Speaking is the highest-leverage visibility activity available to most executives — but only if you are on the right stages. The executives who generate the most business from speaking are ruthlessly selective about where they appear.
The Stage Selection Framework
The most common mistake speakers make is optimizing for size rather than specificity. A keynote at a large general business conference may reach a bigger audience than a panel at a niche industry event, but the niche event audience is far more likely to include your actual potential clients. The executives who generate the most business from speaking consistently prioritize events where their specific ideal client is in the room over events where a larger but less targeted audience will hear them.
Getting Booked Without a Speaking Bureau
The fastest path to speaking opportunities for most executives is not a speaking bureau — it is a media trail. Conference organizers do not book unknown speakers; they book people they have already encountered as credible experts in their field. An executive who has published in respected publications, is active on LinkedIn, and has existing speaking credits has the profile that conference organizers search for when filling their programs. Building the media presence is the prerequisite for the speaking opportunities, not the other way around.
The Speaking-to-Business Conversion
The executives who convert speaking appearances into business at the highest rates are those who approach the stage as a demonstration rather than a pitch. They share specific, implementable insights that the audience can apply immediately — which demonstrates their expertise more convincingly than any amount of self-promotion. The business comes from the credibility built by the substance of the talk, not from the call to action at the end.
