
How to Brief Your Keynote Speaker for Maximum Impact
About
Jeff Bloomfield is a keynote speaker, Wall Street Journal bestselling author, and founder of Braintrust. He brings a structured pre-event briefing process to every conference engagement, building sessions from the specific human dynamics and industry context that make content land and stick with the audience long after the event ends.
Keynote Programs
- The Neuroscience of Trust and Communication
- How Leaders Build Cultures Worth Staying For
- Story-First Communication for Sales and Leadership
- AI and the Human Edge: Leading Through Intelligent Change
Expertise
Most event planners spend weeks selecting the right keynote speaker and less than 30 minutes briefing them. That imbalance is where a good speaker becomes an average one and where a great keynote becomes a merely decent presentation.
The briefing process is not logistics. It is the strategic transfer of context that determines whether your speaker walks on stage with a generic program or a session so specifically relevant to your audience that members feel like the keynote was written for them. Getting that transfer right is one of the highest-leverage moves a conference planner can make.
This guide walks you through exactly how to structure your speaker brief, what information to provide and when, and how to run the pre-event conversation that turns a capable speaker into one your membership will talk about for months.
Why Most Speaker Briefs Fail
The standard speaker brief is a logistics document. It tells the speaker the event date, the audience size, the session length, the A/V setup, and maybe the event theme. What it almost never includes is the information that would actually change how the speaker approaches the room.
Speakers cannot customize content they don't have context for. They cannot anchor their frameworks in your industry's current debates if they don't know what those debates are. They cannot open with a story that resonates with your membership's specific pain points if no one has told them what those pain points are.
The result is a keynote that sounds vaguely relevant but never fully lands. Members leave saying "it was good" but can't articulate what they'll do differently. The speaker rated well but didn't justify the investment. The fix is not a better speaker. It is a better briefing process.
The Two Types of Information Every Speaker Needs
A complete speaker brief covers two categories that most planners conflate or omit entirely.
Type 1: Logistical and structural information covers the basics every speaker needs to plan their session. Session length, room setup, A/V capabilities, order in the program, audience size, and any hard limits on content, such as topics to avoid, language considerations, or regulatory restrictions for your industry.
Type 2: Strategic and contextual information is the information that enables genuine customization. This is the category most briefs skip entirely. It includes the emotional state of the audience, the specific challenges members are navigating, the debates happening in the industry, what previous keynotes have and haven't worked, what you want members to do differently after the session, and what success looks like from your perspective as the planner.
Most speakers can work with Type 1 information and produce a competent session. Only speakers who receive strong Type 2 information can produce the sessions that get referenced in post-event member surveys as the reason members renewed their dues.
The Six Elements of a High-Impact Speaker Brief
1. The Audience Profile
Go beyond headcount and demographics. The most useful audience information for a speaker is behavioral and psychological, not statistical. Tell your speaker about career stage distribution, industry and organizational types represented, current emotional state (whether your membership is generally optimistic, anxious, under regulatory or competitive pressure), and what they already know about the topic area.
If every keynote for the past three years has addressed the same theme, the speaker needs to know this so they can either find a fresh angle or position their content as a new perspective rather than more of the same.
2. The Event Outcome
Write your desired outcome in one sentence. Not "we want members to be energized and inspired." Something specific: "We want members who have been resistant to investing in leadership development to leave with a concrete reason to reprioritize it in next year's budget."
An outcome statement refers to a single sentence that defines the specific change in thinking, behavior, or prioritization you want your audience to make as a result of the session, as distinct from a general description of tone or energy.
If you cannot write a one-sentence outcome statement, your event strategy is not clear enough to brief a speaker effectively. That ambiguity will show up in the keynote.
3. The Industry Context
Your speaker needs to understand the two or three conversations that are defining your industry right now. Not the evergreen challenges that are always present, but the specific debates, disruptions, or transitions that are live and unresolved in your membership's world at the time of the conference. Provide the speaker with the key debates, any regulatory or market changes from the last 6 to 12 months, the tension points where your membership is divided, and the names of two or three industry publications or thought leaders your membership follows.
