The Road to Laracon: A Developer's Guide to Mastering Technical Public Speaking
The Developer's Case for the Stage
Many developers view the conference stage as a pedestal reserved for "super geniuses" or the architects of massive open-source frameworks. This is a persistent myth that keeps talented engineers from experiencing one of the most significant accelerators for professional growth. Public speaking isn't about being the most intelligent person in the room; it's about being the person willing to refine their understanding enough to teach it. When you commit to a talk, you force yourself to dive deeper into a subject than you ever would for a standard Jira ticket.
Beyond the educational benefits, speaking is a powerful tool for career self-branding. If you want to be the go-to person for state machines, serverless architecture, or front-end performance, you don't wait for a job title change. You start
Planting the Seeds for a Compelling Talk
One of the biggest hurdles for first-time speakers is the feeling that they have nothing new to say. However, the most effective talks often focus on lived experience rather than purely technical documentation. While anyone can read the
To find your topic, you must prime your brain months in advance. Think of it like preparing a wedding speech; you don't sit down the night before and hope for inspiration. Instead, you keep a "scratch pad" nearby while you work. When you find a bug that was particularly clever, or a pattern that saved you hours of time, write it down. Over time, you’ll notice these nuggets of ideas begin to coalesce into a theme. The best talks are those where the speaker is a proxy for the audience's pain, leading them through a hero’s journey from a sticky technical situation to a successful resolution.
Winning the CFP: Lowering the Organizer's Risk
Conference organizers have one primary goal: to put on a great event while minimizing the risk of a bad session. When you submit a Call for Papers (CFP), you are making a pitch to a human being who is likely sifting through hundreds of entries. To stand out, you must use your personal voice. While the subject matter is technical, the delivery should be personable.
For first-time speakers, the "risk gap" is real. Organizers don't know if you’ll freeze or if your delivery will be engaging. You can bridge this gap by providing "concrete artifacts" of your ability to speak. This doesn't require a viral video; even a recording of a lightning talk at a local meetup or a short video of you explaining your talk's premise can suffice. A short video submission allows organizers to see your energy and speaking style, significantly lowering the perceived risk of putting you on a main stage like
The Strategic Ladder: From Meetups to Main Stages
While going straight for the biggest conference in the ecosystem is possible, building a ladder of experience is often a more successful long-term strategy. Start with local or online meetups, such as the
Once you have a few recorded sessions under your belt, look for regional conferences like
Practice Tactics for Peak Performance
Preparation for a 25-minute talk is effectively a second full-time job for several weeks. However, there is a difference between mindless repetition and strategic practice. Many successful speakers avoid word-for-word scripts because they can sound robotic and fragile—if you forget one word, the whole house of cards collapses. Instead, focus on "signposts" and "cow paths."
Signposts are the key milestones of your talk; you just need to know the order in which you are heading. Cow paths are the familiar ways you meander from one point to another. To get comfortable, practice your first 60 seconds until they are muscle memory. The first minute is when your nerves are highest; if you can deliver that opening naturally, your heart rate will settle for the technical portions. Try practicing "in full hair and makeup"—set up your clicker, use your presentation software, and stand as if you are on stage. This prepares your nervous system for the physical reality of being the center of attention.
Managing the Post-Conference Adrenaline Drop
A rarely discussed aspect of speaking is the "conference blues" that follow a major event. You spend weeks in a state of high stress and adrenaline, and then, suddenly, it’s over. To combat this, lean into the relational aspects of the event. The true durable value of conferences isn't the technical knowledge—which can be found online—but the friendships you forge.
When you step off the stage, don't just disappear. Use the visibility you’ve gained to mingle with the crowd. People will naturally come up to you to discuss your talk, making it incredibly easy to start conversations. These connections often turn into long-term professional relationships and support systems. By viewing the talk as a gateway to the community rather than just a performance, you turn a fleeting adrenaline rush into a lasting career asset.
