At the last few events I attended, I’ve gotten into conversations on how to begin as a speaker. So I thought I’d share some of my advice that I provided to them.
First and foremost, get your first talk scheduled. Reach out to your local user group and ask to be “penciled” in for a meeting a few months out. Giving yourself a goal and deadline is essential to putting yourself out there to speak. Next, write down ten topics you may want to speak on. Narrow down that list to five by thinking about what you would be most comfortable speaking about.
Next look at your five topics and really think about what kind of experiences you can talk about and what kind of examples you can talk about. Jot those ideas down under each heading. If you come up a little lacking in ideas scratch that topic off your list as there probably is not enough content to do a talk. The key is to narrow it down and keep going down levels of detail. You’ll notice after you get down a level or two that you can begin to see a slide deck constructing itself. Each topic and sub topic become and individual slide with bullet point for each side.
Example (randomly streaming ideas while I type this)
Query Store
- Forcing a plan
- How to figure out which plan
- When not to do this (how can it hurt)
- Query Regression
- What is that
- Configuration
- Proper Settings
- Top Consuming Queries
- Standard reports you can use
- How to identify which ones
- What not to do
- Best Items to change to get biggest results
- RSCI
- Statistics
- Memory
- Proper Settings
- Issues I’ve seen
- Multiple Instances
- Extra Services Running
- Indexes
- 3rd Party Tools
- Key Metrics
Do you say umm to many times?
Did it seem fluid?
Could they follow along?
Are the slides too distracting?
Did you fidget?
Use these notes to make improvements. After you give your session for first time to the User Group ask for feedback and session evals. Speakers are constantly improving their sessions and slide decks each time they give that session. You may not knock it out of the park the first time, but as long as you keep building on to your skill you are well on your way to being a great speaker. All speakers had to give their very first session once. We all had to bite the bullet and face the fear of no one wanting to hear us talk, what if I teach something wrong, or I what if throw up because I am to nervous. We’ve all been there. You’re not alone in your journey of becoming a speaker. I know many speakers within the SQL community that would be willing to review slide decks and listen to give notes.