The latest SpeakerFlow State of the Industry Report offers a fascinating look inside the speaking business. The findings reveal something many professional speakers, trainers, consultants, and thought leaders have suspected for years.
The biggest difference between top earners and everyone else isn’t talent. It’s systems.
As someone who has spent nearly two decades in the professional speaking industry, I found the results both validating and surprising.
My first introduction to the National Speakers Association came in 2006 when I completed Speaker Academy through NSA Illinois. I later served on the board of NSA Illinois, including as co-dean of Speaker Academy and VP of Marketing. After moving to North Carolina, I joined NSA Carolinas and served as VP of Membership and VP of Marketing.
Over the years, I’ve spoken at conferences, trained leadership teams, coached executives, and worked alongside many of the smartest people in the industry.
That’s why I paid close attention when SpeakerFlow released its 2026 State of the Industry Report.
The findings offer an important snapshot of where the speaking industry stands today and where the biggest opportunities for growth may be.

Who Participated in the Study?
SpeakerFlow surveyed 216 thought leaders across 13 countries. The average respondent has been in business for nearly 15 years.
Thirty-two percent have operated their businesses for more than 20 years.
These are experienced speakers, consultants, coaches, trainers, facilitators, and thought leaders who understand both the opportunities and challenges of building a sustainable speaking business.
The report explores six key areas:
- Revenue growth
- Lead generation
- Marketing effectiveness
- AI adoption
- Business systems
- Hidden revenue opportunities
One finding stood out above all others.
The Visibility and Revenue Disconnect
Sixty-five percent of respondents said generating more revenue is their number one business priority. However, the way many speakers spend their time doesn’t align with that goal.
According to the survey:
- Social media consumes 31.5% of working hours
- Social media drives only 2.3% of revenue
- Referrals generate 64.7% of revenue
- Referral-focused speakers average $280,000 annually
- Social-media-focused speakers average $69,000 annually
Those numbers are hard to ignore.
Before you delete your Instagram account, though, let’s be careful about how we interpret the data.
I don’t believe the report proves social media doesn’t matter. I believe it proves that social media alone isn’t enough.
In my work helping leaders build a Brighter Presence™, I’ve seen social media serve a different purpose.
It creates visibility. It builds familiarity. It reinforces credibility.
But referrals, relationships, and reputation are often what convert visibility into revenue. The lesson isn’t to minimize social media.
The lesson is to stop treating content creation as the finish line.
The Real Purpose of Visibility
Many speakers think visibility is the goal.
Visibility is the beginning. Visibility helps people discover you.
Trust helps them remember you. Relationships help them hire you.
One of the biggest mistakes I see speakers make is confusing activity with momentum.
Posting daily feels productive. Building referral relationships often feels slower.
Yet the data suggests that referrals remain the strongest revenue driver in the industry.
If your calendar isn’t as full as you’d like, ask yourself:
How much time am I spending creating content?
How much time am I spending strengthening relationships with event planners, association leaders, bureau partners, past clients, and referral sources?
The answer may reveal your biggest growth opportunity.
The $74,000 AI Gap
Artificial intelligence was another area where the survey uncovered a significant divide.
SpeakerFlow found a $74,000 revenue difference between respondents who use AI strategically and those who primarily use it to create more content.
The findings showed:
- 59% said AI mainly increased content production
- 41% said AI actually reduced working hours
The higher earners were far more likely to use AI operationally.
Instead of creating endless social posts, they used AI for:
- Proposal development
- Meeting preparation
- Market research
- CRM management
- Follow-up systems
- Lead qualification
- Workflow automation
This aligns with what I’ve been teaching organizations and leaders.
The greatest value of AI is removing administrative friction so experts can spend more time doing what only humans can do.
Building trust. Creating insight. Delivering transformation.
The 3X Revenue Difference
Perhaps the most important finding in the entire report involved systems.
Respondents with fully integrated back-office systems reported an average revenue of $453,000.
Those with disjointed systems averaged $167,000. That’s nearly a threefold difference.
