How to give a great ignite talk

by Scott | 6/1/2009

There’s this popular format for public speaking called Ignite – It’s an evening of short talks with some special rules.  Similar to, but simpler than, Pecha Kucha, and more involved than lightening talks, in ignite each speakers gets 5 minutes – but must have 20 slides and each slide must automatically progress in 15 seconds.

Most ignites are held as social events with drinking and other activities, and dozens of these events have been held around the world.

I’ve spoken at 5 different ignite events (Ignite Seattle x3, Gnomedex, Ignite Boston) and make much of my living from public speaking – here’s my advice on this special format:

  • 300 seconds kicks ass. This is super short, which means it’s easy to practice . There is no excuse for not practicing until it feels good. It also means you have to be tight in your points. 300 seconds equals 10 television commercials. You can make great points in a short time if you refine your thoughts.  The entire sermon on the mount can be read in about 5 minutes and The Gettysburg address takes about 2 and a half minutes.
  • Figure out your points before you make slides. Talking about something for five minutes is easy – really, give it a shot once or twice before you make a slide – it will help you sort out what you want to say. You only need Four or five  solid points to go 5 minutes. And practice with a timer before you make a slide. You’ll quickly discover how unlikely it is to run out of things to say during an ignite talk.
  • It is ok to breathe. There is no law that says you must fill every second with talking. When you practice, practice breathing. Take a moment between points. Like whitespace in visual design it’s the pauses that make what you do say stand out clearly. Give yourself a slide or two that’s for just for catching up and taking a breath.
  • Pick strong stories and big themes.  What do you love? What do you hate? What is the best advice anyone ever gave you? Pick stories with big themes, since they require less introduction. What are the 5 most important things to know about X that no one talks about? The stronger the topic & title the easier the work is. Top 10 lists can work, but making 10 points is extremely hard – aim for 5 or 6.
  • Don’t get hung up on slides. Good slides support what you’re saying, not the other way around. The last thing you want is to end up chasing your slides, a common problem at ignite as you’ll never catch up. Pick simple images and if you must use text be sparse. No bullet lists, just one or two points. Make the slides flexible enough that if you fall behind it’s easy to skip something to catch up.
  • Watch some ignite talks! Some of the best ignite talks get posted to the ignite show regularly and you can see the many different ways people use the format. You can watch 6 different ones in a half hour. Do this. You’ll get ideas and confidence.
  • Using the abstract ignite deckYou can hack the format. The idea of a ’slide’ is vestigial – they’re not slides anymore. I’ve hacked the format a few times, including using a special time counter deck to give me more flexibility (see photo at right). You can see this in action in my ignite talk on Attention and Sex or grab the deck here if you want to use or hack it further.
  • Plan to lose your first and last slide. Time will get eaten by the audience laughing,  by any ad-libs you do, etc. so plan for about 4:30 instead of the full 5:00.
  • You can find royalty free images to use. Search flickr using the advanced options to show you creative commons images. Or try sxc.hu or istockphoto.

And for extra fun, the rest of my advice is in the form of an ignite talk from Ignite Seattle #6.  How meta.

Photo credits for photos used in the above talk (they’re on the last slide but hard to see):

Also see:

If you’ve spoken at ingite and have more advice, leave a comment.  I’d love to hear your thoughts on how preparing helped… or didn’t :)

16 Responses to “How to give a great ignite talk”

  1. Chris Yeung Says:

    Compfight is a simple way of searching for Creative Commons images on flickr.

    http://www.compfight.com/

  2. scottberkun.com » Wednesday linkfest + Confessions Says:

    [...] How to give a great Ignite talk.  What I’ve learned from doing 4 different ignite talks, including an actual ignite talk on how to give an ignite talk! [...]

  3. Scott Says:

    Thanks Chris. Big list of other sources here:

    http://randomknowledge.wordpress.com/2008/05/09/how-to-find-images-on-the-internet/

  4. Adam Goucher Says:

    I did an Ignite last week and blogged about my lessons (and slides) at http://adam.goucher.ca/?p=985.

