Speaker Notification Checklist: What to Send and When
How to Set Up Effective Speaker Notifications for Conferences
1. Timeline and cadence
- Initial invite (6–12 weeks before): Confirm availability, session title, and any honorarium or travel details.
- Confirmation & details (4–6 weeks before): Send logistics, session length, A/V needs, and slides deadline.
- Reminder (1–2 weeks before): Reiterate arrival time, room, format, moderator name, and backup contact.
- Final reminder (24–48 hours before): Quick itinerary, check-in location, emergency contact, and last-minute updates.
- Post-event (within 48 hours after): Thank you, presentation recording/link, speaker survey, and info on honorarium/expenses.
2. Content to include in each notification
- Event basics: Date, time (with timezone), venue or virtual link, and session title.
- Speaker role: Start/end times, format (panel, keynote, workshop), expected audience size.
- Logistics: Check-in procedure, green room details, parking/transport, Wi‑Fi and A/V specs.
- Materials: Slide templates, branding guidelines, slide deadline, preferred file formats.
- Contacts: Organizer name, phone number, and on-site contact.
- Expectations: Q&A format, recording consent, promotional language and social tags.
- Reminders about reimbursements/honoraria: Process and required receipts.
3. Channels and formats
- Email: Primary channel for formal details and attachments.
- SMS/text: For day‑of timing changes or urgent notices.
- Calendar invite: Include exact time, location/link, and attachments.
- Event platform/app notifications: Useful for multi-session updates.
- Phone call or video check-in: For high-profile speakers or complex sessions.
4. Templates (short examples)
- Initial confirmation subject: ”[Event] — Speaker Confirmation & Next Steps” — Body: session details, required deadlines, A/V form link, organizer contact.
- 1‑week reminder subject: ”[Event] — Reminder: Your Session on DATE” — Body: arrival time, room, moderator, slides due date.
- Day‑of SMS: “Hi [Name], reminder: [Event] at [Time]. Please check in at [Location]. Contact: [Phone].”
5. Automation and tools
- Use email automation (Mailchimp, SendGrid) or CRM (HubSpot) for scheduled sequences.
- Calendar APIs (Google Calendar, Outlook) to send invites and updates.
- SMS gateways (Twilio) for last‑minute alerts.
- Event platforms (Hopin, Whova) to centralize messages and speaker resources.
- Use forms (Google Forms, Typeform) to collect A/V needs and bios.
6. Accessibility and clarity
- Use clear subject lines and bullet lists.
- Provide alt text for images and transcripts for any pre-recorded content.
- Include timezone conversions or link to a timezone converter.
- Offer accommodations and a contact for accessibility requests.
7. Tone and relationship
- Be concise, professional, and appreciative.
- Personalize where possible (name, session title).
- Reinforce value: audience profile and expected outcomes.
8. Testing and contingency
- Dry‑run tech with presenters 1–3 days prior for virtual or hybrid sessions.
- Create backup plans for A/V failures (presenter phone number, extra slides on USB).
- Prepare on-site staff script for late arrivals or no-shows.
9. Metrics to track
- Delivery/open rates for emails.
- Responses to logistics requests and slides submissions.
- Speaker satisfaction via post-event survey.
- On-time speaker arrivals and session start accuracy.
10. Quick checklist (use before sending)
- Confirm session title, time, and speaker name.
- Attach A/V specs and slide template.
- Add organizer and day‑of contacts.
- Send calendar invite with location/link.
- Schedule reminders at 1 week and 24–48 hours.
Leave a Reply