The study also found that 65% of lost opportunities died after the initial conversation.
Think about that. Most deals weren’t lost because the speaker lacked expertise. Most deals weren’t lost because they needed a better keynote. Most deals weren’t lost because of competition.
They were lost because follow-up didn’t happen effectively.
A great keynote opens the door. A great system helps you walk through it.
Hidden Revenue Opportunities Most Speakers Miss
The report also highlighted several opportunities many speakers overlook.
Licensing Intellectual Property
Speakers who charge separately for licensing their content dramatically outperform those who simply include materials without additional fees.
Your expertise is intellectual property. Treat it that way.
Strategic Bureau Relationships
Speakers working with bureaus reported significantly higher average revenue than those without bureau relationships. The key is becoming easier to sell.
Raising Fees
Several of the fastest-growing respondents cited fee increases as a primary growth driver.
Many speakers underprice themselves long after they’ve earned the right to charge more.
Reducing Free Speaking
The study found that respondents who delivered four or more free presentations earned approximately $80,000 less annually than those who did none.
Free has a cost. Make sure the return justifies the investment. And sometimes, a free speech can pay off big time. One of my free speeches led to a six-figure consulting contract with a Fortune 150 company.
What Professional Speakers Should Do Next
If I had to summarize the entire report in one sentence, it would be this:
The future belongs to speakers who combine visibility, relationships, AI, and systems.
Not one of them. All four.
Visibility gets attention. Relationships create trust. AI creates leverage. Systems create scale.
The most successful speakers aren’t necessarily the most talented people on stage. They’re the people who build businesses that support their expertise.
That’s encouraging news because systems can be learned. Relationships can be nurtured.
Visibility can be built. And every one of those improvements is within your control.
What Do You Think?
Which finding surprised you most? The social media gap?
The AI gap? The 3X systems advantage?
Or the fact that 65% of deals are lost after the first conversation?
I’d love to hear your perspective.
And if you’re a speaker, trainer, consultant, or thought leader looking to build a Brighter Presence™, subscribe to my newsletter for practical insights on visibility, AI, thought leadership, and sustainable business growth.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do professional speakers generate more revenue?
According to the SpeakerFlow 2026 State of the Industry Report, speakers who focus on referrals, follow-up systems, strategic partnerships, and operational efficiency consistently outperform those who rely primarily on social media marketing. Revenue growth is often tied more closely to business systems than speaking ability.
Does social media help professional speakers get booked?
Social media helps speakers build visibility, credibility, and trust. However, the survey found that referrals and word-of-mouth recommendations remain the primary drivers of speaking revenue. The most successful speakers use social media to support relationships rather than replace them.
How are successful speakers using AI?
Top-performing speakers use AI to streamline operations, including proposal creation, meeting preparation, research, CRM management, follow-up communications, and workflow automation. They focus on reducing administrative work rather than simply producing more content.
What is the biggest mistake professional speakers make?
Many speakers spend significant time creating content but insufficient time nurturing referral relationships, following up with prospects, and building scalable business systems. The report found that 65% of lost opportunities occurred after an initial conversation had already taken place.
Do speakers need a CRM?
The survey found a strong correlation between revenue growth and the use of integrated systems for managing leads, proposals, follow-up, and client relationships. Speakers with organized systems significantly outperformed those relying on manual processes.
Ready to Build Your Systems?
If you are looking to benchmark your speaking business, close the follow-up gap, or integrate your back office, check out SpeakerFlow to explore options.
Full disclosure: I’m a SpeakerFlow affiliate because I believe in what they’re building. If you purchase through my link, I may receive a commission.
About Barbara Rozgonyi
Barbara Rozgonyi is a keynote speaker, Visibility Architect™, AI strategist, and CEO of CoryWest Media. A former board member of both NSA Illinois and NSA Carolinas, she helps leaders, speakers, and organizations build a Brighter Presence™ by combining visibility, PR, thought leadership, AI, and strategic communications.









