Baseball Hall of Famer Dave Winfield Chats With Derek Jeter About Success, Business, and Community Service

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“I didn’t know what it was gonna take to get here and all I can say is that had I known that I was gonna be up here one day, I sure would have saved all my rookie cards.”

Dave Winfield, Hall of Fame Induction Speech

If you know baseball, you know Hall of Famer Dave Winfield. Besides an impressive MLB career spanning 22 years, more than 3,000 hits, and over 450 home runs, Winfield holds the distinction of the only athlete ever drafted into four professional sports leagues—NBA, ABA, NFL, and MLB—and the first active athlete to create a 501(c)(3) charitable foundation.

After years of working as an analyst for Fox Sports and ESPN, Winfield now splits his time between working for the MLB Players Association, delivering well-received motivational keynotes, and moderating talks like the one he did with baseball legend Derek Jeter on Sept. 25 in Santa Barbara.

Though Winfield and Jeter played in different eras of the game, they were no strangers. The two first met when Jeter was a rookie. Winfield recalled speaking at a rookie career development seminar and how Jeter peppered him with questions over the course of the event. A relationship was formed and they kept in contact throughout Jeter’s career.

Over the course of a half-hour moderated talk at the Ritz-Carlton Bacara Hotel, Winfield deftly guided Jeter through questions about sports, business, and community service; success and leadership, and brands for companies and individuals.

The two found common ground on giving a voice to players. Winfield gives voice to baseball players as a member of the MLB Players Association while Derek Jeter gives players a voice through his new media service, The Players’ Tribune, where players can connect directly to fans in their own words.

The two giants of baseball also connected on what it takes to succeed in the sport. They both agreed you need to be surrounded by a good team. Jeter was fortunate to have a supportive family as well as meeting other successful athletes, like Michael Jordan, to guide him through the process of being in the national spotlight.

Not only did they agree it was important to have a good team, but to do well, you must also be quiet and listen. When you listen you learn a lot more.

After the moderated talk, Winfield took a few moments to share that he is now working with the MLB Players Association on post-career opportunities for players.

If you’re interested in booking Winfield for a motivational talk, leadership keynote, or moderated session, and learning more about his past or current endeavors contact BigSpeak Speakers Bureau.


Kyle Crocco is the Content Marketing Coordinator at BigSpeak Speakers Bureau, a graduate of UC Santa Barbara, and the lead singer of Duh Professors. He regularly publishes business book reviews and thought articles on Medium, Business 2 Community, and Born 2 Invest.

Moderated Sessions Are Better Than Keynote Déjà Vu

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You take a seat in the audience. The lights go down. The speaker bounds out on stage to a burst of applause. The presentation is smooth, polished, funny — but something is off. You’re not laughing, and the material feels stale. This is a big name, a New York Times bestselling author. Yet, somehow, you’re not feeling it.

Then it hits you. You’ve seen this exact presentation before on YouTube. The only difference between this keynote and the speech the presenter gave at the last conference you attended is the company name and logo on the PowerPoint deck. If you feel had, imagine how the rest of the audience feels. Wonder what those “smile sheets” will reveal in the post-session surveys?

Don’t panic. There’s a cure for keynote déjà vu: moderated sessions.

This format is also great for showcasing big-name celebrities. While your typical celebrity gives a great performance on film — after 14 takes, great lighting and a bunch of editing — they usually don’t knock it out of the park with a keynote. Part of it is their performance, and part of it is your expectations of perfection. BUT…imagine, if you will, a magic potion that makes it all better.

A.K.A. the fireside chat
I have to admit that when I first started in the speaker industry, I wasn’t a big fan of the moderated session. I thought, why do you want to sit in on someone else’s conversation when you can see a speaker bang out the three points you need to know to “shift paradigms for a pivotal game changer”? (Gag!).

But after seeing hundreds of keynotes, I now understand moderated sessions not only liven up a conference, but they can also be more powerful than the classic three-point presentation. Unlike your standard keynote, moderated sessions are customizable, smooth, conversational and intimate, no matter how large the crowd.

Intimate setting
Take your typical keynote: In the middle of the stage sits a lectern and a huge screen. During the talk, the speaker either stands behind the lectern or paces back and forth across the stage, clicker in hand, gesturing to the screen. There is a clear separation between the role of speaker and audience and, usually, no interaction.

Moderated sessions on the other hand have a cozy feel. Instead of a lectern, there are two comfortable chairs facing each other as if the speaker and the moderator were in a living room together. The intimate feel puts the audience at ease, makes the speakers relaxed and produces a much deeper and personal experience.

