BigSpeak’s 2019 Top Speakers as Holiday Treats

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The Holiday Season is upon us! With the year and decade coming to a close, we want to share our 2019 top-booked speakers with you, even if you haven’t had a chance to bring them to a stage near you.

If you can’t host one of our amazing top speakers, enjoy their holiday dessert counterparts. We’ve matched each of our expert speakers with a holiday treat that speaks to them as a speaker and person. We’ve even included links to several recipes for those with a floury thumb.

Happy baking!


Robyn Benincasa: Leadership Speaker, Motivator, Adventurer, and Firefighter

Treat: Gingerbread. This sturdy treat travels well, is immensely versatile, sweet & just a little bit spicy, just like Robyn.

Old Fashioned Gingerbread

Gingerbread Cookies

 

Molly Bloom: Entrepreneur, Bestselling Author and Operator of the Most Notorious Private Poker Game in the World

Treat: Croquembouche. This French confection is an immensely elegant crowd pleaser.

Classic Croquembouche

Easy Croquembouche

 

Jia Jiang: Top Inspirational Speaker and Founder of Rejection Therapy

Treat: Fudge. Sweet, on the informal and friendly side, and very, very hard to say no to. Rejection proof, one might say?

Peppermint Fudge

Marshmallow Fudge

 

Matthew Luhn: Storytelling Maestro and Former Pixar Animator and Story Artist

Treat: Frosted sugar cookies. These playful, colorful, sweets easily evoke nostalgia for your childhood and can spark your creativity when it comes time to ice them.

Alton Brown’s Sugar Cookies

Soft and Chewy Sugar Cookies

 

James Clear: Decision-making Expert and Bestselling Author of Atomic Habits

Treat: Chocolate advent calendar. A habit you can’t break and don’t want to!

15 Best Chocolate Advent Calendars

 

Marc Randolph: Entrepreneur, Co-founder of Netflix, Mentor and Angel Investor

Treat: Biscotti. This classic but casual Italian snack holds up under pressure, is a little tough, and suggests maturity without being too serious or intimidating.

Biscotti With Chocolate Chips and Almonds

Classic Biscotti 4 Ways

Ken Schmidt:  Former Director of Communications at Harley-Davidson and Author of Make Some Noise

Treat: Candy cane. This no frills, striped little shepherd’s crook is iconic and memorable, with colors that immediately catch your attention.

The Best and Tastiest Candy Canes

 

Eric O’Neil: Cyber-security Expert, Bestselling Author, Former FBI Counterterrorism and Counterintelligence Operative

Treat: Risalamande, a traditional Danish pudding . Its refreshing and no-nonsense exterior conceals a hidden element.

Outrageously Tasty Danish Rice Pudding with Cherries

Risalamande (Several Different Ways)

 

Bill Benjamin and JP Pawliw-Fry: Emotional Intelligence and Leadership Experts

Treat: Thumbprint cookies. These speakers joined our roster at the same time and co-authored a book together. Thumbprint cookies are made of two main elements that are delicious individually, but also harmonize beautifully, resulting in a super crave-able snack.

Raspberry Almond Thumbprints

Easy Jam Thumbprints

 

Mitch Lowe: Top Business and Entertainment Speaker and Netflix Co-founder

Treat: Pumpkin pie. Like this traditional dessert, Mitch is a classic who has been around the block and established himself as a favorite who is here to stay.

Perfect Pumpkin Pie

Chocolate Pumpkin Pie

 

Omar Johnson: Branding Speaker, Former CMO at Beats by Dre and Former VP Marketing at Apple

Treat: Rugelach. This croissant-like confection is stylish and aesthetically bold, but unfussy.

Ina Garten’s Rugelach

Cinnamon Roll Rugelach

 

Natalie Nixon: Innovator, President and Founder of Figure 8 Thinking and Strategy Expert

Treat: Baked Alaska. This seemingly complex dessert requires careful planning (one could say strategizing) and a healthy dose of creativity, but the end result dazzles.

Easy Baked Alaska

Best Baked Alaska

Barb Stegemann: Social Advocate and Entrepreneur, Founder of  7 Virtues

Treat: Molasses cookie. Sweet and comforting, this unpretentious nosh delights the senses even more than a whiff of an enchanting perfume.

Chewy Molasses Cookies

Old-fashioned Molasses Cookies

 

Kevin O’Leary: Shark Tank’s Mr. Wonderful, Investor, Author and Venture Capitalist

Treat: Yule log. This old-school dessert is classic, reliable, and enjoys a cult following among holiday dessert fans.

Chocolate Yule Log

Mocha Yule Log

 

Tan Le:  Innovative Technology Speaker and Entrepreneur, Inventor and CEO of EMOTIV

Treat: Peppermint bark. Multi-layered, sweet and fun… are we describing Tan, or the bark?

Almost Famous Peppermint Bark

5 Minute Peppermint Bark

 

From Hacker to White Hat, Former Anonymous Leader Hector “Sabu” Monsegur

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Hector “Sabu” Monsegur is the most famous hacker of his generation to change hats from black to white. His story is legend. With only a 9th grade education, Monsegur taught himself the computer skills that would make him one of the biggest names in the hacking world.

