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Lesson 4 of 5
The Speaking Fear

You Don't Need to Be a TED Speaker

The confidence ladder approach to public speaking, and why running a workshop is nothing like giving a keynote.

A few months ago, my friend Hannah was organising a conference. She'd booked me to run an AI workshop for her attendees.

The day before, she messaged me the final numbers: 72 people.

My response? "72! Small! That's good, I don't need to get all worried."

WhatsApp conversation with Hannah about stage fright before a 72-person workshop

But… just a year ago 72 people would have had me vomiting in the toilets before going on stage. I'm not exaggerating.

I'm introverted. I hated public speaking. On camera and off. I'd come out in cold sweats, stumble over my words, pure panic response.

And now? I do daily livestreams for an hour or so. I post videos on social media constantly. I've stood on stage in front of hundreds of people.

This is new. Very new. And if I can do it, so can you.

The Confidence Ladder

You don't go from zero to keynote speaker overnight. You climb a ladder.

The confidence ladder: scaling difficulty from shorter/online/free/known to longer/offline/paid/unknown

The ladder scales with both difficulty and money.

On the easy end (low difficulty, low pay):

  • Shorter sessions
  • Online delivery
  • Free workshops
  • Known audience

On the harder end (high difficulty, high pay):

  • Longer sessions
  • Offline/in-person delivery
  • Paid workshops
  • Unknown audience

Like most things the harder it is the more you'll be rewarded. Funny that.

The "secret" here is pretty obvious: start on the left, work your way right.

That's it.

Here's an example "progression" combining these elements:

Rung 1: Online, Free, Small, Familiar

Record a 2-minute video explaining one AI concept. Post it on LinkedIn, TikTok or wherever. Doesn't matter - this is exposure therapy. Or offer to do a 15-minute AI demo on Zoom for your team at work. People you already know. Low stakes.

Rung 2: Online, Free, Small, Unfamiliar

Offer a free online workshop to a community you're not part of. A local nonprofit or charity. A professional association. A friend's company. New audience, but no money on the line reduces pressure.

Rung 3: In-Person, Free, Small

Same thing, but now you're in the room. This is where you learn to read body language, handle tech issues, and manage a live audience. You'll be physically there which raises the stakes.

Rung 4: Paid, Small

Your first paid gig. Maybe $500. Maybe $1,000. Small group. 10-20 people. This is the breakthrough moment. Once you've been paid once, you're a professional.

Rung 5: Paid, Large

Bigger audiences. Higher fees. But by now, you've got reps. You've done this before. The nerves don't disappear, but they become manageable.

Don't skip rungs. Each one builds confidence for the next. We tend to want to go straight to the end because that's where the big money is. Don't. Work your way there. Put in the time and effort rather than chasing the cash.

You can 100% do this as long as you go step by step.

Ross: From 'Back-Office' to 50+ Person Workshop testimonial

Workshops ≠ Keynotes

Super important if you are still wary: a workshop is not a performance.

It should not be all eyes on you. Quite the opposite.

You're not standing on a TED stage delivering a memorised 18-minute talk to a silent audience. You're in a room with people who have questions, and you're helping them find answers.

The best workshops are interactive. You ask questions. They answer. They try things. You help. You walk around the room. You troubleshoot. You chat.

I spend less than 50% of my workshops actually "lecturing". The rest is exercises, group work, shares, Q&A. It's about them not you.

Practice Your Translation

The very best way to practice talking about AI is to… you guessed it… talk about AI.

We can't wait for an audience though. We can and should start practicing today.

In the next few minutes you can reach your audience and start educating them on AI.

Using your phone. That little thing has a broadcast ready camera inside of it. And apps that let you potentially talk to a million people.

The only barrier to starting to talk about AI are your own emotional blocks. Fear specifically.

The best way to get comfortable is to practice explaining AI in your audience's language. The more you do it, the more natural it feels.

Use the Industry AI Translator below. Input your niche, and it will help you generate:

  • Analogies that make sense to your specific audience
  • Metaphors that reframe AI from scary to familiar
  • Simple explanations of technical concepts in plain English
Industry AI Translator tool showing opening hooks, AI concepts explained, and common objections

This tool will take your specifics and spit out an entire briefing for you.

Take one of these concepts or common questions and shoot a video on it. Talking head. No editing. Don't overthink this process. Then post it. Doing this will put you ahead of 95% of the competition. Most people will never do this.

But this is the fastest way to get micro-practice explaining AI by, yes, explaining AI!

This is stuff we cover in a lot more detail in the AI Workshop Kit, as well as giving you practice videos to shoot and a community space to get feedback and improve.

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