Speaking Inquiry

Book Julie Good

For keynotes, panels, guest lectures, workshops, and conversations shaped for the room, the audience, and the questions at hand.

Start Here

If you are reaching out about a speaking engagement, a few basics are enough to begin: date, location, format, audience, and the kind of conversation you want the event to make possible.

I am glad to talk through keynotes, panels, workshops, guest lectures, and interdisciplinary conversations. If the idea is still taking shape, that is completely fine. We can start with what you know and work from there.

Helpful Details

A few details that help the conversation move quickly

Event Basics

Date, city, venue, and whether the event is in person, virtual, or hybrid are the fastest starting points.

Audience and Format

Let me know who will be in the room and whether you are imagining a keynote, panel, workshop, guest lecture, or moderated conversation.

Themes and Questions

Share the topics you want the conversation to hold. I am especially at home where communication, culture, education, and digital systems overlap.

Practical Notes

If there is already a budget range, timing window, or travel expectation, including that early is always helpful.

Speaking Formats

Ways this work usually shows up

  • Keynotes
    For conferences, summits, and events that want a clear throughline and a memorable frame.
  • Panels and moderated conversations
    For rooms that want depth, generosity, and language people can carry back into their work.
  • Workshops
    For teams, classrooms, and organizations that want practical engagement rather than a one-way talk.
  • Guest lectures
    For colleges, universities, and interdisciplinary programs where communication and culture are already in play.
Next Step

If you are still shaping it, that is fine

You do not need a perfectly formed brief to reach out. A note with the essentials is enough, and we can sort out the best format together.

If it helps, include what success would look like for the room. That is usually the most useful place to begin.