15 Upcoming Business-Changing Tech Trends (And How To Prepare For Them)

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The worlds of both business and technology are changing rapidly, and often intertwine in surprising ways. Workers themselves are adapting, resulting in a growing  digital workforce made up of freelancers and remote employees adept in using new technologies to their own ends and less interested in the offerings of the traditional workplace and workspace. These changes are inevitable, but whether or not a given company takes advantage of and evolves with these trends or is left behind by them is very much in the hands of each organization’s leadership team. Will your business invest in digital health solutions, internal chatbots and accountability systems? Thought leaders at the cutting edge of the field highly recommend that you do.

 

Read the full article by 15 members of the Forbes Technology Council here.

Famous Motivational Speakers

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Famous Motivational Speakers are athletes, entertainers, business owners, and bestselling authors who are well known for their talent and success but also have a motivational message to tell about how they overcame adversity to reach their full potential. Try one of the top eleven famous motivational speakers in 2019 for your next event or keynote.

Earvin “Magic” Johnson

Magic Johnson is known for his 13-year professional basketball career with the L.A. Lakers, including 12 NBA All-Star games and an Olympic gold medal win. After retiring from professional basketball, Magic became a leading spokesperson for HIV education and a motivational speaker. Johnson delivers a passionate message about his life story, what motivated him, and how we can all make a difference in our community.

Molly Bloom

Molly Bloom is an inspirational speaker, bestselling author of Molly’s Game, and was the business mind behind the most exclusive, high-stakes poker game in the world. Her story covers everything from starting her business knowing nothing about poker to losing everything—then overcoming addiction and rebuilding her life.

Brad Montague

Brad Montague is a storytelling expert and inspirational speaker famous for co-creating the “Kid President” viral videos in 2013. In his talks, Brad shares stories of how his small, funny video became a hit and the life lessons he learned from the experience.

Mel Robbins

Mel Robbins is best known for her TEDxTalk “How To Stop Screwing Yourself Over.” She is a powerful motivational keynote speaker who shares the story of overcoming her depression and turning her life around with “the five-second rule.” Mel helps break the habit of procrastination and self-doubt so you can become a more confident and productive individual.

Daymond John

Daymond John is a motivational speaker, founder of FUBU clothing, and reality TV investor on Shark Tank. Daymond shares his inspirational story of overcoming tough times to grow FUBU clothing from a garage startup to a multi-million dollar company.

Brené Brown

Dr. Brené Brown is a motivational speaker and emotional intelligence expert, famous for her TEDx talk “The Power of Vulnerability” (one of the top 5 TED talks in the world) and her Netflix special The Call to Courage. Brené inspires audiences with her story of learning to embrace vulnerability and shows how others can do the same.

Abby Wambach

Abby came to fame as the co-captain of the 2015 U.S. Women’s World Cup Champion Team and as a two-time Olympic medalist. She inspires audiences with her talks on commitment, resilience, excellence, and sisterhood.

Bert Jacobs

Bert Jacobs along with his brother John Jacobs created the Life is Good t-shirt company, originally selling t-shirts from their van. Neither one had a background in business at the start but their company took off, becoming a huge success. Despite making countless mistakes along the way, they learned how to use optimism to stay on top.

Michio Kaku

Dr. Michio Kaku is one of the most widely recognized people in science today, appearing on international TV and radio for his unique insights. His talks on the future of the mind inspire audiences everywhere.

Bethany Hamilton

Bethany Hamilton was a rising teenage surfing sensation when she lost her arm to a 14-foot tiger shark. But one month after the attack, Bethany returned to the water and just over a year later she won her first national title. Bethany’s comeback story has been told as theNew York Times bestselling autobiography, Soul Surfer, and the 2011 film with the same title.

Jack Canfield

The originator of the Chicken Soup for the Soul series and a prolific self-development author, Jack is recognized as America’s number one motivational speaker. Jack inspires audiences to participate more fully in life, show more compassion, dream bigger, and persevere in the face of setbacks.

Bring one of these famous motivational speakers to your next event; they are sure to add a touch of cachet and inspire your audience to reach new heights.

