| I want to get started doing talks at tech conferences. I have several (hopefully) decent topics which are a cross between security and AI/machine learning. My plan is to build up experience with smaller, local opportunities like meetups and small regional conferences. (I am not a complete speaking noob -- I do internal corporate talks frequently and have done a bunch of college seminars). I have a few questions, though: 1) Will doing the talk at a small conference/meetups disqualify me or hurt my chances to get accepted at a bigger talk? My goal is to do talks at the 'big' conferences but, if I have a particularly good topic to talk about, I wouldn't want to "waste" it at a smaller venue. 2) Is it okay to submit multiple talks per conference? 3) Is earlier always better for submission, or does the submission time (early in the CFP period vs late) matter at all? 4) How 'complete' is your talk when you submit? Is it a vague outline that you don't start working on until accepted, or is it mostly ready-to-go when you submit? Any other thoughts and advice for a beginning speaker greatly appreciated. |
An example of a really good talk is https://youtu.be/5c0BvOlR5gs where Shriram Krishnamurthi explains creating computer science curriculum for highschool students. Notice he moves around the room (if this is possible and not a huge arena), is able to prevent people from hijacking the talk like the one audience guy who rants off topic about early arithmetic curriculum, yet still manages to give an acceptable answer to his question, and promises to hang around afterwards to discuss questions with audience members who have multiple questions as a way to keep the talk moving on topic. The slides are perfectly presented as well moving effortlessly instead of those talks where they pause for each slide.