The European Investigative Journalism Conference

Tips for Speakers

We are journalists, not professional speakers. If you are speaking at a session at Dataharvest, here are some handy tips to make sure that you get your message across – and reach the finish line on time.

1. Consider your main 2-4 points

You may have worked on your investigation for a year, and you have learned a ton of things. But you can’t cover all of them. Ask yourself: What is the point of the session? What do you want the audience to take away from your presentation? (And – if you’re part of a panel, how can you contribute to the overall theme?)

2. Make it easy for the audience to follow you

In which order should you present your main points? Do they correspond with chronology or another organizing principle? Divide your thoughts into chapters, summarise what you have said from time to time (the “rule of 3” works well – summarise each part into 3 short points)

3. Think about the audience’s needs

The audience wants to learn from you for the sake of their own future stories. Make a short intro to your story and give them a link – but don’t speak in length about the story itself. Talk about your methodology and your tools. What worked? What didn’t? What would you do differently next time? Remember to keep it practical – your audience isn’t going to go home to do your investigation, they want to know how to do theirs!

4. Keep it short

If you are the only speaker, don’t speak for more than 30-40 minutes (and limit yourself to max 15 Power Point slides). If you are in a panel, agree with the other panellists and the moderator how long you will each speak for. In a panel, think “debate”, not “speech”. Always leave time for audience questions – they are journalists and most people learn better that way.

5. Be concrete and factual

How exactly did you get to your conclusions? For example – How many FOI requests did you file, and how long did you have to wait for the answers? What did you do to reach a surprising result? Good examples will help the audience remember general principles.

6. Speak up, look at the audience, not the slides

Nothing is more boring than someone who reads a manuscript aloud. Speak naturally, look at the audience and the other panellists. Be yourself.

Less is more. Don’t be tempted to fill a 10 minute slot with 20 minutes of material by speaking fast. And remember, very few Dataharvest speakers and participants are native English speakers, you are most probably not either. Speak clearly and slowly.

7. Don’t forget the mistakes and problems

Some of the best learning experiences come from people being brave enough to share their mistakes and how they dealt with the setbacks. Everyone in the audience listens intensely while thinking “Oh my God, I might have done that as well.”

8. Wrap-up: What can others learn from this?

Time is almost up – what do you want the audience to take away? Go back to your main points, wrap up your conclusions, set out briefly what you have told them – in crisp memorable phrases (if you can’t summarise your talk that way, think again, maybe it isn’t focused enough). Remember to leave yourself open for questions, and with time to answer them.

9. Stop in time.

The conference runs on a tight schedule. Please stop in time. It shows professionalism and ensures that people don’t have to feel impolite when they sneak out to be in time for the next session. We all need the breaks – you do too!

10. Facilitate networking

If relevant, encourage people to meet in the cafeteria after the session to discuss further work on a subject and exchange contact details. Make yourself available there – it is better to meet in the cafeteria than to block the room for the next speaker.