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For your success as a professional speaker…

This post is a bit unusual for me. This is directed solely to my fellow #professionalspeakers and to those who desire to speak professionally.

It’s time for me to respectfully, but strongly, dispute some advice that is being shared by some that, if taken on its face, could be hugely detrimental to both your career personally and to the speaking business as a whole.

When asked to describe what it takes to become successful, Steve Martin said, “Market like crazy and do whatever it takes to get hired as a performer!”

No…wait. He did not say anything like that at all.

Instead, he said, “Become so good at what you do that you become impossible to ignore.”

Here’s the problem — Martin’s approach is significantly more difficult to undertake. It also leaves you less of a prospect for those who seek to sell you services that market your business, run your social media, write and publish a book, and any of the other myriad of pitches that anyone who calls themselves a speaker will encounter.

  • If Mercedes-Benz said, “Our job is to sell the car, not make a great car,” where do you think their reputation and profitability would be as compared to the esteem they have in the marketplace?
  • If Steve Jobs had stated, “Apple’s job is to sell the iPhone, not deliver a remarkable device,” we might still be carrying BlackBerrys. Instead, he drove his team to develop products that were “insanely great.”

Let me be clear: if you call yourself a professional speaker, your primary job is to serve your client by delivering a distinctive, amazing presentation.

You book the speech because you are so great on the platform that you become impossible to ignore as a speaker, thereby creating demand for your programs. If you think your primary job is to book the speech, your focus is on the wrong target — and can likely derail your long-term prospects for a successful career.

Look, I realize there will be many who will dispute my position here — or say this is the way it used to be but doesn’t apply to today’s meetings marketplace. All I ask you to consider are these two questions:

  1. If you purchased a supremely marketed product or service that failed to deliver as promised, would you buy more of it and advocate it in the marketplace? Or would you never buy it again and tell others of your disappointment?
  2. If someone tells you that booking the speech is your main job instead of delivering the presentation, is there the potential for a hidden agenda? Are they hoping to sell you a service that promotes your speaking without helping you improve your content and delivery?

Your job is to craft and deliver a presentation so compelling to the client and the audience that their loyalty becomes assured. I had someone tell me that my success as a speaker could be measured in the thousands of paid presentations that I’ve delivered. I gently disagreed. I think my success should be measured by how many terrific clients and meeting professionals have had me return and speak for their groups on multiple occasions.

  • A speaker does not work for one firm over 100 times, as I have for Merrill Lynch, because I thought my job was to book the gig.
  • You aren’t a keynote for seven consecutive years, as I am for Chrysler, because of marketing.
  • You don’t sign six-figure retainers, as we have with terrific partners like Volkswagen Australia, Juniper, and SkinCure Oncology, and more, because I hired a social media team.

(Please excuse this previous paragraph — I know it sounds braggadocios, and I apologize for that. It’s important to me, however, that you know I’m presenting my opinion from experience and evidence.)

There’s only one aspect that the “A-list” of professional speakers have in unison. In today’s meetings marketplace, thank goodness, there’s more diversity in speakers and in thought than ever before. But there is still this common denominator: the top speakers are all AMAZING on the platform.

Here’s a bit of tough love that we all need to hear in this profession: If you are not getting booked — and especially if you aren’t getting booked to return or through word-of-mouth recommendations — your problem is NOT your marketing.

It’s your speech.

ICONIC inner circle with Scott McKain
Path to Distinction