SPEAKERS
TOPICS
Metaverse and Web 3.0 speakers are ready to share their insights about the future of business in the new age of immersive internet.
Fees start from £5,000, though credentialed practitioners with WEF recognition or major platform-founder backgrounds — the profiles most corporate audiences require for this topic — typically sit in the £10,000 to £25,000 range. Top-tier speakers reach £50,000; celebrity-adjacent names run two to three times that figure. Because spatial computing and Web3 strategy demand genuine technical depth, this specialism skews toward the mid-tier more consistently than broader technology topics. For detailed guidance, see how much a keynote speaker costs in the UK.
Book 3 to 6 months ahead for credentialed practitioners who speak internationally — spatial computing and Web3 strategy specialists carry full calendars, and sub-topic specialism (CBDC policy, XR deployment, tokenisation) narrows the available field considerably. Last-minute requirements under 6 weeks can be addressed through our 1,190+ global network, but earlier engagement materially improves shortlist quality and gives the speaker adequate time to tailor content to your audience's specific knowledge level.
A keynote runs 45 to 60 minutes: it positions the strategic landscape, recalibrates assumptions about spatial computing versus consumer-facing virtual worlds, and shifts audience sentiment. A Web3 workshop runs 2 to 4 hours and builds working frameworks — mapping tokenisation options, evaluating infrastructure layers, or drafting governance principles. These formats require different speakers and different briefs. Do not treat them as scaled versions of the same session; conflating the two is the most common briefing error for this topic.
For this topic, sector-specific tailoring is not optional — it is essential to the session's credibility. A financial services risk team requires FCA crypto asset regime fluency and CBDC policy grounding that a retail immersive-commerce keynote does not. A briefing call 2 to 3 weeks before the event allows the speaker to calibrate case studies, regulatory framing, and the specific scepticism points relevant to your audience, whether that is a board, an engineering team, or a mixed-executive group.
Yes, and this topic lends itself particularly well to the format. Spatial computing and Web3 speakers can incorporate live XR demonstrations, virtual environment walkthroughs, and immersive technology showcases directly into the session — making virtual or hybrid delivery an editorial opportunity, not a compromise. Technical setup requirements and rehearsal time are confirmed at the briefing stage and are included within the standard booking scope for both virtual and in-person engagements.
Standard scope covers a pre-event briefing call, tailored content calibrated to audience sophistication and sub-topic priority, keynote or workshop delivery, and a post-event debrief. Optional additions include executive Q&A sessions, panel moderation, supplementary written frameworks, and follow-on speaker recommendations for organisations running multi-stage Web3 strategy programmes across financial services, retail, or HR functions. Scope is confirmed in writing before any engagement is confirmed.
The speakers on our roster are active practitioners and researchers — people with live advisory relationships, current deployment work, and recent publications, not commentators whose expertise peaked in 2021. For a topic where the Gartner Hype Cycle has already repositioned "spatial computing" and "metaverse" as distinct trajectories, currency matters enormously. We confirm each speaker's active engagement with the field at the briefing stage, not only at the point of initial roster listing.