What Makes a Keynote Work: The Buzz Is the Business With Brian Miller cover art

What Makes a Keynote Work: The Buzz Is the Business With Brian Miller

What Makes a Keynote Work: The Buzz Is the Business With Brian Miller

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Magician-turned-keynote-speaker Brian Miller built a speaking career on the back of a TEDx talk that went viral in 2015, then watched that career dry up within eighteen months because charisma and entertainment weren't enough to make anyone act on what he'd said. In this episode, Brian and John dig into the real argument underneath most speaker training: is a keynote about how you deliver it, or what's actually in it? Brian's answer, and the thesis of his new book "The One Page Keynote," is that design beats delivery every time, and that the entertainment industry's instinct (be more charismatic, be funnier, be more captivating) is solving the wrong problem for most professional speakers.The conversation covers what a keynote is actually for (hint: it's not the audience's experience in the room), why "the buzz is the business" is the only metric that matters to the people who write the cheques, how to build credible expertise without a PhD, why slides should be a last resort rather than a crutch, and why the most experienced experts are often the ones most paralysed by imposter syndrome.Key takeaways:A keynote's job is to shift perspective, not create lasting change. Real change needs repetition and reinforcement; a single talk from the front of the room can only move how someone thinks, which is the first domino.Event planners judge success by one thing: are people still talking about your talk at the coffee break, in the Slack channel, on the Monday call. If they're not, it doesn't matter how entertaining you were.Expertise doesn't require formal credentials. Brian built his on an unreasonable amount of obsessive attention to one niche topic, not a PhD.The most credentialed, knowledgeable speakers are often the most riddled with imposter syndrome, because understanding the nuance and edge cases of your topic makes you aware of everything you could get wrong.A talk should work with the power out and the slides gone. If it only works with the deck, the talk doesn't work.You don't need to out-credential the most famous person in your field. You need a different angle on the same topic; one only you can offer.Audiences don't care about your problem. Buyers booking and paying for keynotes care about theirs, and your talk has to speak to the problem they're already trying to solve, not the one you find interesting.Get a copy of Brian's new book, The One Page Keynote, from all good booksellers, or even Amazon.In the UK: https://amzn.to/4vRduAv and for the USA: https://amzn.to/4ozkfo8To connect with Brian: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianmillerspeaksTo work with Brian: https://www.clarityupconsulting.com/CHAPTERS:00:00 Charisma Isn’t Enough02:02 Magician to Speaker Origin04:35 Viral TEDx and Fast Fees07:28 Why Rebookings Dried Up09:59 Design Beats Delivery15:14 No Boring Topics17:26 Creating Memorable Moments19:34 Props and Paintings Example23:33 Tools Over Talent Tricks25:39 PowerPoint and Slides Debate25:50 Slides Without Power26:34 When Slides Help29:28 Defining A Keynote31:03 Shift Perspective Goal32:19 Buzz Is Business34:34 Expertise Over Inspiration38:44 Nuance And Edge Cases42:48 Topic Angle Buyer Problem47:27 Book Launch And Offer50:43 Host Wrap And Next Steps4. FAQDoes charisma actually matter for professional keynote speakers?According to Brian Miller, author of "The One Page Keynote," charisma is far less important to a keynote's success than the design of the talk itself. Miller argues that a well-designed talk delivered without much charisma will outperform a highly charismatic, entertaining talk with no clear message, because audiences who can't articulate what they learned won't talk about the speech afterwards or act on it.What does "the buzz is the business" mean in professional speaking?"The buzz is the business" is a phrase Brian Miller uses to describe how event planners actually judge whether a keynote succeeded. Miller has asked thousands of event planners what success looks like, and the near-universal answer is whether attendees are still talking about the talk during coffee breaks, in Slack channels, or in the following Monday's meeting. John Ball and Miller agree that if the audience leaves the talk in the room, the speech has failed, regardless of how well it was delivered.Do you need a PhD or formal credentials to become a professional keynote speaker?No. Brian Miller, who has a bachelor's degree in philosophy and no graduate qualifications, argues that expertise can be built by spending an unreasonable amount of time obsessing over a niche topic: reading everything available, talking to practitioners, and understanding the nuance and edge cases well enough to know when standard advice would be wrong for someone. Miller built his expertise in human connection this way after his 2015 TEDx talk went viral.Should professional speakers use slides during a keynote?Brian Miller's rule of thumb is that a keynote should work even if the slides disappear and the power goes out. Slides ...
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