Eight Public Speaking Tips for Maximum Marketing Mileage
How to succeed at public speaking, enhance your reputation
and produce new revenue
Successful public speaking can be easier than
you think. Natural anxiety aside, speaking is a useful and
effective marketing tool for a meaningful connection with
professional peers and prospective patients in the community.
Attracting new patients and professional referrals is more
about what you have to say than how well you say it..
Believe it or not, there's really little to fear and much
to be gained from public speaking.
Speaking is a marketing strategy that presents you (your
reputation, your brand, your personality) in a comfortable
environment—no "white coat" issues. Speaking adds
to and extends your credibility. It's a useful tool for the
individual practitioner, a representative of a physical group
practice, a healthcare organization, or any number of individuals
representing a hospital outreach to the community it serves.
And above all, it's an opportunity to showcase your professional
knowledge and share some part of this knowledge with the audience.
Professional practitioners on the podium—at least sometimes—overlook
the fact that the audience cares more about what you have
to say than about how well you say it.
So relax a little. Consider these eight tips for maximum
marketing mileage, and polished speaker or not, you'll likely
be a hit with the crowd. And you'll win new patients and/or
referrals at your next public speaking gig without "selling."
- Know your audience. We mean really
know your audience. A luncheon talk with the local
civic leaders assembly is a different animal than a poster
presentation at the professional society annual meeting.
But no matter what the venue or size of the audience, you
want to be crystal clear about what they are looking for
and how you can help them. If you know why you were asked
to speak, you can frame your message to meet and exceed
their expectations.
- Create a timely topic and "grabber"
title. Knowing what's important to the audience,
shape your talk to a subject that commands attention; and
the timelier the better. This will be a subject where your
expertise can show through. And give your talk a title that
sizzles. Like the headline in an advertisement, a title
should get attention and offer a benefit.
- Write your own introduction. Someone
else will say these words, but your speech actually begins
here. The introduction sets the stage for what you're prepared
to present, begins to shape expectations, provides context,
and it connects you and your credentials to the audience
and the subject matter. Keep it brief and focused.
- Use the Problem-Solution-Why You format.
Taking another page from advertising, a problem-solution
format allows you to first define the issue and then present
answers. It's a natural platform to provide the audience
with valuable information (the solutions) where you are
the authority.
- Tell stories. Look for ways to illustrate
your talk (especially the solutions) with interesting stories
from your experience or practice. It adds real-life credibility
to talk about how you did something or what happened to
you.
- Keep your comments focused and structured. A
rule of thumb is to present no more than three core ideas.
Even numbering them helps the audience keep in sync with
the progress of your talk.
- Deliver a gem. Everyone came for something,
so deliver at least one gem of an idea—and make it impressive,
useful and helpful. This is the big payoff to the audience
question of "what's in it for them?" Wrap this
benefit-gem into your closing comments to make it even more
memorable and fulfilling.
- Have handouts available after. This may
be your practice brochure, or a supply of pertinent patient
education pamphlets—something that is germane to your talk
and/or your gem. Attach or include your business card or
contact information.
Bonus idea: For additional value capture
your speech material on video and post it—in slices if needed—on
your practice, hospital website and YouTube channel.
There's a spot in every marketing plan for public speaking;
typically it's low-cost, produces a high Return-on-Investment
(ROI) and extends your reputation. Practices that present
at civic and community organizations come away with new patients,
and a presentation to peer groups inspires professional referrals.
If you'd like help in developing your practice marketing
plan, give us a call today at (800) 656-0907.
Or talk with us soon at a 2-day
healthcare marketing seminar. If you'd like us to join
you on the podium, we're
available to speak to healthcare organizations and groups
about healthcare marketing.
"Want to be famous? Share your marketing
success story,
and we just might write a case study about you."