ABC – Autism, business and cashing in.
Questioning the money spinners and the stereotypes they perpetuate.
Sure, I’m an author in that field, I’ve been a consultant for 12 years in that field, a lecturer for 14 years and I put the word autistic in association with my name which I feel humanises the condition and raises its public profile, paving the way hopefully for the belief in the potential of others with the same diagnosis. So when is autism being exploited for business purposes? Its a good question and a majorly important one.
Many of the rural communities here in Australia who are offered big name public speakers are already communities with virtually no funding for respite or special Ed services and many of the families are severely financially effected by the drought. I’m sure these struggles are echoed around the world.
Yet there are public speakers coming to cash-strapped cities and towns who are charging $95 PER TICKET to hear them for an hour. Some public speakers charge up to $4000 per event to attend and appear for only an hour. Most of these speakers have based large amounts of their work on the first person accounts of people on the autism spectrum and some first person speakers talk only about their own case which is one in an ocean of diversity of presentations of ASD.
Alpha Autism has trained public speakers who are on the autism spectrum whose speaker’s fees are around $50 to hear their stories first hand and www.auties.org has public speaker’s on the autism spectrum world wide who are equally highly affordable.
hmmm, $4000 or $50? It ain’t rocket science to see a major discrepancy.
Sure, credentials and experience matter, as does the quality of someone’s public speaking, but most rural communities don’t need to be stripped of $4000 per lecture or $95 per head. They need information, and preferably from those with compassion for their lives living with people on the spectrum and the poor services and costliness that often entails.
I have generally avoided being a speaker at conferences which charge excessive fees for those coming
and I love speaking for smaller organisations who might, at most, charge people $5-$15 per attendee to hear up to 2 hours of my blah blah. I’ve stuck to this in the UK, where I’ve been lucky enough to have a wonderful speaker’s agent who keeps ticket costs wonderfully low (around £5-£15 per person in spite of having to help me cover the international flight). I charge $60 for hour long consultations ($85 if I also have to cover room hire). I haven’t increased my charges for 10 years and don’t intend to. I’m also one of the most famous people with autism in the world and a qualified teacher. In my world, that doesn’t have to make me think like a cash register. I’d rather be an embarrassing measuring stick than a highly paid public speaker knowing my earnings detract from services and support systems.
As author of 9 books in the autism field who has worked with over 600 people on the spectrum, I hope to represent some of that diversity by drawing on examples of many different lives of people with autism, only one of which mine own. So if you are invited to pay big bucks to hear one life story, don’t be afraid to ask ‘what’s in it for me and my family’. Ask for strategies, not just anecdotes. Make sure your public speaker’s are USEFUL and that their suggested strategies are affordable, not ‘infomercials’ for high cost products and programs posing as lectures which you’ve been charged to hear.
I’m not sending this out in order to get bookings. A quick look at my events page and you’ll see I already have four international tours this year (and I have plenty of local work as it is and prefer my work in arts to actively pursuing autism related work). I’m telling you this because you need to gage what you’re booking, who you’re hiring and that a your own belief in yourselves shouldn’t be undermined or overshadowed by someone else bandying about the word ‘expert’.
Where are the hearts of ‘experts’ in relation to the autism community? Some are deeply committed to people on the spectrum and their families. Some, through their excessive fees are proving they are really only committed to themselves. They don’t have to work for peanuts and lecturing and consulting is work and often involves hours of travel and I certainly have seen the horrors of exploitation of people on the spectrum exhausted by endless questions without anyone thinking for a moment of that persons humanity and isolation (Marc Segar 1974-1997 is certainly a well known example). But listening to a lecture should be priced around the cost of going to a movie. After all they both involve folks in seats attending for up to 2 hrs and if you do the maths, 50-100 people paying $5 to attend is $250-$500 and a perfectly good days wage for most people even factoring in a few hours of travel. If you come away from a movie only entertained and not informed and armed with affordable, even low or no cost strategies, you won’t mind. If you come away from an autism related lecture feeling only entertained and no better armed to manage living with autism or those with it, then you spent your hard earned $5-$15 at the wrong lecture.
If a public speaker is coming to your community or charity, ask them how they might help fundraise rather than merely strip the funds of your organisation. Dare to question, regardless of their status and standing and always look further than the gloss, the fame or the letters next to their name. Most of all never underestimate your own creativity, instincts and resources in working with people with autism who are all very individual and don’t forget the library has free books you can gain lectures from in your own time, at no cost.
Never forget that carers are experts too.
The best therapist I ever met was an innovative nutter with a second grade education who could barely read or write.
He was my dad.
Take care, and believe in yourselves.
Warmly,
Donna Williams
www.donnawilliams.net
Public speakers that would like to share their knowledge with the locals of Western Australia, please feel free to post information on your conference under the heading of Workshops and Community Announcements, found at:
http://www.adapt.org.au/phpBB2/index.php
A.D.A.P.T Forum is a small community, with no affiliations, that supports parents with children diagnosed with autism.
Donna Williams’ insights are found in our Fan Club/Blog section.
Warm Regards
Shirley
Hi Shirley,
good to hear from you.
http://www.auties.org has affordable public speakers’ who are on the autism spectrum and looking for work. I think there is at least one on there from WA. Certainly we’d invite any others to list.
