---
title: "How to Get a Speaking Slot at TOKEN2049, ETHDenver, and Consensus: The PR"
description: "Most Web3 founders treat speaker applications as cold submissions. This playbook shows how TOKEN2049, ETHDenver, and Consensus actually select speakers—and how to earn your slot before you ever apply."
author: "Shilika Jain"
date: "2026-06-20T18:00:11.241+00:00"
tags: ["Web3 conference PR", "speaking strategy", "TOKEN2049", "ETHDenver", "Consensus", "founder PR", "thought leadership", "conference speaking"]
canonical: "https://www.shilikajain.com/blog/web3-conference-speaking-slot-pr-strategy-token2049-ethdenver-consensus"
---

# How to Get a Speaking Slot at TOKEN2049, ETHDenver, and Consensus: The PR

By [Shilika Jain](https://www.shilikajain.com/authors/shilika-jain) — 6/20/2026

Most Web3 founders treat speaker applications as cold submissions. This playbook shows how TOKEN2049, ETHDenver, and Consensus actually select speakers—and how to earn your slot before you ever apply.

---

# How to Get a Speaking Slot at TOKEN2049, ETHDenver, and Consensus: The PR Strategy for Web3 Founders Who Want the Stage, Not Just a Badge

A speaking slot at a top-tier Web3 conference is not a marketing perk. It is a business development event with a two-to-three year compounding tail. The investors in that room will Google you the next morning. The journalists covering the conference will add you to their source lists. The podcast hosts in the audience will reach out within 48 hours. And the founders who heard you speak will remember that you were on stage, not just in attendance.

But here is where most founders go wrong: they treat the speaker application as the starting point. It is not. By the time you hit submit, the committee's mental model of you should already be formed. Your job is to build the credibility stack that makes the yes feel inevitable, and to use the speaking slot as a launch pad for a PR campaign that runs weeks before and after the event itself.

This is the playbook for doing exactly that.

## Understanding the Stakes: Why These Three Events Matter

The numbers are not abstract. TOKEN2049 Singapore is projecting over 25,000 attendees representing 7,000+ companies, with more than 60% holding C-level or founder-level titles. The 2025 Singapore edition drew 25,000 attendees from 160+ countries, with 70% C-suite participation. A speaking slot at an event with that audience profile is not a vanity play. It is direct access to the decision-makers who fund, partner with, and write about companies like yours.

Consensus by CoinDesk operates at comparable scale, having welcomed over 500 speakers, 1,000 companies, and 25,000 attendees in 2025, with a programme spanning six stages and dedicated tracks for stablecoins, tokenization, and institutional adoption.

ETHDenver is a different kind of event entirely. Run by SporkDAO, a decentralized autonomous organization, it operates on a community-first, merit-based model rather than a corporate programme. The 2026 edition at the Stockyards Event Center drew over 25,000 participants from 125+ countries, with high-profile participants ranging from Vitalik Buterin's Ethereum roadmap keynote to the White House's first direct participation in a crypto conference. The community skews builder-heavy, which means your credibility currency is on-chain proof and technical depth, not just brand recognition.

Each event selects speakers through a fundamentally different mechanism. Getting that wrong is the most expensive mistake a founder can make.

## How Each Event Actually Selects Speakers

### TOKEN2049: Outbound-First, Relevance-Driven

TOKEN2049 is explicit about its process. The team receives a significant volume of inbound requests in addition to running its own outbound effort. The official guidance is blunt: submit early, be interesting, and be relevant. Applicants are asked to send an email detailing their preferred speaking role, the general topics they could cover, and relevant information about themselves.

That description has a critical implication. The TOKEN2049 programming team is actively hunting for speakers who fit themes they have already decided matter. Your application does not shape those themes. Your job is to map your expertise onto the themes they are already building content around, and to do so with enough specificity that you look like the obvious choice for a panel slot nobody else can fill.

For the 2026 Singapore edition, the dominant themes are real-world asset tokenization, institutional custody, AI-blockchain integration, stablecoin regulation, and DePIN models. If your protocol sits at any of those intersections, your pitch needs to be framed around the narrative tension in that space, not around your product's feature set.

