How to Become an SEO Conference Speaker


I asked 11 of SEO’s own headline acts to share their best advice for aspiring speakers.

Here’s their personal roadmap for speaking on the biggest stages, building your personal brand, and even getting flown around the world on someone else’s dollar.

Big dreams often start with small first steps—in this case, hosting webinars and running presentations within your company.

Aleyda Solis
Tim Soulo

These virtual events allow you to collect social proof for your speaking abilities, making it easier for you to persuade event organizers that you’re a good fit:

Cyrus Shepard
Tim Soulo

Once you can run a webinar without breaking into too much of a sweat, local meetups are a great next step:

James Norquay

As Lily Ray explains, earning your first dose of live audience feedback can be a real confidence booster:

Lily Ray

Our CMO Tim views these local meetups as a great way to get reps in and prepare for big stages:

Tim Soulo

When you’re ready for the big time, there’s no real secret to success. You just need to pitch organizers:

Tim Soulo
Bernard Huang
Andy Chadwick

Some events are more welcoming of newbie speakers than others, like our beloved brightonSEO:

Andy Chadwick

And speaking of brightonSEO, here’s conference founder Kelvin’s tips for pitching:

Kelvin Newman

Most of the speakers I asked find their talk topics in the same simple way: their own personal experience.

Lily Ray
James Norquay

And if you’re worried that you don’t have any useful experience—you’d be wrong.

Ross Simmonds
Aleyda Solis

Public speaking is a skill like any other, something that can be improved and developed. Many of SEO’s biggest names still make time to practice, via training, studying famous speakers, or just simply workshopping their presentations out loud:

James Norquay
Ross Simmonds
Lily Ray

Want to learn from the best speakers in the world?

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  • 18 top speakers from around the world

Learn more and buy tickets.

There’s a Ryan Holiday quote about writing that I regularly share with my team, and it applies equally here: if you want to be a good speaker, go do interesting things.”

You don’t have to be a world-class orator if you share an interesting idea and jump straight to the good stuff.

Having something interesting to say is critical, in my opinion. I go to lots of conferences where speakers talk about topics that have already been covered many times or that the audience could look up on the internet. But presenting something fresh and interesting is hard. That’s where the value is!

Kevin Indig

Typically, people want to hear unique information. This is not something you’ve heard before that you want to share on stage, but something you figured out yourself. So, years of experience definitely contribute to your ability to become a speaker.

Tim Soulo

Never waste time on an introduction. So many speakers waste 5 minutes at the start of their presentation explaining who they are and why they’re important. No one cares. Everyone can Google that information or read your bio in the pamphlet for the event. Get to the good stuff. Deliver value immediately or capture the audience’s attention with something bold. 

Ross Simmonds

With a few talks under your belt, you want to think about “niching down”, and focusing your topics on a particular topic or style. As Cyrus explains:

Remember that organizers need to cover a diverse set of topics, so having a “niche” can work in your favor.

Cyrus Shepard

Lazarina Stoy has great ideas for finding a niche that feels right for you:

Choose a topic or even talk format that is unique to you. You could do this by doing an ‘audit’ of your processes and compare/contrasting to others.

You could do this by analysis, research, and insights from events (think Lily Ray’s Winners and Losers from Algorithm Updates series).

You could do this by giving an old process a revamp by incorporating new technology or new data to enhance the insights.

You could do this by showing how a process is different in your niche (e.g. on-page SEO for Healthcare).

The opportunities are endless!

Lazarina Stoy

The more people you connect with and talk to, the greater the odds that lucky, serendipitous opportunities will present themselves to you. As Andy Chadwick explains:

Andy Chadwick

Bernard Huang is proactive about understanding and addressing the needs of everyone involved in speaking—organizers, other speakers, and your audience:

Bernard Huang

Final thoughts

This should provide a decent roadmap for working your way onto the biggest stages in the SEO industry. With the practical stuff out of the way, I’ll turn the inspirational final thoughts over to Lazarina:

Lazarina Stoy



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