See Below For More Top Keynote Speakers:

Top Motivational Keynote Speakers

All Top Keynote Speakers

What To Expect When Booking a Celebrity Keynote Speaker


The content writers at BigSpeak Speakers Bureau are Experts on the Experts. They hold doctoral, masters, and bachelors’ degrees in business, writing, literature, and education. Their business thought pieces are published regularly in leading business publications. Working in close association with the top business, entrepreneur, and motivational speakers, BigSpeak content writers are at the forefront of industry trends and research.

Maintain Your Healthy Habits Throughout the Year

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Maintaining healthy habits throughout the year can be a challenge. Travel, parties, holidays—they all disrupt our routines. How can you stay on track in the face of constant disruptions?

In a recent interview on CBS This Morning, The New York Times bestselling author of Atomic Habits James Clear explained how. Here are three tips to keep your habits healthy all year round.

Reduce your scope but stick to the schedule.

It’s difficult to maintain a healthy routine when you leave home for work or pleasure. The tendency is to give up your entire system of exercise and healthy eating. So what can you do to keep to the routine?

James suggests we overcome challenges by maintaining our routines while reducing the scope. For example, if you’re used to working out an hour every day and then you can’t because of work or family obligations, just do a few minutes of exercise. If you do a short walk or a few push-ups each day, then you can maintain your routine of exercise so you can get back on track once the disruption is over.

Design your personal environment for success.

Holidays and parties can disrupt healthy eating plans. Then, leftovers tempt us to stay on an unhealthy path. So what can you do with those leftovers?

Clear says design your environment to emphasize good eating over bad. Wrap the unhealthy leftovers in aluminum foil so you can’t see the tempting food. Then wrap the healthy leftovers in plastic wrap so you will see these instead (and maybe let a co-worker eat the bad stuff). Sometimes healthy eating is as simple as putting bad food out of sight.

Never miss twice.

One day, despite our best intentions, we will eat a fatty meal or fail to exercise, or both. When this happens, many people decide to abandon their good habits altogether. So what should you do when you miss a day?

Clear suggests you get back on track by never missing twice. The key is to accept some days you will fail and allow for that. Then get back to your healthy habit the next day. If you resolve to never miss two days in a row, you can keep your good habits going indefinitely.

For more tips, check out the interview on CBS This Morning.

Eight Ways To Encourage Cybersecurity Compliance Among Employees

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Cybersecurity is now a top priority for many organizations. From basic protocols like firewalls and two-factor authentication to restricted administrative and network access,  manycompanies are taking steps toward tighter security in order to avoid becoming the next victim of a corporate data breach or phishing scam. BigSpeak Exclusive and consultant for NASA, IBM, Hyperloop Transportation, and Liberty Bio Security José Morey, M.D weighs in on involving employees and investing in education to ensure higher rates of compliance.

To read the full article and see what other experts in the field have to say, see here.

 

 

Who Are the Top Commencement Speakers? We’ll tell you who!

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A top commencement speaker can make your graduation ceremony a memorable, heartfelt and inspiring experience. Their stories of success about overcoming challenges in their field will inspire graduates as they enter the next phase of their careers.

For a memorable graduation speech, consider inviting a famous celebrity speaker, renowned academic, Fortune 500 CEO, or motivational speaker to your commencement event. Here is a sampling of the top graduation and commencement speakers that have shaped the next generation of scholars.

Top Commencement Speakers 2020

Steve Wozniak

Before Woz became a cultural icon as the man behind the Apple computer, he was just another engineer working from his garage in Silicon Valley. Be inspired by how Woz and Steve Jobs helped make Apple a brand name company. Woz’s past commencement speeches have focused on continued learning throughout life and also in trusting your independent, innovative ideas.

Molly Bloom

Molly Bloom is an inspirational speaker whose personal story became the Oscar-nominated movie Molly’s Game. She overcame back surgery to become one of the top 3 women mogul skiers in the U.S., then moved to L.A. with nothing and built up the most successful underground poker game in Hollywood only to lose it. Audiences will be treated to valuable life lessons as they learn how she came back each time life knocked her down.

Michio Kaku

Michio is the rare scientist who makes complex sciences sound simple. He has become an internationally recognized media celebrity, appearing on late-night talk shows, Emmy award-winning documentaries, and national news. Audiences will be inspired by his talks of what the future holds, in terms you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to understand.