Role of the moderator
Another big difference of moderated sessions is the control the moderator has. The person running things onstage can be someone from inside the organization or another expert in the field, as long as he or she has insight into the industry and the speaker.

Having the right moderator changes the dynamic. The best moderator is someone energetic, funny and quick-witted. It’s their job to control the pace of the session, to give enough time for answers and steer the conversation in whatever direction best engages the audience to keep everyone involved. They are a friend, storyteller and emcee rolled into one.

The key is in the questions
But the biggest difference in terms of the experience are the questions. In your standard keynote, you get great ideas packed into a short time frame. Questions, if any, come at the Q&A and are usually rushed, as the speaker has other obligations.

A moderated session, on the other hand, allows the questioner to unpack those ideas and go much deeper than would be the case in your standard canned speech. The questions moderators ask can yield details and stories relevant to the audience. The conversational nature also allows for surprise insights or an exclusive story not delivered in a standard session.

The moderator can ask very specific questions about current events, the industry, the company and even how ideas relates to the exact attendees sitting in the audience. Audiences come away feeling they have learned something relevant and unique.

Adventure Time: First Jobs of Legendary Travelers

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written by Chris Taylor

“Life is either a daring adventure or nothing.”

So said Helen Keller, and a few adventurous souls have taken those words to heart. Rather than sitting at a desk or punching a timecard, you will find them cycling around the world, climbing a Himalayan peak or performing another feat of human endurance.

But of course, a career does not start atop Everest. Every big life begins in places that are laughably small. For the latest in Reuters’ First Jobs series, a few legendary adventurers share stories of the first steps on their epic journeys.

Robyn Benincasa

Two-time Adventure Racing world champion; Founder, Project Athena

First job: Chuck E. Cheese

I used to live right down the street from Chuck E. Cheese (a restaurant and arcade chain aimed at families) in Tempe, Arizona. On my first day they gave me a few options, like working the skee-ball area or giving out tickets, and I said: Not so much. Then they said, ‘Well, you could be Chuck E. Cheese,’ and I said yes. (Chuck E. Cheese is the chain’s mouse mascot.)

There were a few drawbacks to that. One is that you are not allowed to say any words or make any sounds, which is difficult when you have little kids hanging off you all day long. There are some evil children in the world.

Also, many times they had me walk on the street corner in order to attract people in. Keep in mind this was in the Phoenix area, so it was 100 degrees, and I was inside a big furry costume. It was excellent heat training for my later adventures.

I used to use a whole can of Lysol before putting that costume head on. God knows how many years of sweat were collected in there. The final drawback was that the only break area was a little place under the stairs, and the other employee who used it was a 40-year-old clown. He didn’t say much, but he looked at me a lot. So I spent way too much time under the stairs with the creepy clown guy.

Alastair Humphreys

Four-year bicycle journey around the world; National Geographic Adventurer of the Year

First job: Street advertising

The summer after I left school, I needed to earn enough money for a plane ticket to Africa, to escape from the claustrophobically boring countryside. I worked on minimum wage for Ye Olde Mill Shop in Skipton (Britain). I had to stand on the street wearing a sandwich board and holding a sign pointing toward the shop. Time dragged, my feet ached something chronic, and on one particularly hot day I almost fainted and had to be revived by the local greengrocer.

But I made it. I earned enough money for that plane ticket to Africa. And stepping out for the very first time into the bright sunshine, heat and smells of that new continent was made all the more thrilling for those hours, days and weeks in the sandwich board. A new life was about to begin.

Bear Grylls

Former British Army survival instructor; Host, multiple TV shows including Man vs Wild and Running Wild

First job: Martial arts instructor

The first job I ever had was straight after leaving school. I realized that if I wanted to explore the world, then step one was to save some funds. My ambition was to travel to northern India to climb and get to see the mighty Himalayas close up.

I initially tried being a waiter, but quickly found I wasn’t good at that at all. It would have taken me forever to save enough money. The restaurant definitely did not draw high rollers who tipped well.

I figured that working for myself would be smarter, more fun and get me to the mountains faster. But the only skills I had were climbing and martial arts. I figured there could be a market teaching effective self-defense skills to busy professionals.

I dropped leaflets on 100 streets in the area of London that my sister lived in (where I could sleep on her sofa) and hired the local hall. Within a month I had saved enough for the airfare, and after three months I was good to go. My journey in life had begun.

(The writer is a Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed are his own.)

Editing by Beth Pinsker and Cynthia Osterman

 

Every Story We Tell Ourselves About Work Is Wrong. Here’s How to Change the Narrative

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When Eric Termuende started looking for work, he was overwhelmed by the lack of interest from the business community. Despite being Vice President of the University of Calgary’s Students’ Union, serving as Class Ambassador for his graduating class, and having a Bachelors in Commerce in Business Process Management, only one company wanted so much as an interview with him. They were simply…not…interested.

