Some of the speakers I've met at conferences were people on who's contribution in form of articles/tutorials/videos I relied on (and still do) to learn and develop my craft. I was so glad to be able to thank them in person. They all turned out to be great people in real life as well. What I'm trying to say is that, sometimes, some people do it for free just because they care about others and love what they do.
We have a LogiTech setup at my work and work really well. We have problems on connecting sometimes but I don't know if to blame the macbooks or the speaker itself.
Love both discussions but I actually wanted to now about people speaking on stages about tech topics.
Or in the current situation speaking on virtual conferences via video chat.
A few thousand bucks buys you a professional conference speaker. Most of that is expenses.
I had a friend who did conferences for verticals that would attract 500-2000 people. People who write books, former generals/admirals/nasa people, B-list celebrities, people associated with past news events, tech celebrities, etc all do keynotes.
A remote event should be much cheaper as these people have no work. I’d offer $500 and go as high as $2000.
A local tech meetup I go to has managed to get some very well-known and accomplished speakers. They don't pay speakers fees, so having a large personal network is really useful. The local tech community is large, and a few senior tech leaders are involved with the meetups.
The meetup is also involved in running a conference. And some companies are willing to pay travel expenses for their employees to come out and speak. It's good for marketing and recruiting.
* To get that iconic/cliche Steve Jobs style posed photo on stage, with your hands arranged in some sort of Tai Chi move - https://image.cnbcfm.com/api/v1/image/104673638-GettyImages-...
* To get the LinkedIn/Twitter/Social media humble bragging points
* To get yourself known to recruiters or other tech platforms for career opportunities
* To get the free swag
* To network with other techie folks
* Free hotel / travel expenses (paid by your company or the host)