Vernice Flygirl Armour

Known as FlyGirl, Vernice Armour went from cop to combat pilot in 3 years. Within months of earning her wings, FlyGirl found herself flying over the deserts of Iraq supporting the men and women on the ground. From the moment she steps on stage, she shows audiences how to acknowledge the obstacles in life without giving them power and how to create a flight plan utilizing her candid strategies to win on the battlefield of business and life.

Robert Sutton

Robert Sutton is a popular Stanford professor and bestselling author in the area of organizational change. His books, articles, and classes prepare people everywhere with the skills to identify and manage difficult bosses and co-workers. Let him prepare your graduates with entertaining advice on how to get along in the world of work.

Barb Stegemann

Barb Stegemann is a social entrepreneur and founder of 7 Virtues perfumes. She inspires audiences with her story of reducing the opium trade in Afghanistan by convincing farmers to grow the ingredients used in her perfumes instead of poppies. Her humor, candor, and charm will inspire and entertain your commencement audience.

Shawn Achor

Shawn Achor is a top motivational speaker, happiness researcher, and bestselling author of The Happiness Advantage. His happiness research has been featured on many media outlets, including Oprah Winfrey, and one of the most popular TED talks. What better way to start life after graduation than armed with the tools to have a happy life.

To bring one of these, or other graduation and commencement speakers to your event contact BigSpeak at info@BigSpeak.com

See Below For More Top Keynote Speakers:

Powerful Women Speakers

All Top Keynote Speakers

To bring one of these, or other, graduation and commencement speakers to your event contact BigSpeak at info@BigSpeak.com


The content writers at BigSpeak Speakers Bureau are Experts on the Experts. They hold doctoral, masters, and bachelors’ degrees in business, writing, literature, and education. Their business thought pieces are published regularly in leading business publications. Working in close association with the top business, entrepreneur, and motivational speakers, BigSpeak content writers are at the forefront of industry trends and research.

Top Technology Speakers

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Technology and futurist keynote speakers are experts in innovation, big data, blockchain, and artificial intelligence. In some cases, these speakers literally demo new, game-changing technologies on stage. They are renowned entrepreneurs, researchers, strategists, and forecasters. Their talks focus on emerging topics of cloud computing, social media, communication platforms, IT, knowledge networks, medical technology and beyond.

Whether your company is on the verge of a high-tech breakthrough, or you still can’t change the defaults on your phone, these top technology keynote speakers can help you. Their takeaways will help you revolutionize your organization, markets, customers, and society at large.

Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.Arthur C. Clarke

Kevin Surace

Kevin Surace is a futurist speaker, creator of the first smartphone and digital assistant, and veteran of over 15 main-stage TED talks. He is widely known as a dynamic public speaker, who educates and energizes audiences to action with his personal brand of “Edutainment.”

Nancy Giordano

Nancy Giordano is an exciting strategic futurist and corporate strategist. Her talks help businesses understand the intersection of tech, business, and society so they can improve their strategies going forward.

Tan Le

Tan Le is a top innovation and business speaker, technology entrepreneur, and founder and CEO of EMOTIV. Her moving talks focus on innovation, and A.I.,  which often feature amazing demos of her groundbreaking brainwear.

Sunil Gupta

Sunil Gupta is an expert on digital strategy and Chair of the General Management program at Harvard Business school. He helps companies understand how digital technology impacts consumer behavior and firm strategy.

Erik Qualman

Erik Qualman is a top technology speaker, bestselling author, Pulitzer Prize nominee, and social media expert. Named one of the top 50 professors in the world, his entertaining and fun talks teach audiences about innovation and digital leadership.

Mike Walsh

Mike Walsh is a top innovation and futurist speaker. Rather than focusing on the distant future, Walsh looks at what the next five years will bring. His most recent book The Algorithmic Leader shows leaders and businesses how to adapt to the age of algorithms.

Adam Cheyer

Adam Cheyer is a top A.I. expert and Co-Founder of Siri. His talks focus on the future of artificial intelligence and how it will affect your business.

Daniel Kraft, M.D.