The NEXUS Startup Competition is a parallel entry path worth knowing. Selection is merit-based, applying is free, and finalists receive all the perks of being a TOKEN2049 speaker, including access to the exclusive speaker reception and networking. For early-stage founders who have not yet built the media footprint for a main stage slot, NEXUS is the smartest way onto the stage, and it puts you in the speaker tier for every subsequent application.

### ETHDenver: Community-Merit, Human-Review

ETHDenver's approach is structurally different. Applications are reviewed by Content Stewards, community members who assess submissions based on educational value, authentic perspective, and fit with the Summit themes the organizers have defined. The guidance is direct: invest thought and authenticity in your responses, and avoid automated responses such as those generated by AI tools. The committee explicitly values unique perspectives and genuine insights over polished but generic proposals.

For 2026, ETHDenver reorganized its programming into theme-based Summits covering areas like privacy and cryptography, governance, infrastructure, and DePIN. Every submission is evaluated against a specific Summit's focus. This means the first thing you need to do before applying is identify which Summit your expertise most naturally maps to, then write a proposal that could only have come from someone who has spent years building in that exact corner of the ecosystem.

ETHDenver also notes that community-merit-based content can be considered for featured sessions and keynotes. This matters. Your presence in the broader Ethereum developer community, on forums, in open-source repositories, in governance discussions, directly influences how Content Stewards perceive your application. Being accepted as a speaker does not automatically grant entry to the event, so plan the logistics accordingly. Speakers must also complete a separate General Admission Application.

### Consensus by CoinDesk: Thought Leadership, Framed as Education

Consensus frames its selection process explicitly around amplifying the wisdom of the Consensus community and showcasing the industry's most important voices. To apply, founders propose engaging and relevant topics that exemplify their thought leadership. The editorial team at CoinDesk, which runs the conference, is evaluating whether your topic adds something to the conversation that their existing editorial coverage has not already exhausted.

That alignment with editorial priorities is the key insight. CoinDesk's journalists cover stablecoins, tokenization, institutional adoption, regulation, and AI-blockchain convergence. If you want a speaking slot at Consensus, your pitch should be something CoinDesk would theoretically want to write about: a genuinely novel argument, a contrarian take backed by data, or a case study that illustrates a trend their reporters have been tracking.

For early-stage founders, the PitchFest competition is the alternative entry point. A panel of CoinDesk experts evaluates all applications, selected startups pitch live at the conference, and the final rounds happen on the mainstage. Requirements: less than five years old, under $5M raised, and a core product in Web3, AI, or blockchain.

## The Credibility Stack You Need Before You Apply

Here is the uncomfortable truth: the application form is not where speaking decisions are made. It is where they are confirmed.

Conference programmers are not reading cold submissions from founders they have never encountered. They are validating the impressions they have already formed from what they can find about you online, on-chain, and in the press. That means the six months before you apply are more important than the application itself.

### Build the Media Footprint First

Conference organizers and hosts care less about your funding round and more about whether you can educate their audience on problems they are actively trying to solve. That shift in framing, moving from "promoting my project" to "solving a problem the audience has," is what separates the founders who get booked from those who do not.

The practical translation: you need bylined content that already exists before you apply. A piece in Decrypt or CoinDesk arguing a specific position on the theme you plan to speak about is worth more than any credential you can list in an application form. Bylined content establishes your personal perspective, demonstrates depth of thinking, and creates artifacts that continue working for you long after publication. When a TOKEN2049 programmer searches your name, they should find evidence that you have already been trusted to speak on this topic in print.

### Establish On-Chain Proof Where Relevant

For ETHDenver especially, on-chain activity matters. Governance participation, protocol contributions, verifiable TVL milestones, audited smart contract deployments: these are the proof points that signal to a builder community that you have earned the right to speak about a technical topic. A founder who can point to a specific on-chain data set or an original research piece that illuminates something nobody else has quantified is dramatically easier to select than one whose case rests entirely on press release history.

