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Top Ten Ways to Make Money Public Speaking
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1. Sell
your knowledge
This is my overriding principle that came from years of hard
knocks trying to get people to hire me to speak. I get more
speaking engagements than I ever had before when I quit trying
to sell them and began selling my knowledge in as many different
formats as possible. The idea is that infinitely more people can
buy what you know through books, tapes, CDs, Ebooks and videos
than could ever hire you to speak. Your name recognition because
of your knowledge distribution makes speaking engagements much
easier to come by because the people that could hire you have
already heard you and your message on your knowledge based
products. In the mean time, the money from the product sales
keeps your business thriving.
2. Get sponsorship
You can get other companies to sponsor your speaking fee so they
can be associated with your message when you speak. Stop and
think of what kinds of groups would want to be associated with
your message. Let’s say you speak to the banking industry. Maybe
mortgage, or mutual fund companies would sponsor you. Maybe bank
equipment companies would. Think of anyone who would want to
have exposure to your target audience then simply make a
proposal to their public relations department.
3. Get directly paid
This is pretty straight forward. As a motivational speaker, you
speak to a corporation, association, civic group, or anyone who
would hire you and they pay you directly. Most of the time you
should try to get a deposit up front of about 50 percent and the
balance either before the event, or the day of the event. You
will use various methods to get hired. I have had the greatest
success in my career getting hired to speak by promoting myself
properly on the Internet.
4. Speakers Bureaus
A speakers bureau is a for profit organization that locates
speakers for paying clients. The speakers bureau normally takes
a percentage of your gross fee. The percentage is usually in the
15 to 30 percent range with the average fee being 25 percent. It
is very difficult to start with speakers bureaus unless you are
a bonafide celebrity and your fees are substantial. You must
remember they get paid on straight commission and the higher
your fee, the more they make. Also, unless you have a proven
track record, a speakers bureau will be afraid to put you in
front of one of their clients because if you bomb they could
lose many more bookings from the same client. You must also
supply the bureau with promotional materials that don’t have
your contact information so anyone that sees the material will
contact the bureau directly and not you.
5. Public Seminars
This is another fairly simple idea, but that doesn’t mean it’s
simple to do. Basically you promote your seminar to the public
and they buy tickets to attend. You could also promote it to
corporate management and get them to buy tickets for their
employees to attend. I avoided public seminars for years because
of the risk and expense involved in printing and mailing
brochures. Now I do lots of public seminars because I can
promote them at no cost through my website and email magazine.
6. Telephone Seminars
This can be a form of public seminar, or it can be done for
private groups. You arrange for a telephone bridge line (very
inexpensive), or a conference call (can be VERY expensive). You
have participants call in and you deliver the seminar over the
telephone. This saves a tremendous amount of money on travel
expenses for you and the participants along with all kinds of
savings for the participants (travel, time, etc.) For visuals
you can have the participants sitting in front of their computer
while on the phone. You tell them what web page to visit to see
your visuals.
7. Webcasts
This is similar to telephone seminars except you are using the
Internet instead of a telephone to hold the seminar.
8. Training companies
In this case a company hires you to deliver their programs to
public seminar participants, or to participants all from the
same private company. Career Track, SkillPath Seminars and Fred
Pryor Seminars are examples of companies who hire seminar
leaders. In some cases you can develop programs for the seminar
company and get a higher fee for delivering that program and a
fee each time it is delivered by another seminar leader. You
also get a percentage of all the back of room products you sell.
These companies can keep you on the road quite a bit so you
better be ready to travel and don’t think each event will be in
the Bahamas . . .Your events are more likely to be in places
like Toledo, Cleveland and Columbus. These are relatively low
paying jobs when compared to the kind of money you can get
promoting your own speeches and seminars.
9. Motivational Speakers Speak Free to promote your Business
Many professionals (including professional speakers) speak or
give free public seminars to help get clients. Attorneys,
doctors, dentists, accountants, real estate agents, lawyers,
home builders and many other people from a wide variety of
professions give seminars to promote their business and to gain
clients directly from the seminars. To do this effectively you
must not spend the entire seminar promoting yourself. You must
give the participants good information with the idea of
establishing yourself or your company as the expert. There is
certainly nothing wrong with showing people how complicated
things are and even though they can do it themselves, it might
not be a wise thing to do. For instance, you could be a plumber
giving a seminar on how to remodel your bathroom. You tell the
participants every little detail of how to do it and also tell
them the perils if they do it wrong. No one will complain that
you were just giving a sales pitch, but many will think to
themselves, “Maybe this is too much to tackle by myself. Maybe I
should hire this person to either help me or do it for me.”
10. Speak as part of your job
Many companies have their own speakers bureau. Normally the only
reason it exists is as a public relations tool to provide a good
image of their company to the community. One of the ways you can
speak for pay in your company is to volunteer to be in the
speakers bureau. As long as you are on company time when you are
speaking, you are indirectly getting paid to speak. If they
always ask you to speak after hours on your own time, well
that’s a different story. You still might want to do it to
continue to become a better motivational speaker. Another way to
get paid to speak in your job is to join the training staff of
your company, or start one if one doesn’t exist. You can simply
target a problem the company is having and work up a program to
train others in the company on how to solve the problem. Suggest
a few sessions to your boss to see how it goes. If you get
results, chances are they will want you to do the same program
for others in the company.
David Newman
is a nationally-acclaimed speaker known for his high-content,
high-energy presentations laced with humor and “do-it-now” tools
that ensure maximum take-away value.
http://www.motivational-speaker-resource.com/motivational-speaker-bio.htm
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