Daniel Kraft is an expert on the future of medicine and Founder and Chair of Exponential Medicine. His enlightening talks focus on how new technologies are changing healthcare and the practice of medicine.

Bettina Warburg

Bettina Warburg is a blockchain researcher and Co-Founder of Animal Ventures, which helps companies take advantage of advanced technologies. Her cutting-edge talks focus on the emerging practices of blockchain technologies for business.

Steve Wozniak

Steve Wozniak is a top technology speaker and innovation expert, cult icon, and Co-Founder of Apple Computer. A fun and lively personality, he teaches audiences about creativity and innovation in technology.

Marita Cheng

Marita Cheng is a popular keynote speaker from Australia and the founder and CEO of Aubot, which makes a telepresence robot, Teleport, for people with longterm illness or a disability to attend school or work remotely.

Janelle Shane 

Janelle Shane is a machine learning expert and artificial intelligence humorist. In 2019, she was named one of Fast Company’s 100 most creative people in business. Her TED talk, “The danger of AI is weirder than you think” has close to 1 million views as of 2020 and provides a funny and insightful look at the nature of machine learning algorithms.

For More Top Keynote Speakers:

Top Futurist Keynote Speakers

Top Innovation Keynote Speakers

All Top Keynote Speakers


The content writers at BigSpeak Speakers Bureau are Experts on the Experts. They hold doctoral, masters, and bachelors’ degrees in business, writing, literature, and education. Their business thought pieces are published regularly in leading business publications. Working in close association with the top business, entrepreneur, and motivational speakers, BigSpeak content writers are at the forefront of industry trends and research.

BigSpeak’s Top Booked Change Management Speakers

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The only thing constant in business is change. We all know this; so why is it difficult for us to predict and deal with? Change comes in all forms, whether your small startup is finally taking off or your large corporation needs decluttering, it’s never an easy process.

That’s why BigSpeak Speakers Bureau brings you our top change management speakers. Each speaker has a different approach to growth and change. They’ll guide you through any daunting challenge that may lie on the horizon as you scale up. We can help you choose the best one to ease your growing pains.

Frits van Paasschen

Frits Van Paasschen is a top business and change management speaker, author, and former CEO of Starwood Hotels and Resorts and Coors Brewing Company. He was also Nike’s former President of Europe, Middle East, and Africa. His speaking and his book, The Disruptors’ Feast, detail the forces disrupting the status quo and how businesses can evolve and thrive in changing environments.

Robert Sutton

Robert Sutton is an organizational change keynote speaker, Stanford Professor, and New York Times bestselling author. His research focuses on organizational change, leadership, innovation, and workplace dynamics. His current research, The Friction Project, focuses on causes and cures for destructive organizational friction, as well as how to utilize good friction.

Lisa Bodell

Lisa Bodell is a recognized global leader in behavior change, whose innovation skill-building firm has transformed hundreds of Fortune 500 companies by eliminating complexity and unleashing innovation.

Gibson Biddle

Gibson Biddle is a business speaker, product advisor, Stanford lecturer, and Executive-in-Residence for NerdWallet. Prior to NerdWallet, he spent five formative years transforming Netflix from a startup to an industry dominator as the VP of Product Management.

Steve Donahue

Steve Donahue believes that epic change needs an epic story. After his first two books, Shifting Sands and Follow Your Compass—about his adventures through the Sahara— became international bestsellers, he crafted the idea that providing a strong narrative will guide your team through any change.

Peter Sheahan 

Peter Sheahan is Founder & Group CEO of Karrikins Group, a consulting firm that helps build effective leadership, and the bestselling author of Flip, Generation Y, Making It Happen, and Matter. His insights will help you lead your team through any change.

Tiffani Bova

As Salesforce’s Growth and Innovation Evangelist, Tiffani Bova has simplified change and growth down to a formulaic science. She will customize a plan for any company to help them shift their practices to find optimal growth.

Mitch Lowe

Mitch Lowe focuses his change management strategies on being the disruptor and being a strong and reliable leader through it all. His time with Netflix, Redbox, and MoviePass has taught him how to lead a constantly evolving company.

Thomas Kolditz

Thomas Kolditz shares his experiences leading under extreme duress as a Brigadier General to you and your company. If he can coach you through a battle scenario, he can coach you through any change in the workplace.

