Your Calendar Is Telling on You
Your schedule is not just a plan. It is a confession.
A practical, humorous, and honest look at how leaders use time. The speech challenges the audience to stop saying “I do not have time” and start noticing what their calendar is already proving.
Program promise
A practical, humorous, and honest look at how leaders use time. The speech challenges the audience to stop saying “I do not have time” and start noticing what their calendar is already proving.
Best audience
Leaders, club officers, professionals, volunteers, and anyone trying to align time with priorities.
Audience takeaways
- 1. Recognize the difference between stated priorities and scheduled priorities.
- 2. Use the calendar as evidence, not guilt.
- 3. Create room for what matters before the week fills itself.
- 4. Make one practical time choice visible.
Why this works
A good speech needs more than a topic. It needs a hook, a promise, a path, and a useful landing.
Want this in your room?
Tell me the audience, available time, meeting theme, and what you want people to walk away with. I can help adapt the program to fit.
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