Keynote
speakers

Dr Patrick Dixon - Management Centre Europe - Keynote Speaker
World-class
keynote speakers are very rare. Awful keynote speakers
are unfortunately very common and dreaded by conference participants
everywhere. You can usually tell if a
keynote speaker is going to shine in less than a couple of
minutes. With a great
keynote speaker there's an immediate total emotional and mental
connection, a stage presence, an energy which captivates, the
whole auditorium lights up. Being a
keynote speaker is not a logical or rational thing only.
You can watch videos of keynote
speakers and try to analyze style or content but there's something
else going on. In fact videos are a very poor tool to capture
the experience of being part of a live audience that is being
"worked" by a pro. It's almost mystical - the connection
of one person with hundreds or thousands is the primary characteristic
of a world-class keynote speaker.
People relate to people, and at the end of the day
that's what really counts.
Keynote evaluations,
comments, videos and slides by Dr Patrick Dixon - press here. Dr Dixon has been ranked as one of the world's 20 most influential business thinkers (Thinkers50 - 2005 global survey) and is often described as Europe's leading Futurist.
See also information about how Dr Dixon works with clients to create highly successful events.
Great Keynote Speakers - what
are they like?
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Keynote
speakers grab attention. |
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Keynote
speakers have provocative ideas which last. |
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Keynote
speakers give people hope and boost morale. |
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Keynote
speakers change the lives of those they meet. |
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Keynote
speakers communicate the most complex ideas in a single
phrase. |
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Keynote
speakers take the wider view - setting the tone and perspective
for everything that follows. |
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Keynote
speakers entertain as well as inform. |
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Keynote
speakers create a buzz, and boost conference morale. |
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Keynote
speakers are intensely interested in other people. |
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Keynote
speakers are warm and confident in what they are saying
without being arrogant. |
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Keynote
speakers are flexible: your event's success is more
important to them than their great ideas. |
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Keynote
speakers work closely with organizers to make the message
fit well. |
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Keynote
speakers are good team workers. |
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Keynote
speakers pay the closest attention to detail to get it right. |
Video: Future of Technology and Management
Keynote by Dr Patrick Dixon for 2,000 clients of Fujitsu Siemens - CEOs and CIOs. Next generation use of technology and why the future is about emotion. Lifestyle choices, fashions, fads and the demographic time-bomb. Slides of multimedia presentation and one hour Video.
So how can you tell in advance who is going to be
a great keynote speaker and who is going to be a total disaster?
Important tests for potential
Keynote Speakers
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Audition
them on the phone |
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Do
they listen? |
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Do
you like them? |
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Do
they really get what you are trying to do? |
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Do
their ideas really fit your keynote theme? |
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Are
they persuasive, getting your attention? |
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Can
they communicate powerfully in a direct and simple way? |
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Do
you think you can work with this person? |
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Have
you talked to others they have worked with? |
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Has
anyone actually heard them give a keynote speech at an event? |
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Have
you at least seen a keynote video? |
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Have
you looked at the slides from a sample keynote presentation? |
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Do
they give keynote speeches at a lot of events like yours? |
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Do
they speak well of other contributors or slag other people
off? |
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Are
they rigid or accommodating? |
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Do
they have a sense of humour? |
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Do
they have an agent representing them, with a strong reputation,
as a further badge of quality and guarantee of past success?
Perhaps a well established company like Leigh
Bureau? |
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Have
you searched the web using the speaker's name to see what
others are saying about them? Remember your conference
delegates may well do the same. |
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Do
they have a high profile on the web? |
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Have
you searched press files to see how often they are quoted? |
Common mistakes people make
about Keynote Speakers
Just because someone is a Professor or the author
of a book does not necessarily mean they are great in front of
an audience. Many of the world's best and most original
thinkers are hopeless in front of a sizeable audience. And
successful Chairmen or CEOs of companies can be an even greater
risk as keynote speakers: they got to be where they are for
many reasons, but rarely because they are primarily great conference
communicators. And even if they are, you may find you are
getting little more than a long commercial, albeit for free.
Celebrities from film, TV or sport can be wonderful entertainers,
especially at a lunch-time or dinner session, but you may be disappointed
if you expect great numbers of sharply relevant insights into
business success. Politicians are professional speech-givers,
but you can land up with a party-political broadcast unless they
are recently retired.
Keynote conference speaking has become a specialty
area in it's own right in recent years, almost an art form , with
a select group of practitioners dominating the world stage at
corporate events. It is a now a distinct profession, with
various entry paths, many of them eclectic.
And the qualification? There is of course
only one: the ability to delight an audience.
Dr Patrick Dixon
is often described as Europe's
leading Futurist, and is a renowned keynote speaker addressing
audiences of up to 4,000 people a time
in up to three countries a week. He works extensively with
Fortune 500 companies
at the most senior levels and has been ranked
amongst the 20 most influential business thinkers worldwide.