Robyn Benincasa

Robyn Benincasa has learned from her experience adventure racing that part of adapting to change is shifting the team dynamics. Let her guide your company to help you put your best foot forward when approaching any challenging change.

See Below For More Top Keynote Speakers:

Top Culture and Teambuilding Keynote Speakers

All Top Keynote Speakers


The content writers at BigSpeak Speakers Bureau are Experts on the Experts. They hold doctoral, masters, and bachelors’ degrees in business, writing, literature, and education. Their business thought pieces are published regularly in leading business publications. Working in close association with the top business, entrepreneur, and motivational speakers, BigSpeak content writers are at the forefront of industry trends and research.

Use Backward Thinking to Propel Your Ideas Forward

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In former rocket scientist Ozan Varol’s forthcoming book Think Like a Rocket Scientist, Varol gives an introduction to the successful thinking strategies of…well…rocket scientists. These problem-solving strategies are the same thought processes that helped humankind reach the moon, land rovers on Mars, and innovate the galaxy. Some of them are pretty straight forward, but others are downright backward. So the next time you want to innovate or achieve a big goal, try doing the reverse, inverting, or backcasting.

To read more about these thinking strategies, read the article by Kyle Crocco, 3 Ways Backward Thinking Can Propel You Forward.

 

 

The Iron Cowboy Explains The Right Mindset for Success

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Extraordinary feats are within your grasp. If you’ve ever seen a colleague receive an award, watched an athlete cross a finish line, or read about an entrepreneur who sold their business for millions of dollars and thought, “That’s amazing but I could never do that,” you’re wrong. We’re all one decision away from getting on the path to extraordinary, says James Lawrence aka the Iron Cowboy.

We can all do something extraordinary if we use our minds. For five takeaways from Lawrence on how to improve your mindset for life and business, read the article “Why the long road to business success begins with the right mindset” by Kyle Crocco.

 

35 Things You Can Do To Give Better and More Memorable Speeches

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Did you ever wonder why some speeches are better than others? Some speakers just know how to dress up, open up a speech, use their body language, and leave us wanting more at the end. But how do they do it?

As a member of BigSpeak Speakers Bureau for over 20 years, I’ve learned a thing or 35 from watching, coaching, and working with the best business and keynote speakers from all over the world.

If you want to speak well, you need to master these six areas: dressing for success, managing stage fright, mastering body language, grabbing the audience’s attention, closing with a bang, and avoiding speech-killing phrases.

If you follow these 35 tips, I promise you’ll be delivering memorable and successful speeches in no time.

Dress for Speech Success

  1. Find out the dress code

Ask event planners about the dress code. Find out whether there are specific requirements for men and women in advance.

  1. Dress above average

When selecting your outfit, keep this rule of thumb in mind: dress as well, or slightly better, than your audience.

  1. Stand out from the stage

The environment of the venue is also worth a second thought. After all, that killer black dress won’t look as good if you’re standing in front of a black backdrop.

  1. Give yourself attire options

If you’re traveling, pack multiple outfits and accessories with varying degrees of formalness. Conference events, in particular, can range from highly formal to extremely casual.

  1. Dress comfortably

Feeling comfortable is even more important than color choices and heel height. With the right outfit, you’ll be free to deliver your speech with enthusiasm and move around the stage with passion.

Manage Your Stage Fright

  1. Master your topic

Master the topic before your speech by discussing your area of expertise in casual social settings, such as a dinner party or in the office break room. Spontaneously discussing your topic will help you to detect gaps in your knowledge, while also building confidence and fluency in your speech patterns.

  1. Bring a list of bullet points

On the day of your speech, bring a list of bullet points for quick reference, or even a full text of your speech, just in case you forget.

  1. Get off to a good start

Getting started is typically the hardest part for most orators. Memorize the first three lines of your speech to put yourself. Before you know, you’ll be halfway through your speech and feeling at ease.

  1. Breathe

Use deep breathing techniques prior to going out on stage. The “4-7-8” method is particularly helpful: inhale through your nose for the count of four, hold your breath for the count of seven, and exhale completely through your mouth for the count of eight. Repeat this three times and you will have noticeably calmed your nerves.

