn More |
|
|
|
|
Get advice & tips from famous business owners, new articles by entrepreneur experts, my latest website updates, & special sneak peaks at what's to come!
|
![]() |
|
|
![]() | ||
|
Choose A PR Topic
Press Release Builder | ||
|
Top 50 Blogs For Startups
Top Blogs To Watch In 2009 | ||
![]() | ||
![]() | ||||
| ||||
| ||||
| ||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|













Subscribe to Jane's articles











