The Speaker Brief Template Event Organisers Use to Get a Great Session
If you’ve ever watched a keynote land perfectly — the opening story hooks the room, the examples feel made for that audience, and the takeaways get quoted for weeks — there’s usually a simple reason: the speaker was briefed properly.
And if you’ve watched a keynote miss (great speaker, wrong emphasis, too generic, not aligned to the day), the cause is often just as simple: the brief was thin, late, or didn’t reflect what the stakeholders actually needed.
This guide gives you a practical, copy-and-paste speaker brief template that works for corporate events, conferences, leadership days, government programs, and HR/L&D sessions across Australia — whether you’re running a big stage in Sydney, a strategy offsite on the Gold Coast, a conference in Melbourne, or a leadership retreat in Cairns, the Whitsundays, the Sunshine Coast, Brisbane, or Toowoomba.
Quick answer: what should a keynote speaker brief include?
A strong speaker brief answers five questions clearly:
- Why this event exists (the purpose, the problem, the moment)
- Who the audience is (roles, context, mood, what they’re tired of hearing)
- What success looks like (the outcomes you want people to think, feel, and do)
- What the speaker should anchor to (themes, language, internal priorities, constraints)
- How the day runs (format, timing, AV, room, Q&A, and logistics)
Why briefing matters (even when the speaker is “experienced”)
Professional speakers can deliver a polished session with minimal input. That’s not the benchmark. The benchmark is: does the keynote feel like it was built for your people and your moment?
Briefing does three things that directly affect event ROI:
- It improves relevance fast. The speaker can choose examples, language, and emphasis that match your audience’s reality.
- It protects stakeholders. When the brief is clear, the keynote won’t collide with internal messaging, sensitivities, or unfinished decisions.
- It lifts engagement. People tune in when they feel seen — when the speaker “gets it” within the first five minutes.
If you’re briefing for a government executive audience, you’ll care about credibility, care with claims, and alignment to policy context. If you’re briefing for a tech-forward audience, you’ll care about novelty, specificity, and forward-looking insight. Briefing helps the speaker hit the right register.
The Speaker Brief Template (copy/paste this or bookmark this page)
Use the headings below as your template. If you’re short on time, complete the sections marked Essential and send that. If you want a keynote that feels truly tailored, include as much information as you can.
1) Event basics (Essential)
- Event name:
- Date:
- Time:
- Location (This should include the venue, city, state/region; travel notes if relevant, nearest airport, onsite parking, find out from the venue if there are other events while your event is there and share this with the speaker.):
- Format: (conference, leadership day, strategy offsite, awards night)
- Audience size:
- Session length:
- Where the keynote sits: (opening, after lunch, closing)
2) Audience profile (Essential)
- Who is in the room? (roles, functions, seniority, regions, demographics, department)
- What do they care about right now? (pressures, risks, fatigue)
- What’s their baseline knowledge?
- What’s their mood?
- Any audience segments?
3) Purpose and outcomes (Essential)
- Why are we running this event?
- What prompted it?
- Top 3 outcomes: what attendees should think, feel, and do
- What does success look like?
This is often overlooked by clients or events people who have an entire agenda to fill with content, speakers, panels and workshops. This need not be a specific break down of the ROI the client wants from the specific speaker (but it might be). It could be as simple as the themes of the conference and the impression the audience should leave with. I’ve had clients simply tell me they wanted my keynote to be the thing everyone is talking about 8 hours later at the cocktail party – that’s fine.
Let the speaker know.
4) Theme, message and boundaries (Essential)
- Event theme or tagline:
- Key messages to reinforce:
- Topics to lean into:
- Topics to avoid or handle carefully:
- Language preferences:
5) Context the speaker should know (Highly recommended)
- What’s changed in the last 6–12 months?
- What’s coming next?
- What’s worked and what hasn’t?
- Internal initiatives to reference:
6) Practicalities: timing, AV, room and interaction (Essential)
- Room setup:
- Stage:
- Audio:
- Visuals:
- Recording or streaming:
- Interaction level:
- Run sheet:
- Speakers preferences for AV and stage:
7) Stakeholders and approvals (Highly recommended)
- Primary contact:
- Decision-maker:
- Other stakeholders:
- Approval process:
8) What you need from the speaker (Optional)
- Bio length:
- Headshots:
- Pre-event promo:
- Meet & greet:
- Post-event resources:
9) Post event process – confirm in writing
- Does the speaker have a feedback process for clients, organisers or the audience? Are you happy for them to use it?
- Does the speaker want videos or photography from the session?