  1. Redefine fear

Trembling hands is actually a dose of adrenaline preparing you for the challenge you’re about to take on. Redefine this fear as what it really is: a positive mood enhancer that strengthens your resolve and narrows your focus.

  1. Focus on the audience

Zero in on something other than your racing thoughts. Connect with the audience by shaking hands and partaking in warm banter before your speech. Or latch on to a visual cue. Pay attention to the red jacket in the last row, or watch a pair of boots tapping on the floor.

Practice Good Body Language 

  1. Make purposeful eye contact

Connect with your audience by making meaningful eye contact. You’ll come off as cool, collected, and personable. Avoid simply locking onto one person in the front row for five straight minutes. Move around the room and try to make a connection with as many people as possible.

  1. Use engaging facial expressions

Your countenance needs to match the emotional message you’re sending. If you make a joke, lead with a smile. If you ask a direct question, look at your audience not the floor. If you’re giving a serious lecture, practice in a mirror to ensure to look pensive rather than furious.

  1. Gesture appropriately

People gauge your emotions by looking at your hands before you even begin to speak. By gesturing occasionally and decisively with open palms, you can indicate to your audience that you are confident and invested in the message of your speech. Be careful not to ball your hands into fists, which can convey fear or aggression. Open palms, on the other hand, communicate honesty and self-assurance.

  1. Limit the fidgeting

Unnecessary hand motion will distract from what you have to say. When you’re not making deliberate gestures, keep your arms still, either resting at your waist or by your side.

  1. Move deliberately

A few steps in one direction or another from the podium will make it seem as though you’re addressing the entirety of your audience. Just don’t go overboard with the pacing. Swinging back and forth across the stage like a pendulum conveys nervousness and uncertainty.

Grab Your Audience’s Attention

  1. Give your audience an exclusive experience

Let your audience know the talk is just for them. Start your speech off with an ingenious insider trick or a mind-blowing statistic from a study that hasn’t yet been released to the public.

  1. Crack a joke to break the ice

Did you hear the one about the boring presentation? No, you probably didn’t. Make them laugh with that first line. The audience will like you, and they’ll likely retain the actual substance of your presentation, too.

  1. Use a prop to make your point

If you set a massive pitcher down on the podium, your audience is going to wonder why. Including a prop will not only provoke curiosity, but it can dramatically make your point.

But don’t just use a prop to get attention. It needs to serve a purpose—otherwise, it’ll only distract from your message.

  1. Make a creative comparison

Use an analogy to showcase your capacity for analytical thought and provide the audience with context on a subject that might otherwise be new to them.

  1. Involve your audience

Nothing gets an audience’s attention like including them in the presentation. Participation can be encouraged with a question, an imagined scenario, or a makeshift poll that requires audience members to raise their hands in response.

Avoid Speech-Killing Phrases

  1. “I’m tired”

Whether you were up all night fretting about your speech, out drinking, or jet-lagged, there’s no reason to announce it (especially if you’re hungover). Great public speakers push through and deliver a great speech regardless of extenuating circumstances.

  1. “I’m nervous”

Experiencing anxiety before a public speaking engagement is perfectly normal, but using it as an excuse or framing it as a negative does you no good. See the tips on dealing with fear.

  1. “I’ll make this quick”

The audience has made the decision to invest their time in your presentation, so telling them you’ll “make it fast” not only devalues their investment—it’s most likely a promise you can’t keep.

  1. “Weren’t you listening?”

Never scold an audience member—Even if you very clearly answered someone’s question in an earlier slide, and they very clearly weren’t paying attention. Great lecturers are as gracious as they are informative, so remain patient and polite (no matter how irritated you may be on the inside).

  1. “I’ll come back to that”

If an unexpected question throws you off your rhythm, take advantage of the audience’s curiosity and enthusiasm and go with the flow. Answer directly, and if need be, skip ahead to the corresponding slide.

  1. “I’m not totally sure, but here goes…”

It’s okay to not know everything—but don’t offer a half-hearted or underdeveloped answer if you’re not sure of the correct response. In lieu of exposing your uncertainty, ask for the inquirer’s contact information and offer to get back to them after you’ve conducted more research.