Alpha Autism here in Vic put many people on the spectrum through a recognised qualification to become trainers able to deliver quality presentations to small groups. It’s worth contacting them at least by an email and asking if any autism employment service in WA has considered doing the same and how they might start. Alpha is also listed on http://www.auties.org under the ‘autism friendly’ section in the category of ’employment services’.
I know several of the public speaker’s who did that training. One of them, Kerryn, has started an online consulting service for people with Aspergers called K-Talk. These folks have had good instruction to attain a reasonably professional level of service and many otherwise struggle to find autism friendly employment or work.
In the UK, I offer local newbies to present for 5 mins at my lectures (they don’t get paid but its good exposure and experience). This gives poets, musicians and those wanting to gain experience in public speaking a chance to do so with audiences of about 200 people at each event. We also are open to artists have some works on display at the events. Two of those presenting have begun to get paid work presenting as a result of that exposure.
Most newbies with some experience and/or training in the public presenting area charge around $25-$50. After years of experience and established professionalism they may increase their fee to $100-$150. I charge that rate locally for small groups and charities. I started out doing 4 years voluntary work in the field before I ever put a fee to my work and I did so as by then I was exhausted and as a teacher I already had a qualification so it seemed reasonable to charge an affordable fee, especially as non-autistic professionals were using my works as they basis for much of their own presentations which they had no problem charging professional fees for.
I think those who are charging more than $250 locally, $500 interstate (plus expenses) and $1500 overseas (plus expenses) are charging at a rate that mocks the expertise of carers and charities who often have years of first hand experience themselves. By charging exceptionally high fees its like they are subconsciously reinforcing the audience members’ views of themselves as being ‘nowhere near that level of expertise’. In fact many just need their own insights refined, some clear strategies specific to the issues of the people THEY work or live with, instruction in how to recognise and get clarity on their own instincts, competence, expectations and feelings about ASD and where to find or how to build affordable resources.
Many of the high paid public speaker’s charging $95 a head are regurgitating a book they’ve written which they sell for $30 afterwards – making their presentation effectively an ‘infomercial’ the audience members have been conned into paying. If the same speaker came out and said, I’m going to regurgitate the contents on this particular book for you which you can order into your library and read for free or sit here and pay $95 a head, most of the audience would run to the library!
Sure, if you’re paying $5-$10 to hear them it might save you the time it’d have taken to read their book/books so maybe that’s a bargain, especially if you don’t read well or text books aren’t easy for you.
…. Donna Williams
http://www.donnawilliams.net
resident cheeky monkey and author of 9 books
which people can order for free through libraries 😉
Hi,
I refuse to charge exorbedant fees for my speaking when I just want more opportunities to encourage and inspire others using my personal perspectives. Even as a highly experience and excellent public speaker, i do not charge fees, but I do except donotions of any amountys to help defray my expenses. I get rewarded by just witness what people get out of hearing me and having opportunities to meet them. I am just happy with these non monetary pay back.
Debbie
http://www.debbiethorsos.com
I was heartsick to learn of the way the parents of autistic children in your country are being exploited by high-priced “experts” in the field.
I have some important information I would like to share regarding what is causing the increase in autism in your country and elsewhere.
For the past year, I have been researching prenatal ultrasound and have discovered that — countrary to the opinion of virtually all obstetricians — it is neither reliably safe nor non-invasive and may be the root cause of a number of birth defects and disorders.
There are two known biological effects of prenatal ultrasound that pose considerable risk to developing embryos and fetuses. The least understood effect is cavitation, which is a harmonic effect caused by sound waves that destroys cells by causing gas pockets to vibrate at such high rates, cell membranes can collapse as a consequence. (This is probably the reason ultrasounded babies are often smaller than those who were not exposed to this technology — if even a small number of cells are destroyed early in the process of cell division, there will less mass in the resulting organism.)
The second biological effect is thermal, as the vibrations from the inaudible sound waves are transformed into heat when they are absorbed by tissue. Raising the temperature of tissue compromises key enzyme reactions, which effect the formation and replication of genes that direct proper growth. There is evidence that the thermal changes affect neuronal migration, the process that actually “wires” the brain, resulting in neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism.
I have written the article, “Questions about Prenatal Ultrasound and the Alarming Increase in Autism,” which was published last December in the professional journal Midwifery Today. The article, which is supported by more than 40 citations from prominent scientific journals and reports, is available online at: midwiferytoday.com/articles/ultrasoundrodgers.asp.
I would welcome any comments regarding my article sent to: caroline.rodgers@hotmail.com
I am against the exorbitant fees some consultancies charge for watching speakers on the autism spectrum. I believe that such information and lectures should be kept at affordable prices to gain the widest possible audience. This being parents, carers, persons on the autism spectrum, or anyone else who is interested in the subject area.
As with Donna, I also believe in the idea of using community facilities, which are easy to get to on public transport. 🙂
[…] which don’t incur the seller’s rental costs for their clinic. Thing is, you can even keep your $240 or $295 because you’re really gonna need it this Christmas, you’re gonna need it for food, […]