- Will the speaker bring their own videographer or photographer?
- Is the content of any images or footage from the event confidential?
- If the event or the speaker has footage or photos from the day can they be shared with the other party for reuse and are their any limitations?
- Is the speaker able to share copies of their presentation (slides) either in full or in a redacted form? If so how can the client user and distribute them? Are their limits to this use?
10) Extra things to note or include
- If possible provide the speaker with event and client branding, colours and logos. This should include any specific instructions on how these assets are to be used on screen.
- When including the venue information be sure to provide the name of the room and which floor it is on. Is it in the ballroom or the outdoor area behind the golf course? You speaker will need to know.
- Ask the venue if there are other events on that day. This information can make sure your speaker is not getting the radio micro from the wrong AV tech that met them as the exited the car park with a big smile and a batter pack.
- Share with the speaker details on how the event will run,
- Is there an Emcee?
- Who is introducing them?
- Are their other speakers on the agenda, who and what will they be speaking on? This allows the speaker to talk to internal or external presenters to ensure alignment and allow them to capitalise on the themes of others to maximise the coherence of the program.
- Are they required, expected or invited to stay for lunch, dinner, other aspects of the event?
Common briefing mistakes (and how to avoid them)
Mistake 1: “We just want something inspirational”
Inspiration without direction fades fast. Replace it with clear outcomes.
Mistake 2: Sending the brief too late
Tailored keynotes need thinking time. Aim for 3–6 weeks where possible.
Mistake 3: Oversharing documents with no summary
Always include a one-page spine before attachments.
Mistake 4: Not naming sensitivities
If something is delicate, say so early.
Sharing important areas to avoid is critical between 2020 and 2025 I had 3 different conferences where sensitive information came to light and was shared before I spoke to the audience,
You can’t brief your speaker too soon – if things change let them know. |
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A simple pre-event briefing process that works
- Send the brief and run sheet
- Hold a short alignment call
- Confirm AV and room setup
- Optional outline review
- Final check-in if anything changes
If you’re planning a corporate event, conference, leadership day, or government program and want a keynote that feels genuinely built for your audience, send through a short brief and we’ll take it from there.
Email: bookings@brettwiskar.com
- How to Brief a Keynote Speaker
- The Speaker Brief Template Event Organisers Use to Get a Great Session
- Quick answer: what should a keynote speaker brief include?
- Why briefing matters (even when the speaker is “experienced”)
- The Speaker Brief Template (copy/paste this or bookmark this page)
- Common briefing mistakes (and how to avoid them)
- A simple pre-event briefing process that works
- Frequently Asked Questions (for Event Organisers booking Speakers)
- Related Posts
Frequently Asked Questions (for Event Organisers booking Speakers)
This provides an opportunity for the speaker to generate more value for you and the event. Professional speakers have been to many events across many sectors of different styles and different sizes all seeking different outcomes. They know what works – what makes audiences engage and be energised. As your speaker what content they present on that works best and how it might be valuable for your event.
Most importantly start with outcomes. Understand what your event is seeking to achieve for your client, your company and the audience. From there a strong speaker can help shape the theme and ensure the role they play in your eventual event maximises the value they create.
A strong briefing include areas to focus on and topics that are sensitive is usually enough to ensure a professional speaker will deliver. Most speakers should be comfortable providing an outline review and a couple of sample slides. This is usually more effective than line-by-line slide approval.
Speakers that work with their clients to tailor the keynote to the needs of the event will frequently continue to refine their content and delivery until surprisingly close to the event. Research continues, lessons from their other presentations about what audiences do or don’t engage with, new technology or articles appear on the seen – this often leads to the latest in thinking appearing in the keynote and the presentation.
If clients have a regulatory, legal, or compliance driven need to review slides then this should be raised with the speaker prior to entering into a formal agreement.
Yes. Even a draft helps align energy and content. The more thorough the briefing including agenda of the entire event, the different sessions, speakers and themes the greater level of empowerment the speaker has to deliver a great session. If they haven’t been fully briefed they have to guess and your event is relying on their experience and their assumptions.
General rule is as early as possible. The longer the speaker has to sit with it and have briefing calls with the relevant people the more easily they will be able to align the content with the event and audience. Ideally 4–6 weeks before the event is plenty of time.
Speakers in demand should be able to take a last minute brief and shape a session but this adds risk to an event program so avoid late booking and briefing if you are able to.
One page is enough to start out assuming it’s clear and addresses the important aspects. Having a template ensures the important things are addressed. More context helps for high-stakes events.