  1. “I’m sorry”

A good speaker doesn’t apologize for a minor or perceived mistake; doing so only calls attention to something that would otherwise have gone unnoticed. If an audience member asks you to return to a previous slide for clarification or speak more loudly, you should happily oblige—but don’t draw attention to your misstep.

End Your Speech With A Bang

  1. Give a sound bite

Distill your message down to a memorable statement (or even a single word or phrase).  A simple takeaway is an effective way to communicate the core of your presentation.

  1. Share a surprising fact

Leaving your audience with a surprising (but related!) fact re-ignites engagement, keeping them interested long after they exit the auditorium.

  1. Make a call to action

Take advantage of the interest you’ve built with a specific call to action. Whether it’s joining a movement, buying your book, or contacting your organization, clearly communicate the next step that should follow from your presentation, and then inspire your audience to pursue it.

  1. Tell a story

Engage your audience with a concluding anecdote that ties back to the main points of your presentation to really make them stick (bonus tip: stories make great introductions, too).

  1. Ask a question

Ending with a question can both spur your audience to action and inspire immediate reflection on the points communicated during your presentation.

  1. Show an image (or video)

Most people are visual learners, so leverage that natural capacity with a powerful image or video at the end to drive your message home.

  1. Give “One more thing”

This attention-grabbing tactic acts as a kind of postscript—a final cherry on top of your presentation that can really make it shine, while also indicating that you are, in fact, wrapping up.

For More Advice on Public Speaking and Keynote Speaking:

How to Ace the Keynote Speaker Introduction

Tips For Managing Stage Fright


Items from this list were previously published in Inc., YFS, Speaker Magazine, and Business2Community.

Ken Sterling is the Executive Vice President at BigSpeak. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of California and an MBA from Babson College. Ken teaches Entrepreneurship, Marketing, and Strategy at UC Santa Barbara. He is a serial entrepreneur, keynote speaker, business consultant, and sales & marketing expert.

Kyle Crocco is an East Coast native and content creator for Big Speak. His career has taken him from authoring the Heroes, Inc series., to living and teaching abroad in France and China, to completing his Ph.D. in Education at the University of California-Santa Barbara. He is also the lead singer in Duh Professors, a local Santa Barbara band.

 

Top Health and Wellness Speakers

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As entrepreneurs and leaders know, employees’ health and wellness is the key to productivity and success. Employees who suffer from burnout have lower engagement and are more likely to leave, while sick employees can reduce overall productivity. On a national scale, healthcare implementation is constantly changing for small and large businesses alike. Some organizations like Amazon and Apple are trying to find their own solutions.

Whatever your health and wellness concern, BigSpeak has keynote speakers who are experts on your issues. Check out some of BigSpeak’s top health and wellness keynote speakers who can inform you about the future of healthcare, preventing worker burnout, and even improve your own well-being.

Shawn Achor

If you’re looking for joy in your life, Shawn Achor is a top keynote speaker on happiness and the New York Times bestselling author of The Happiness Advantage. His work has been featured on Oprah Winfrey, the Harvard Business Review, and in one of the most popular TED talks.

Jia Jiang 

Want to stay balanced by learning to handle rejection? Jia Jiang is a top resilience keynote speaker and bestselling author of Rejection Proof: How I Beat Fear and Became Invincible Through 100 Days of Rejection.

James Clear

Get your health and wellness on track with James Clear. Clear is a personal development keynote speaker and New York Times bestselling author of Atomic Habits. His entertaining talks teach audiences about small habits, decision-making, and continuous improvement.

Peter Attia, M.D.

If you’re looking for nutrition answers and longer life, Dr. Peter Attia is a health speaker, researcher, nutrition and longevity expert. He is the founder of Attia Medical, PC, a medical practice focusing on the applied science of longevity and optimal performance.

Robin Farmanfarmaian

Robin Farmanfarmaianis a healthcare expert, entrepreneur and angel investor who drives high-level business development for cutting edge medical and biotech companies poised to impact 100M people or more.

Dr. Robert Waldinger

Robert Waldinger is a life balance and happiness keynote speaker, psychiatrist, and current director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development. His research has inspired the famous TED talk: “What makes a good life? Lessons from the longest study on happiness.”

