How to Invite Bishworaj Poudel
A thoughtful invitation is simple: explain the value, be specific, respect time, and make it easy to say yes or no.
Important Note
I don’t attend programs that don’t provide real value for the audience, the organizer, and the outcome.
Process
Keep it respectful, structured, and value-focused.
Step 1: Send Email
Send a clear email explaining your program, why you want Bishworaj, and what value the audience will gain.
Step 2: Wait for Reply
If the email is aligned and valuable, you’ll get a reply. If there’s no reply, consider it a respectful decline.
Thoughtful behavior: One clear follow-up is okay. Multiple follow-ups, pressure, or guilt messaging is not.
What your email should include
Make it easy to evaluate quickly.
- Program overview: what it is, theme, and goal
- Why Bishworaj: a specific reason (not generic praise)
- Audience details: who will attend + expected number
- Date & time: include timezone + duration
- Format: keynote / workshop / panel / Q&A + language
- Value promise: what participants will learn and take home
- Logistics: venue/online platform, AV needs, recording policy
- Compensation (if any): speaker fee, travel, accommodation, tokens, etc.
Before the program
What a respectful organizer does to create a smooth experience.
Clarify the value
Confirm what the audience wants, what outcome you expect, and what “success” looks like.
Respect time
Share a tight agenda, exact speaking slot, and keep the session on schedule.
Prepare logistics
Confirm venue/Zoom link, mic/screen setup, and recording permission in advance.
Be easy to work with
One point of contact, fast replies, clear instructions, and no last-minute surprises.
Note: I don’t go to programs that don’t provide value. The email must make the value obvious.
Email template (copy & send)
Short, clear, and respectful, written from a thoughtful organizer’s perspective.
Tip: Don’t pressure. One follow-up after a few days is enough. No reply = respectful no.