Monsegur went from hacking individual credit cards to hacking credit card companies and then from hacker to hacktivist. In his time, he hacked all the big names, almost daily. His targets read like a who’s who list of Internet giants and foreign governments: Nintendo, News Corp, PayPal/VISA/Mastercard, Egypt and Tunisia.

When he was finally caught by the FBI, he chose family over hacktivism, trading in his black hat to a white one to help care for his two nieces. His cooperation helped put many hackers in jail. After serving a short stint in prison and spending years on probation without a computer, Monsegur now wears a very different hat. Today he uses the skills that made him famous as “Sabu,” hacking into private and public companies and showing them their weaknesses.

If you want to get the real deal on the dark side of hacking and how to keep your data safe from the black hats, reach out to BigSpeak to learn more about cybersecurity expert Hector “Sabu” Monsegur.

Get To Know Our Team—Rebecca Buel

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We’d like to introduce you to Rebecca! Most of you probably already know Rebecca; she’s been with BigSpeak for 6 years and has been a huge part of our healthy growth. You might recognize her as your saving grace from a time when she found you the perfect speaker for your event as your Strategic Account Advisor. Or maybe she’s familiar to you from her help translating Ken’s talk-to-text emails while serving as his Executive Assistant and Sales Associate.

Now more than ever, (if that’s even possible) we are grateful to have Rebecca as she takes over the Partner Relations Department to share her care and diligence with our brilliant speakers. As the Speaker Relations Advisor she is dedicated to deepening relationships with speakers and clients,  through outstanding service and a commitment to healthy growth.

Rebecca is also our Green Team champion, dedicated to making BigSpeak and our community a more environmentally friendly place. Most people don’t know that Rebecca actually rides her electric bike to work every day. When she believes in something, she puts her whole heart and mind behind it!

Our Rollercoaster World: From the Digital 2010s to the Humanistic 2020s

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If you think predicting the future is difficult, then try understanding the past. It turns out deciphering the most important trends of the past ten years can be just as hard as forecasting what will become the most important in the next ten.

However, at BigSpeak we like a BigChallenge. So we asked ten thought leaders from different industries to analyze where we’ve been in the 2010s and determine where we’re going in the 2020s.

Their visions were as diverse as their expertise. These keynote speakers represented the best minds in the fields of business, sales, branding, entrepreneurship, innovation, leadership, and customer loyalty.

While their ideas were different, two themes stood out: optimism and humanism. They all shared an idea that the 2020s will be a brighter future, with a departure from the digital age and a return to a more human approach. While the 2010s appeared to be a decade of complexity, confusion, division, and alienation, they all saw the 2020s moving toward a simpler, warmer, and more human future.

Business

Our business thought leaders saw trends in the 2010s of too much content, too much data, and too much complexity in the workplace. Artificial intelligence and machine learning became a huge factor in the 2010s, and we’re still figuring out how to handle the consequences.

Sales expert Aaron Ross said our businesses are “drowning in a sea of content, apps, and information. And so are our customers and salespeople!” Innovation and change expert Lisa Bodell agreed, saying “We’re drowning—at work and at home—in complexity.” And customer loyalty expert Ken Schmidt saw us moving away from the human touch, focusing on systems, explaining: “We never asked for everything to be done faster and cheaper and the stuff we buy to be delivered the same day.”

Because we’re struggling to cope with a world stuck on fast-forward, our experts foresee trends pointing towards a simpler and more human world. Ross predicts businesses will focus on “how to execute fewer activities that produce a better quality of results.” Bodell agrees, seeing how business, in order to keep up, “must move faster, and simplifying is the answer.” While Schmidt foresees “massive opportunities [that] are being created for businesses that humanize their approach and the relationships with those they serve. Customers will seek out more human, personalized and delightful experiences.”

Performance expert Bill Benjamin sums it up this way: “While AI, machine learning and automation [have taken] over routine mental and physical tasks, Emotional Intelligence (EI) [will become] the key differentiator in achieving excellence in individual and organizational engagement, product innovation and customer experience [in the 2020s].”

Technology

In terms of technology, the 2010s saw the explosion of social media, data, and artificial intelligence—everywhere, and in all businesses. Futurist and disruptive innovation expert Kevin Surace said we had “no awareness of the social media madness to come.” We saw the gifts of social connection on the Internet tear us apart with fake news and social influencers. We also saw software and machines not only taking away blue-collar jobs in factories but also replacing white-collar workers who did routine tasks.

However, the trends weren’t all negative for workers in the 2010s. We also saw digital tools becoming widely available to the masses. Branding and creativity expert Srivinas Rao saw a transfer of power from big companies to individuals.  Rao explained: “The power that was once only in the hands of enterprises with deep pockets and unlimited resources is now in the hands of individual creators with limited resources but unlimited resourcefulness.”

The trend in the 2020s will be about learning and adapting. We will see business and society beginning to learn how to deal with the digital devices, social media, and data that have proliferated in all aspects of our lives. Surace foresees social media continuing to grow as a threat, stating there is a “limited understanding by most people of the danger algorithms may pose to our lives, our thoughts, and our friendships.”

