Amplify Your Experience: How to Start Writing and Speaking
Proposed session for SQLBits 2026TL; DR
Turn vague tech ideas into clear, audience-focused stories you can write or present. Learn simple techniques and communication rules to explain complex topics with purpose. Be ready to boost your impact on stage, while blogging and or just at work.
Session Details
Our goal in this session is to help you get started with sharing your technical knowledge and experience with others, whether it's by publishing an article, or getting up on stage at a conference, or delivering a training session at work.
Finding the best and most effective way to communicate your ideas is a creative process, and one that not all tech professionals find easy. There is no single, defined path that will get you from a vague idea of what you 'could' write or speak about, to an article or presentation that has 'the magic'. However, in this session we're going to share with you some simple techniques that will help you get started and give you the best chance of success.
We'll show you how to explore your 'vague idea' and turn it into a story with a purpose, and an understanding of its audience, the problems they need to solve most urgently and why. The content will start to take shape and structure and, after that, if you follow a few simple rules of communication, you'll be able to explain even complex technical ideas with purpose and clarity, and in a way that others can easily follow. And this is what mean by "amplify your experience". We will show you how to make sure your audience get the maximum benefit from the ideas, the knowledge and experience that you want to share with them.
Once you start using the techniques, you'll find that not only are you able to write an article or give a presentation that hits its audience, but also to communicate more effectively with team members at work and explain your ideas more clearly more clearly to your managers. You'll learn technical communication skills that are of broader benefit to all IT professionals.
Finding the best and most effective way to communicate your ideas is a creative process, and one that not all tech professionals find easy. There is no single, defined path that will get you from a vague idea of what you 'could' write or speak about, to an article or presentation that has 'the magic'. However, in this session we're going to share with you some simple techniques that will help you get started and give you the best chance of success.
We'll show you how to explore your 'vague idea' and turn it into a story with a purpose, and an understanding of its audience, the problems they need to solve most urgently and why. The content will start to take shape and structure and, after that, if you follow a few simple rules of communication, you'll be able to explain even complex technical ideas with purpose and clarity, and in a way that others can easily follow. And this is what mean by "amplify your experience". We will show you how to make sure your audience get the maximum benefit from the ideas, the knowledge and experience that you want to share with them.
Once you start using the techniques, you'll find that not only are you able to write an article or give a presentation that hits its audience, but also to communicate more effectively with team members at work and explain your ideas more clearly more clearly to your managers. You'll learn technical communication skills that are of broader benefit to all IT professionals.
3 things you'll get out of this session
Our goal in this session is to help you get started with sharing your technical knowledge and experience with others, whether it's by publishing an article, or getting up on stage at a conference, or delivering a training session at work.
Speakers
Tonie Huizer's other proposed sessions for 2026
Code First, Review Later: Making EF Core Work for DBAs - 2026
How to Build Workflow-Driven Database Provisioning in Azure DevOps - 2026
How to Build Workflow-Driven Database Provisioning in Azure DevOps - 2026
Two Developers, One Mission: Make a Test Database That Doesn’t Suck - 2026
Unexpected SQL + documentation workflows with AI agents (Codex, Copilot and beyond) - 2026