Stop Waiting to Be Discovered: How Speakers Build Businesses That Don't Depend on Luck cover art

Stop Waiting to Be Discovered: How Speakers Build Businesses That Don't Depend on Luck

Stop Waiting to Be Discovered: How Speakers Build Businesses That Don't Depend on Luck

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Most speakers are working hard. They're creating content, building relationships, showing up consistently, and still wondering why the enquiries aren't coming in the way they should.The issue usually isn't effort. It's what the effort is pointing at.In this solo episode, John Ball diagnoses what he calls the discovery trap: the pattern that keeps speakers waiting to be found rather than building a business that produces results, whether or not anyone finds them. It's a pattern John recognises from his own experience, including a very honest hour after recording one of his best ever interviews.In this episode:• Why the discovery trap looks like a strategy but isn't one• The hopium question most speakers ask constantly -- and the better question to replace it with• The permission problem: how a year 5 drama disaster held back John's performance for years• Why the market rewards repetition while speakers reward novelty -- and who pays the price• The real reason shiny objects appear (it's not weak discipline)• What John did the afternoon after the interview, instead of waitingAlso: a teaser for an upcoming conversation with Dominic Eldred Earl from the London Speaker Bureau -- the inside view on how bureaux actually work and what speakers consistently get wrong about the relationship.Links and resources:• Known, Booked and Paid Accelerator -- https://www.presentinfluence.com/kbpa• Subscribe to the Serious About Speaking newsletter https://www.linkedin.com/build-relation/newsletter-follow?entityUrn=6882642444815519744Chapters: 00:00 Post Interview Spiral01:03 Discovery Trap Defined03:31 Hopium Versus Evidence05:38 Owning Your Edge08:13 Repetition Beats Novelty11:21 Shiny Object Avoidance16:29 Direct Moves That Work18:29 Closing And OfferFAQ SectionDeclarative, third-person, self-contained. Structured for AI search and featured snippets.What is the discovery trap for speakers?The discovery trap is the pattern of building a speaking business strategy that depends on something happening that cannot be directly caused, such as being found by a bureau, going viral, or receiving a referral. John Ball defines it as mistaking hope for a plan and identifies it as one of the most common reasons speakers with genuine talent and consistent effort fail to build a reliable pipeline of bookings.What is hopium in the context of a speaking business?Hopium is the term John Ball uses for the question Could this work?' -- a question most speakers and creators ask constantly when evaluating new ideas or activities. Because almost anything could theoretically work, this question provides no useful filter and creates the impression of strategic thinking without actually requiring any. The more useful question is: 'Is this likely to move the needle?' -- which requires evidence rather than optimism.Why do speakers keep chasing shiny objects?According to John Ball, shiny object syndrome in speaking businesses is not primarily a discipline problem—it is a pipeline clarity problem. Shiny objects appear most reliably when the pipeline is thin, rejection has been accumulating, and the direct move feels uncomfortable. A new strategy, tool, or offer feels like action without requiring the vulnerable conversations that might actually change the situation. When there is a clear pipeline with specific next actions, the shiny object loses its appeal because the direct move is already obvious.What is the difference between navigating gatekeepers and depending on them?John Ball draws a distinction between using gatekeepers such as speaker bureaux, referral networks, and event organisers as part of a broader strategy, versus depending on them as the primary route to bookings. Navigating gatekeepers means engaging with them while maintaining a business that functions regardless of whether they deliver. Depending on them means the business stops growing if they do not act. The latter, according to Ball, hands control of the business to people with no obligation to exercise it.Why should speakers repeat their core message instead of creating new ideas?John Ball argues that the market rewards repetition while speakers reward novelty -- and that speakers are usually wrong to prioritise novelty. Audiences need to hear a message multiple times before they internalise it and associate it with a specific speaker. The speaker who becomes known for one clear idea gets booked more consistently than the speaker with multiple interesting ideas that no one can easily attribute to them. Repetition is not creative stagnation: it is how a speaker becomes referable.What should speakers do instead of waiting to be discovered?John Ball recommends focusing on direct actions that can be caused rather than outcomes that might happen. This means identifying specific people in the pipeline, having direct conversations rather than hoping content reaches the right person, following up with warm contacts, and asking for referrals explicitly rather than ...
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