On the other hand, technology will bring new innovations. Surace admits, as “we enter 2020 with the great hope of a decade that will bring clean affordable driverless transportation options on the ground and in the air, and AI that will augment our lives forever and for good.” Rao sees “a convergence of the last 10 years (AI, social media, commercial web browser, and mobile devices)” and that will lead to ever new possibilities.

Politics and Society

We all know the last few years have been rough in terms of political divisions and disruptions. Leadership expert Thomas Kolditz and “the Dean of Innovation” Jeff DeGraff both pointed out the increase in political extremism in the 2010s. However, Kolditz believes we actually started the 2010s much more unified in which “tremendous strides were made in the advancement of women, of gay and lesbian rights, and transgender rights.” But the trend did not continue, as DeGraff notes, “Partisan politics continues to pull both parties in ever more extreme directions.”

However, both Kolditz and DeGraff see the US coming back together. Kolditz explained: “In the 2010s, we lost touch with the truth, we discovered ‘alternative facts,’ and in many ways, turned away from science as an answer to national and global problems. I predict that in the 2020s, those imperatives will be restored.”

DeGraff also sees hope. He sees a force in the political independents, who are 38% of voters, stating: “Contrary to popular opinion that the country is being pulled apart, it may in fact be coming back together in 2020.” Social Entrepreneur Barb Stegmann agrees, stating: “You will see a movement towards purposeful and meaningful living, and kindness will rule in 2020.”

And in terms of the US Government, top business guru Kevin O’Leary predicts: “Trump will be impeached and re-elected in 2020″—a bold statement that lends heavy commentary on America’s political system.

Economy

In terms of the economy, many individuals and businesses are better off than they were at the start of the 2010s. The 2010s saw the world economies emerging from the Great Recession. At the time, Surace explains, it was “unclear if the US and world could ever recover.” But those gains are not to be taken for granted, as Surace cautions: “As we enter the 2020s, we are at a time of strong employment and solid growth in the US. [But] it took all 10 years to get here.”

O’Leary, on the other hand, is an optimist on the economy as we enter 2020, predicting good things for the economy and markets:

1) The stock market will maintain its bull rally but with moderate gains of no more than 7% for 2020.

2) The 19-year bond will increase by .5% during 2020.

3) No recession in 2020.

Environment

Finally, climate change and a clean environment became priorities in the 2010s with rising global temperatures and increasing evidence of the waste being generated by individuals, governments, and businesses. Surace said, “We entered 2010 with some awareness of climate change but no money or interest to do anything about it.”

However, as we move to the 2020s, we see more movement toward solving the problems we ourselves created. Surace sees the younger generation leading the way, stating: “We enter 2020 with climate awareness being driven by angry students, who will bear the brunt of a do-nothing attitude around the world for decades.” While Stegemann predicts we will see the “treatment of animals and our neighbors and our bodies [being] prioritized.”

While there are many issues to be concerned with and challenges yet unmet as we reach the end of the 2010s, the future is not doom and gloom. Our experts foresee us meeting many of those trials head-on in the 2020s and even taking strides forward in terms of unity and a cleaner environment.

From all of us at BigSpeak, have a happy new year and happy new decade. See you in the 2020s.


 Kyle Crocco is the Chief Creative at BigSpeak Speakers Bureau, a UC Santa Barbara graduate, and lead singer of Duh Professors. He regularly publishes business book reviews, personal development insights, and thought-leadership articles on MediumBusiness 2 Community, and Born 2 Invest.

Peter Guber’s Golden State Warriors Named Sports Franchise of the Decade

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Entrepreneur expert and keynote speaker Peter Guber was lauded as part of the investment team that helped make the NBA Golden State Warriors into the sports franchise of the decade. In 2010, Peter Guber and Joe Lacob—with a group of investors—purchased the struggling basketball franchise in San Francisco, turning it from a pretender into a contender.

Since the purchase, the team has won 3 NBA championships, instituted the use of data analytics to improve player performance, built a new sports venue, led the league in revenue with corporate sponsorships, reached out to international fans, and created many community partnerships.

Read more about their success here.

Dent the Universe With Guy Kawasaki’s Remarkable People

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Are you looking for inspiration on how to dent the universe? Then wait no longer. There’s a new podcast in town aiming to shake up the way you see the world. Startup expert and chief evangelist at Canva, Guy Kawasaki has added his formidable thought leadership to the ranks of podcasters.

Kawasaki first came to fame as the Chief Evangelist of Apple, even getting a mention in the 2015 film Steve Jobs. The film shows the article where Kawasaki predicted Jobs’ company Next was a way to get back into Apple. He was right.

Now, Kawasaki is applying his insight and intuition to look at how remarkable people operate. His podcasts feature people who changed how we view the world, such as his first guest conservationist Jane Goodall, or future guests like master of persuasion Robert Cialdini and Apple computer creator Steve Wozniak.

Kawasaki says “In tactical and practical ways, my podcast will help you change the world, dent the universe, and succeed against all odds.”

Check out the first episode of Guy Kawasaki’s Remarkable People here, featuring Jane Goodall.