This context allows the speaker to reference your world specifically rather than generically. It is the difference between a speaker who sounds like they researched your industry and a speaker who sounds like they understand it.
4. The Conference History
The best speakers want to know what has worked before and what has not. Tell your speaker which themes or topics from the last two or three keynotes generated the strongest post-event member response, any topics or approaches that fell flat or generated negative feedback, and what format has worked best in your general session historically.
This briefing element requires honesty. Telling your speaker "the last two keynotes on this topic didn't land" is more useful than protecting the feelings of previous speakers. Your current speaker needs accurate information to position their session effectively.
5. The Post-Event Context
Where does the keynote fit in the larger context of your event and your membership's year? A speaker who knows what comes immediately after their session, what members will be asked to do in afternoon breakouts, and what your membership's priorities will be in the 90 days following the conference can build a session that feeds directly into those contexts rather than existing as a standalone experience.
Provide what happens immediately after the keynote, any specific calls to action the organization is making of its membership this year, and any follow-up resources you plan to send members after the event that the speaker could reference or set up in their session.
6. The Specific Success Metric
How will you know the keynote was successful? Define this before the event and share it with your speaker. If success means members completing a specific action in the 30 days following the conference, tell the speaker. If success means high scores on the session evaluation, tell the speaker. Speakers perform differently when they know exactly what they're being measured against. This transparency also gives you a clearer basis for your post-event debrief.
How to Structure the Pre-Event Briefing Call
A written brief is necessary but not sufficient. The pre-event briefing call is where the contextual transfer actually happens, where the speaker can ask clarifying questions, push back on assumptions, and begin genuinely building the session around your specific audience. The briefing call should happen 4 to 6 weeks before the event, not the week before. The speaker needs time to integrate the context into their preparation.
Before the Call
Send the written brief at least 48 hours before the call so the speaker has time to review and come prepared with specific questions. A speaker who shows up to the briefing call without having read your materials is a speaker who is not treating the engagement with the seriousness it deserves.
On the Call
Structure the conversation in three phases. In the first 10 minutes, walk the speaker through your one-sentence outcome, your audience profile, and the two or three industry debates that are live right now. Let the speaker ask clarifying questions about each. In the next 15 minutes, ask the speaker: "Given what I've shared about our audience, where do you see the strongest connection between your content and what our members are navigating?" This surfaces the specific angles the speaker is considering and gives you the opportunity to confirm, redirect, or add context. In the final 5 minutes, confirm session length, A/V setup, and any hard constraints.
The call should run 30 to 45 minutes. A speaker who needs two hours hasn't done their homework. A speaker who rushes through in 15 minutes hasn't asked enough questions.
After the Call
Send a brief email recap within 24 hours confirming the key points: your one-sentence outcome, the two or three industry contexts you discussed, any specific examples or stories the speaker agreed to incorporate, and any follow-up information you committed to send. This recap protects both sides and gives the speaker a reference point as they build the session.
Common Briefing Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
| Mistake | What It Produces | The Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Sending only logistical information | A technically competent but generically relevant session | Add the six strategic context elements outlined above |
| Scheduling the briefing call the week before the event | Insufficient time for the speaker to customize | Book the briefing call 4 to 6 weeks out |
| Describing the audience demographically, not behaviorally | A session built around job titles, not actual audience dynamics | Describe emotional state, current pressures, and what members are debating |
| Withholding negative history | The same mistake gets repeated | Share honest feedback about what has and hasn't worked |
| Failing to define a clear success metric | No shared basis for post-event evaluation | Write one measurable definition of success and share it with the speaker |
| Over-constraining with prescriptive content direction | A session that sounds scripted and lacks the speaker's genuine perspective | Give context and outcome; let the speaker determine the path |
What a Well-Briefed Speaker Looks Like in the Room
The difference between a briefed and an unbriefed speaker is visible from the first minutes of the session. A well-briefed speaker opens with a reference that makes your membership feel understood before a single framework has been introduced. They don't just acknowledge your industry; they demonstrate that they understand what your industry is actually navigating right now.
