The 3 Kinds of HR Conference Presentations: Are Any Worth $50K?


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I was traveling back from the HR Southwest conference this past week, and a conversation I had while there got me thinking of some of the better presentations I’ve seen at conferences over the past year.
The conversation wasn’t around “who was the best speaker?” It was around, “who was the most expensive speaker?”
For those who don’t know, 90 percent of the presentations you see at HR Conferences are done by HR Pros – like you and me – who aren’t being paid a dime, but if they are lucky someone will pay their travel expenses. The other 10 percent get speaking fees that range from $500 to $125,000 for 1 hour and 30 minutes of work.
Yes, you read that correctly – $125,000!
Now, let’s be straight; you probably haven’t seen anyone speaking at an HR conference who made $125K, but if you go to the largest HR conferences you saw someone who made $50K for the 90 minutes you saw them!
Here’s my question: If an HR Conference came out and told you how much the person was being paid, before they started their speech, would that change they way you thought of that speech? Oh boy, that changes everything doesn’t it!? Can you imagine –
“Please welcome to the stage, being paid $40K for the next 90 minutes, Mrs. X!”
If that were to happen, I wonder if there would be applause and a standing ovation that we see so often? I wonder if you would leave feeling like that was the most inspirational thing I’ve ever heard – certainly worth $40K. Interesting to think about, at the very least.
The sad part is, the money has absolutely no correlation to quality and content. I’ve seen some of the best speakers this year – some of which didn’t get paid a dime, and some that got paid very small amounts. Sure, there are a handful who get very good money, that I’ve really enjoyed, but I didn’t enjoy them $10-20K more then the free guys and gals!
Here’s where I think the high price presenters separate themselves — they’ve found the magic “formula’ for conference speaking. It involves presenting one of three types presentations:
What about all the conference speakers that don’t fit into these categories? They suck; they’re either boring or ill informed or just flat out missed the mark (think Richard Branson at SHRM Las Vegas, or a presentation on I-9 compliance).
Want to be a speaker at an HR conference? Figure out how to get your message into one of the three types above and become an excellent storyteller. Cat stories are optional.
This was originally published on Tim Sackett’s blog, The Tim Sackett Project.