I've got a great idea for a presentation/talk that I think could help people in their daily lives. Since it's a presentation/talk, I'm not looking for a "one-on-one" situation, but rather a group setting.
I'm pondering who I need to contact right now, what I need to do to put this together, and whether or not I should charge, and if so, how much. I mean, I could do it for free on a Saturday afternoon or something, but I think the information is worth something. The issue is the balancing act. I wouldn't want to overcharge and discourage folks from coming, but at the same time, I don't necessarily want to do it for free (though that's not out of the question).
Once I get it done, I'm thinking of contacting local school districts, and maybe focusing on the "older" kids (possibly high school), since they would probably be better at implementing it on their own, but at the same time younger kids could benefit, so I could also do one for younger kids, but have a parent come with them.
I'm also thinking of coming up with just a general one (for everyone), and I don't think it'd be that difficult to come up with two (slightly) different sets of material, since a lot of it will overlap anyway.
I want to put together a solid presentation. I'm confident I can do that. My concern is people walking away from it going "I didn't get anything out of that" or "I'd never do that".
So what are your thoughts?
I'm pondering who I need to contact right now, what I need to do to put this together, and whether or not I should charge, and if so, how much. I mean, I could do it for free on a Saturday afternoon or something, but I think the information is worth something. The issue is the balancing act. I wouldn't want to overcharge and discourage folks from coming, but at the same time, I don't necessarily want to do it for free (though that's not out of the question).
Once I get it done, I'm thinking of contacting local school districts, and maybe focusing on the "older" kids (possibly high school), since they would probably be better at implementing it on their own, but at the same time younger kids could benefit, so I could also do one for younger kids, but have a parent come with them.
I'm also thinking of coming up with just a general one (for everyone), and I don't think it'd be that difficult to come up with two (slightly) different sets of material, since a lot of it will overlap anyway.
I want to put together a solid presentation. I'm confident I can do that. My concern is people walking away from it going "I didn't get anything out of that" or "I'd never do that".
So what are your thoughts?
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