I almost said no to this...

Here's why I changed my mind (and what I'm sharing instead)

So I got invited to speak on this "Big Impact Experts" panel thing.

And my first instinct was to pass.

Not because the other speakers aren't legit...

(They are.)

But because I HATE these "expert panel" events.

You know the ones I'm talking about.

Where five people get on stage...

Share their "frameworks" with cute little acronyms...

And everyone claps politely while secretly checking their phones.

But then I thought about something.

Most of the people I work with are STUCK in the same loop.

They run an event... make some money... then it's over.

So they gotta run ANOTHER event.

And another.

It's exhausting.

You're basically a hamster on a wheel... just with better branding.

And the reason most people get stuck in this cycle...

Is because nobody ever taught them how to turn ONE-TIME buyers...

Into LONG-TERM revenue.

How to build CONTINUITY into their business model.

So they're not constantly starting from scratch.

That's literally my entire specialty.

And when I realized I could share some of that on this panel...

In a way that could actually HELP people break the cycle...

I figured, screw it.

Let's do it.

So here's the deal:

I'm speaking alongside four other experts who are rocking it right now.

→ Steve Brossman (helps you sell without being a pushy jerk—he’s a good friend from Sydney)

→ Nyrie Roos (turns your presentations into client-generating machines)

→ Yvonne McCoy (gets you consistent clients instead of feast-or-famine chaos)

→ Nina Froriep (makes LinkedIn actually WORK for you organically)

And me.

I'll be sharing how event-driven businesses can stop living launch-to-launch...

And start building REAL recurring revenue.

The kind that lets you sleep at night.

This is a LIVE panel.

Free to attend.

And if you've been feeling like you're doing ALL the work...

But not seeing the momentum you KNOW you're capable of...

This might be the breakthrough you need.

See you there,
Ken

P.S. This isn't one of those "death by PowerPoint" situations. We're keeping it real, actionable, and actually useful. Promise.