Libby Gill

If you’re looking for some hope, Libby Gill is a top keynote speaker on hope and the award-winning author of You Unstuck: Mastering the New Rules of Risk-taking in Work and Life. Gill uses her research on the science of hope to teach leaders how to inspire employees.

Daniel Kraft, M.D.

Daniel Kraft is a health and wellness keynote speaker, Stanford and Harvard trained physician-scientist, with over 25 years of experience. Kraft can speak to the future of healthcare and its impact on your business.

Tessa Morgan

If you’re suffering from stress and burnout, Tessa Todd Morgan is a health and wellness speaker and mindfulness expert. In her programs, Tessa leads people to recognize the invisible barriers that exist between them and their goals. Her talks will help you develop strategies for achieving goals by recognizing and neutralizing various forms of stress.

Max Lugavere

Learn about better eating and health from Max Lugavere a health and science journalist and author of the New York Times best-selling book Genius Foods: Become Smarter, Happier, and More Productive While Protecting Your Brain for Life.

José Morey

José Morey, M.D., is a health and technology keynote speaker and a consultant for NASA, IBM, and Hyperloop Transportation.  If you want to know where medicine and technology are going, he’s your speaker.

See Below For More Top Keynote Speakers:

Top Emotional Intelligence Keynote Speakers

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All Top Keynote Speakers

 


The content writers at BigSpeak Speakers Bureau are Experts on the Experts. They hold doctoral, masters, and bachelors’ degrees in business, writing, literature, and education. Their business thought pieces are published regularly in leading business publications. Working in close association with the top business, entrepreneur, and motivational speakers, BigSpeak content writers are at the forefront of industry trends and research.

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Spirit at Work: What is it? How do we get it?

As seen on BigSpeak.com

Spirit at Work or Esprit de Corps is usually used to describe good morale in the military, but can easily be assigned to the good feelings engendered in any group or team aspiring to accomplish something significant. What are the key components that go into creating a spirited work environment where members feel aligned and ready to do what it takes to be excellent?

The first component is to have a common and compelling vision of a service or product that all members of your team can rally around, invest in and be inspired by. This vision is continually evolving and is sensitive to the needs of the marketplace, one’s customers, the competitive environment and the individuals and culture of your organization.

Secondly, what are the bedrock values of your organization? Only after you have done the deep work of ascertaining the values that will drive you forward in good times and bad do you have a chance to create a workplace culture that will attract high performers who resonate with your vision and values and who will bring the full power of their potential to their work each day.

The third component of Spirit at work is having a team composed of individuals who are internally motivated to excel and serve with extraordinary dedication. This quality I like to call “Fire in the Belly!” and it is something that cannot be taught. Someone either has it or they don’t. “Hire for attitude, train for knowledge!” is the motto that has served me well over the years as I have put high performance teams together.

Next is having what Jim Collins, author of Good to Great, calls having the right people in the right seats on the bus. Being able to assess someone’s capabilities and tendencies in order to give him or her the right job and support is key. There are many personality and temperament tests such as Myers/Briggs, StrengthFinders and DISC that help reflect where someone will excel.

Solid communication of what is expected of the team and individuals is essential to manifesting spirit at work as well. New workers need more monitoring and direction while more experienced individuals can be given more latitude and responsibility. Conversely, new, younger employees don’t usually come with a lot of poor habits and baggage, while more seasoned employees can have bad as well as good habits fully engrained that are hard to change.

Lastly, smart, competent, self-driven team members like to surround themselves with other intelligent and accountable individuals so hire smart and then be sure that relevant and inspiring training and development opportunities are offered on a regular basis to all team members. Smart, engaged employees always want to up their game in regards to skills, capabilities and taking advantage of growth and career expansion opportunities.

Best of success in capitalizing on these key components to creating a team and organization that exemplifies Spirit at Work!


Jonathan Wygant is Chairman and founder of BigSpeak, Inc. the largest business-oriented speakers bureau, focused on serving the Fortune 1000 and multinational companies worldwide.  When he’s not brainstorming with other members of the Big Team or working on personal development, he can often be found golfing, volunteering, and spending time with his family.