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Six Easy Steps for Getting Started with Presentations that Promote Your Business

Article Description:
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The topic of how to establish yourself as an expert speaker is a
huge one. There are literally thousands of books, websites,
classes, and coaching programs on the subject.


Additional Article Information:
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996 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-03-05 10:36:00

Written By:     Judy Murdoch
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Six Easy Steps for Getting Started with Presentations that Promote Your Business
Copyright (c) 2007 Judy Murdoch
Highly Contagious Marketing
http://www.judymurdoch.com/workbook.htm



The other day I was having coffee with a business owner who
offers financial planning services.

Now most business owners I talk with like what they do to a
greater or lesser degree. But this guy positively overflowed with
enthusiasm for what he does. He actually managed to get me
interested in the topic of 401k rollovers; a topic I usually find
about as exciting as watching paint dry.

So I said to him, "Ryan, you seem like a natural for giving
presentations and classes. It would be a great way to connect to
prospective clients. Do you do anything like that?"

Ryan's face lit up and he said "I love to teach people and
present!"

Then he said: "But I have no idea how to get started. How do I
do that?"

Great question.

The topic of how to establish yourself as an expert speaker is a
huge one. There are literally thousands of books, websites,
classes, and coaching programs on the subject. But let's say
you're like Ryan--you enjoy talking to groups and you want to
try presentations as a way to promote your business.

I was in the exact same place as Ryan about two years ago. Since
then I've learned a lot about using presentations as a way to
promote my business to small business owners and entrepreneurs.

These six steps are the ones that got me started as a presenter.

Step 1. Start with local membership organizations.

Most cities--large and small--have hundreds of organizations
whose purpose is to support members and do so by offering
education, training, networking opportunities, and so on.

For this reason, they are always looking for ways to provide
value to their members. If you can present a topic that members
will find valuable and fits within the organization's mission,
you are offering something desirable...especially if you have a
fresh or unusual take on your topic.

Step 2. Brainstorm a list of topics you like to speak on.

If you're like Ryan and are using presentations as a way to
introduce yourself to prospects, each topic should address a
particular problem that you handle for your customers and a
success story related to the problem.

As a financial planner, Ryan tends to encounter problems related
to life transitions--voluntary and involuntary. For example, the
happy occasion of a new baby also brings up questions such as:
"Do we need a bigger house?" "Do we need to trade in our Mini
Cooper for a mini van?" and "Do we need to start saving for
college?"

Step 3. Meet the Program Director

Call the program director (or whoever arranges events) and
briefly explain your intention for presenting. If the
organization needs presenters and the program director expresses
interest, this is a perfect time to describe 2-3 topics that seem
like a good match to the interests of the organization.

NOTE: If none of the topics you suggest interest your contact,
ask them what their members consider "hot topics". You may be
able to adapt one of your topics to meet the needs of their
members.

Step 4. Help the organization with promoting your program.

When you successfully schedule a presentation with one or more
organizations, help make the presentation a success. You can do
this by providing a brief bio (1-2 paragraphs), a summary of your
topic, and a photo of yourself. Most program managers ask for
these materials in advance and use them to promote upcoming
programs.

You may also want to prepare a short introduction that the
organization can use to introduce you to the audience.

Step 5. Earn your right to promote by adding value.

Have you ever sat through a presentation that was promoted as
informational but turn out to be a thinly veiled sales pitch?
Were you annoyed? Most people are. And this is why you focus on
content first; promotion second.

The most effective presentations offer information that is
genuinely relevant and useful to your audience. That allows you
to position yourself as a provider of valuable solutions.

You should, of course, make your contact information, email
address and web address easy to find and use. I always include my
full contact information on the last page of my presentation
handouts. In addition, each page of the handouts has my business
name and website address in the footer section.

Step 6. Know what the next step is that you want your audience to
take.

The biggest place where people mess up is on follow-up. They do
their presentation. They chat with people in the audience. And
then they leave hoping that members of the audience are so
excited by what they learned that they will be calling the
presenter the next.

But this is rarely the case.

So, you need to be very specific about what you want your
audience to do and make it easy for them to take that action.
This doesn't have to be anything complicated or fancy. A simple
but effective approach is ask for their business cards in
exchange for more information on the topic you presented. Give
aways audiences like include a copy of the presentation handout,
a list of resources, a helpful report, and so on.

You can then use the contact information as the basis for future
invitations, mailings, and so on.

IMPORTANT: If you use an email subscription list, I strongly
suggest you add only those members who opt-in. In this way you
are contacting only those explicitly agreed to become
subscribers. If you begin contacting people who did not give you
permission, you risk being labeled a spammer. Even worse, you
risk losing credibility as a trusted expert.

Bottom Line

If you follow the six steps I've described *and* present a
relevant topic in an engaging way, you'll have plenty of
opportunities to present. Once you have some experience, you can
refine your presentation topics and focus on organizations whose
missions and membership are the best fit with the products and
services you offer. 




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Judy Murdoch helps small business owners create low-cost, 
effective marketing campaigns using word-of-mouth referrals, 
guerrilla marketing activities, and five-star strategic 
alliances. To download a free copy of the workbook, 
"Where Does it Hurt? Marketing Solutions to the 
problems that Drive Your Customers Crazy!" go to
http://www.judymurdoch.com/workbook.htm 
You can contact Judy at 303-475-2015 
or [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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