Public speaking is one of the highest-ROI marketing tools available to small business owners — and one of the most consistently overlooked. A single well-delivered talk can generate leads, referrals, and lasting credibility in ways that paid ads and social media rarely replicate. For business owners in the Bismarck-Mandan region, where the Chamber EDC hosts nearly 200 annual events, the stages are already there. The question is whether you're using them.
If you think of public speaking as something reserved for polished conference keynote speakers — not for a business owner managing payroll and daily operations — that assumption is understandable. Most competitors probably feel the same way.
But the numbers tell a different story. Research shows that speaking builds trust and drives sales directly: 65% of consumers trust a brand more when its message is delivered in person, and 85% say speakers influence their purchasing decisions. SCORE identifies speaking as a direct marketing tool for small business owners — one that builds brand awareness, establishes expert credibility, and enhances sales confidence at low cost.
That reframe matters. If public speaking is a sales activity, it earns a permanent slot in your week — not just when you get a conference invitation.
Bottom line: Speaking is not adjacent to your pipeline — for most small businesses, it's a direct path into it.
Most business owners who try public speaking overcomplicate the prep. They assume each event needs a tailored presentation, spend hours rebuilding slides for different venues, and eventually conclude it's not worth the time.
The smarter approach is a signature story — a single core narrative about who you are, what problem you solve, and why your business exists. The SBA emphasizes that one clear story reaches multiple audiences at once, increases referral chances, and can open doors to paid speaking engagements. It flexes across rooms without needing a full rewrite. A live launch event or chamber demo day is also a natural home for this story — a live audience generates a different kind of attention than any email campaign.
Use this structure to build yours:
[ ] One-sentence description of the problem your business solves
[ ] A concrete example: a client situation, a real challenge, a before-and-after outcome
[ ] Your approach in plain language — no jargon
[ ] One clear call to action for the audience
In practice: Repetition is what makes a signature story land — it shouldn't feel fresh to you; it should feel polished.
Improving public speaking doesn't require expensive coaching. Toastmasters International offers structured practice in 13,800+ clubs worldwide for just $60 every six months — a fraction of what a speaking coach typically costs. There are active clubs in the Bismarck area, and the format — short prepared speeches followed by peer feedback — is built for working professionals who want to improve without carving out large blocks of time.
The Chamber EDC's nearly 200 annual events are a parallel training ground. Start by contributing to roundtables and panel Q&As, where you can read audience reactions in real time, gather informal feedback on your pitch, and gauge how clearly your message lands before taking it to a larger stage. Presence in those rooms compounds — organizers notice engaged participants.
Speaking creates content. Slides built for a chamber panel, investor pitch, or product launch can be repurposed for blog posts, email newsletters, and social media without much additional work.
Keep your presentation files organized in a shared folder so they're easy to retrieve and share after each event. Saving slides as PDFs preserves formatting across devices and makes them easier to distribute to attendees, prospects, or partners. Adobe Acrobat is an online conversion tool that instantly converts PowerPoint files to PDF format; learn more about using it to simplify how you share materials after a talk.
If anxiety is the thing standing between you and the stage, you're not alone — and the belief that it's permanent trips up more business owners than it should. Most polished speakers seem born confident, so it's easy to assume the skill is innate.
The evidence says otherwise: deliberate practice can cut public speaking anxiety by 68% — yet only 11% of people who want to improve actually pursue training. Harvard Business Review found that top leaders continuously improve their communication skills as a core discipline — not because they needed to catch up, but because they chose to invest there consistently.
Bottom line: If you're waiting to feel ready, you'll wait indefinitely — the practice is the preparation.
The Bismarck-Mandan business community is built on connection, and the Chamber EDC's packed event calendar is one of the most efficient venues available to build your reputation at scale. With the 2026-2030 Strategic Plan emphasizing leadership development and community engagement, the infrastructure for visibility is already in place. You don't need a polished keynote to get started — just one clear story and the willingness to keep telling it. Show up to a chamber mixer or roundtable this month, and start there.
Complexity is almost always a framing problem, not an industry problem. Focus on the outcome your clients receive, not your process. A contractor doesn't explain construction methodology — they talk about what goes wrong when preventive work doesn't happen. Lead with the result, not the method.
Credibility matters more than charisma in business settings. Audiences respond to clarity, specificity, and confidence — not performance. A clear explanation of a real problem you've solved will hold attention better than rehearsed humor. Being easy to understand is its own kind of presence.
Reach out directly to your membership contact at the Chamber EDC and express interest. Members who consistently attend and engage in discussions are the first people organizers call when a panel needs a speaker. Visibility as a participant almost always precedes an invitation to present.
This Deal & Discount is promoted by Bismarck Mandan Chamber EDC.