That specific relevance is what produces the emotional engagement that makes frameworks stick. When an audience feels seen, they listen differently. When they listen differently, they retain more. When they retain more, they apply more. The entire chain of impact that justifies the keynote investment begins with the quality of the brief.
Jeff Bloomfield conducts a dedicated pre-event briefing call for every conference keynote engagement, building each session from the specific human dynamics and industry context that the briefing surfaces. The investment both sides make in that conversation is what separates a session members talk about for months from one they struggle to recall by the following Monday.
A Briefing Template You Can Use
Use this structure to build your written speaker brief before the pre-event call:
| Brief Element | What to Include |
|---|---|
| Event basics | Date, venue, session time and length, order in program, expected audience size, A/V setup |
| Audience profile | Career stage distribution, organizational types, current emotional state, what they already know, what they respond to |
| Event outcome | One sentence: the specific change in thinking, behavior, or prioritization you want the audience to make |
| Industry context | Two to three live debates or disruptions, relevant regulatory or market changes, key industry publications and thought leaders |
| Conference history | What keynote approaches have worked, what has fallen flat, what format your audience responds to |
| Post-event context | What happens immediately after the keynote, calls to action the organization is making, any follow-up communications the speaker could reference |
| Success metric | How you will evaluate whether this keynote accomplished what it was designed to accomplish |
Frequently Asked Questions
How far in advance should I send the written speaker brief?
Send the written brief at least 4 to 6 weeks before the event, and at least 48 hours before your pre-event briefing call. This gives the speaker adequate time to review and integrate the context into their preparation. Sending a brief the week before the event limits the speaker's ability to customize meaningfully.
What if my speaker says they don't need a briefing call?
Be cautious. The most experienced and highest-performing conference speakers actively want the briefing call because they know it directly improves the quality of their session. A speaker who waives the briefing call is either very experienced with your specific audience context already, or is planning to deliver a generic program. If it's the latter, that's important information before the event, not after.
How specific should I be about the content I want the speaker to cover?
Provide context and outcome, not a script. Telling the speaker to cover five topics in a specific order produces a presentation that sounds like your agenda rather than the speaker's perspective. Instead, share your desired outcome and the audience context that informs it, and let the speaker determine how their content and approach best serves that outcome. The speaker's judgment about how to land with your audience is part of what you're paying for.
Should I share member feedback from previous years with the speaker?
Yes, and this is one of the most valuable inputs you can provide. Member comments from previous keynote evaluations, even critical ones, give the speaker specific insight into how your audience processes and responds to conference content. Sharing this feedback demonstrates trust and produces significantly better customization.
How do I handle a speaker whose content didn't land well with my membership?
The post-event debrief is the right place to address this directly. Document specific instances where the brief wasn't reflected in the session and share that feedback honestly. If you're considering re-booking the speaker, address the customization gap as a condition of future engagement. If you're not re-booking, share the feedback anyway, since most professionals value honest input that helps them improve.
How much of the briefing should drive the content versus the speaker's existing material?
The best keynotes are built from the intersection of the speaker's core expertise and your audience's specific context. Neither one alone is sufficient. A session built entirely from the speaker's existing material will feel generic. A session built entirely from your brief will feel like the speaker is echoing your talking points. The briefing call should surface the specific angles, examples, and entry points where the speaker's expertise connects most directly to your audience's world, then let the speaker build from that connection.
The quality of your briefing is one of the most reliable predictors of keynote success. Speakers who receive complete, honest, strategically rich briefs consistently outperform speakers who receive logistical checklists. If you're planning a keynote and want to discuss what a thorough pre-event briefing process looks like in practice, start a conversation.
Keynote Speaker
Jeff delivers keynotes at association annual conferences, sales kickoffs, leadership summits, and corporate events, combining neuroscience, storytelling, and real-world experience into sessions that move people and stick long after the event ends.