### Podcast Appearances as Warm-Up Stages

Landing podcast appearances before conference applications serves two functions: it builds the media footprint programmers search, and it sharpens the narrative you will ultimately take to the main stage. Treat each podcast as a working session for refining the thesis you plan to deliver on stage. The organizers at ETHDenver and TOKEN2049 do notice when a founder's name turns up as a guest on shows their community listens to. It functions as a form of social proof from people they already trust.

The key is targeting the right shows. A podcast with 5,000 engaged listeners who build protocols matters more than one with 50,000 passive listeners who chase airdrops. Prioritize hosts who ask technical questions, challenge their guests, and have built their own credibility through consistent output.

## The Application That Works

Once the credibility stack is in place, the application itself needs to do three things precisely.

**One: lead with the audience problem, not your biography.** The strongest submissions start with a question the audience is actively wrestling with. Something like "Why do 80% of institutional tokenization pilots stall at custody?" works far better than "I am the CEO of a protocol with $200M TVL." The programming committee is building a programme for an audience, and they need to know your talk will serve that audience, not promote your project.

**Two: propose a specific format for a specific theme.** TOKEN2049 asks for your preferred speaking role. ETHDenver asks for your Summit fit. Consensus wants a topic that exemplifies thought leadership. Vague proposals fail. "I could speak about DeFi" is not a pitch. "A 20-minute solo session on why the current approach to oracle security makes institutional adoption structurally impossible, and how three protocols are solving it differently" is a pitch.

**Three: include verifiable proof points, not claims.** Links to published bylines, on-chain data, audit reports, or research that supports your thesis should all be included. The goal is to make the committee's due diligence effort as close to zero as possible.

## Maximising PR Value: Before, During, and After

Getting the slot is step one. Extracting the full PR value from it requires a three-phase campaign.

**Before the event (four to six weeks out):** Announce the speaking engagement across LinkedIn and X, and use it as a hook to get a journalist conversation booked in advance. Blocking time slots for media interviews ahead of the event pays off significantly. Even ten minutes with a journalist in your niche is an ultra-high value interaction that provides an additional chance to get your name in the press. Share the announcement with your existing media contacts as a signal that the story you have been building has now been validated by a conference with institutional credibility.

**During the event:** Treat your session as a content production event, not just a presentation. Capture clips of key moments, live-post insights to X and LinkedIn as the talk happens, and make it easy for journalists in the room to pull a quotable line. The conference media list is a resource. Use it to get warm introductions to editors and reporters who are physically in the same building. A face-to-face conversation with a CoinDesk or The Block journalist at a conference is qualitatively different from a cold pitch email sent weeks later.

**After the event:** The PR cycle does not end when the booth lights go down. Post-conference work should include a written version of your talk pitched as a byline to a publication that did not cover the event, a LinkedIn summary that synthesizes the three most important things your audience walked away with, and targeted follow-up with every journalist who engaged with your session or your name during the week. Speaking at a conference about scaling challenges positions you as the person potential partners approach afterward, but only if you have made it easy for them to find you and the content you produced.

## A Note on the Flywheel

Conference speaking and earned media are not separate tracks. They are the same flywheel, turning faster each time you engage it.

A byline in CoinDesk leads to a podcast invitation. The podcast leads to a conference speaking slot. The speaking slot leads to a journalist profile. The profile leads to the next byline, which leads to a larger stage at a higher-tier event. The founders who dominate panels at TOKEN2049 Singapore did not start there. They built the media footprint that made the yes feel inevitable, and they treated every stage, from a side-event panel to a podcast to a small-venue workshop, as a step in the sequence.

In a space where capital flows toward people who can explain where the ecosystem is going rather than just what they are building, the stage is not a reward for having arrived. It is the mechanism by which you arrive.

Start building the stack. The applications will take care of themselves.

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Canonical: https://www.shilikajain.com/blog/web3-conference-speaking-slot-pr-strategy-token2049-ethdenver-consensus