    -adam

  5. Scott Says:

    Also see this excellent guide to pecha kucha, a similar format:

    http://avoision.com/pechakucha/

  6. Lynn Cherny Says:

    Maybe the other Ignites are better forums (fora?) but the Boston ones have been so crowded, loud, and hard to hear at – I’ve never been very interested in talking there and rarely in trying to hear anyone, either. I always end up at the back chatting over a beer, making it even more obnoxious for everyone trying to talk. I was surprised to see no tips on how to deal with a distracted audience that’s drinking and socializing, kind of like at a comedy club…

  7. Scott Says:

    Lynn: actually when I spoke at the first Ignite in Boston, the one in Cambridge, it was an awful venue for speaking. I forget which bar it was, but it most of the people there were not listening, and they were also quite hostile by the time I got on stage as the opening speaker.

    But all the other ignite events I’ve seen or been to were much more favorable. I haven’t heard many folks complain – anyone else find ignite events hostile?

    I think it’s on the shoulders of the organizers to make the environment reasonable for speakers. At some point, say speaking in the middle of subway train station, there’s not much a speaker can do.

    I’ll post something soon about speaking in unpleasant environments.

  8. Scott Berkun on Why You Should Speak (at Ignite) | Design Website Says:

    [...] addition to his talk Scott wrote about how to do a great talk on his Speaker Confessions blog. Here are some of his [...]

  9. Kare anderson Says:

    After speaking at both Pecha Kucha and Ignite events – and loving the swiftness,
    excitement and audience involvement possibilities in both – the biggest factors
    between a good and great events seem to be the quality of speakers (no surprise here),
    a strong overarching theme, the venue that enables people to hear, see and feel
    comfortable in the audience – and the seamless support of tech needs.

    Like Scott, I make my living giving speeches and consulting, ironically on communicating to collaborate.

    As a long-time advocate of storyboarding conferences and meetings
    and varying the formats in which people “speak” at them (ignite, in conversation with….,
    meet the pros, speed coaching, fast panels, etc.) I just wish more meeting planners would
    mix it up more. Scott – bet you’ll stir things up
    Here I’ve written more.
    http://www.movingfrommetowe.com/2008/01/17/fast-way-to-learn-from-each-other/

    http://www.movingfrommetowe.com/2008/08/17/you’ve-got-five-loooong-minutes-to-grab-their-attention/

  10. Scott Berkun on Why You Should Speak (at Ignite) | Design Website Says:

    [...] that talk and made it this week’s Ignite Show. In addition to his talk Scott wrote about how to do a great talk on his Speaker Confessions blog. Here are some of his [...]

  11. How and Why to Give an Ignite Talk – Scott Berkun Says:

    [...] summarized the talk in this excellent blog post on Speaker Confessions (where he’s chronicling his new [...]

  12. Ignite Denver – awesome ‘how to give an ignite preso’ Says:

    [...] Scott has an awesome write up on ‘how to do an Ignite Preso‘. it’s good [...]

  13. What do these events have in common? – Northwest Connects Says:

    [...] per slide., on a topic that matters. The Ignite talks come out of O’Reilly media. Tips for giving good Ignite talks. The video on that page is v good as it talks about the importance of ’storytelling’, [...]

  14. Storytelling is Everything | Real Grad School Says:

    [...] is Everything I love the remarks on storytelling in this talk by Scott Berkun. To paraphrase/quote from the talk: Storytelling is everything. It is the most important thing [...]

  15. Scott Says:

    Another good pile of advice:

    http://blogs.msdn.com/betsya/archive/2009/08/24/giving-an-ignite-presentation-what-i-learned-at-gnomedex-2009.aspx

  16. Thinking of Speaking? « IgniteCincinnati Says:

    [...] How to give a great Ignite talk http://www.speakerconfessions.com/2009/06/how-to-give-a-great-ignite-talk/ [...]

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