But it wasn’t just Termuende who was having a problem with work. His peers were landing jobs but quickly realizing the job wasn’t for them. Top companies would hire these new recruits, train them for months, give them all the skills they needed to succeed in the workplace, and then they would quit.

This situation wasn’t just bad for workers but also for companies. After investing time and money in new candidates, companies would have nothing to show for the effort and have to start the hiring process again.

Termuende knew something was wrong with the hiring process—good quality candidates weren’t being hired, and those who were hired were leaving jobs after being trained. Something needed to be fixed.

The story we tell about work isn’t working

Termuende decided to investigate the issue. Instead of continuing his fruitless job search, he co-founded his own work consulting company (which has lead to NoW Innovations), to help workers and companies understand each other, tell a better story, and improve the experience at work.

After consulting with companies and interviewing workers and human resource personnel, Termuende saw there was a disconnect. Companies were telling one story about work at their company in the recruiting process and workers were finding a different story when they began their jobs.

One of the problems Termuende saw was companies were only offering applicants a limited view of a job’s duties. For example, if a company posted a job listing for an accountant, the skills and qualifications for the position would be remarkably similar across companies and industries. However, the real story of the job for an accountant in a startup versus a nonprofit versus a Fortune 500 company would be vastly different. One company might have more family-friendly policies and a pleasant company culture of recognition whereas another company might have high pay, isolation, and anonymity. Same job listing, two vastly different stories.

Furthermore, job advertisements did not take in account the holistic story of work. Before the invasive technology of today, work had been compartmentalized. Our workday began at 8 and ended at 5. When we went home, our home life started. With text, emails, notifications, and updates, our work and home life now bleed into each other. This reality—the expectations of being available outside of work hours—was never accounted for in the job description.

How to change the work narrative

After doing hundreds of interviews, the basis of his bestselling book Rethink Work, Termuende discovered that people’s psychological needs were not being addressed. Loosely based on Maslow’s hierarchy, Termuende saw part of the problem was a lack of community and a lack of a sense of belonging in the workplace. While diversity and inclusion were important for our work cultures, he saw a pressing need for more connection and trust at work.

To create this connection, Termuende suggests companies do two things. First, they need to tell a better story of their environment and expectations. Job descriptions should include the reality of the workplace, its culture, and its mission. Termuende points out when companies keep putting out the same ads, as with accountants, they will end up with the same problem of hiring workers who don’t fit the culture or conversely, workers whose needs are not met by the position.

Second, companies need to optimize their workplace to create the connection and trust employees are looking for. Termuende works with companies to improve their mission statements, to clarify work policies, and better design their work environment. For example, he helps clarify work policies for when people are expected to be on and off work so people can better understand the work-life balance.

He also suggests creating work environments that encourage collaboration and interaction rather than isolation. Not necessarily open office environments, but finding the right mix of privacy and collaboration spaces so people can be part of the community and also concentrate enough to get their work done.

In the end, Termuende says, the story of work comes down to basic human needs. Once employees feel more connected, they will feel a sense of belonging, be more engaged, and stay with their company longer. But this will only happen when companies change the story they are telling about work.


Kyle Crocco is the Content Marketing Coordinator at BigSpeak Speakers Bureau, a graduate of UC Santa Barbara, and the lead singer of Duh Professors. He regularly publishes business book reviews and thought articles on Medium, Business 2 Community, and Born 2 Invest.

Apple Cleared to Buy Shazam, Giving Apple Music a Competitive Edge

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After a four month investigation, the European Union has cleared the sale of Chris Barton’s music-identifying app, Shazam, to Apple, giving Apple Music the competitive edge it needs to compete with Spotify. With a growing distrust of American tech companies, Apple’s acquisition was stalled by the EU in order to ensure the sale did not restrict competition.

Apple has yet to announce how much they are paying for Shazam, but with the recent spike in Spotify’s popularity, they are in need of a saving grace like Shazam. While the music identifying software alone is enough to secure Apple’s future as an innovator, the massive amounts of data that comes with it are the real appeal.

Shazam has over 100 million monthly active users and more than 500 million mobile device users. With individual data on each user, Apple’s opportunities to enrich the customer experience are endless.


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.

Boost Your Growth IQ With Tiffani Bova

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Business keynote speaker Tiffani Bova has spent years turning company leaders into Einsteins of innovation by boosting their growth IQ. She works as Salesforce’s lead Growth Expert, introducing companies to inventive business models that allow them to grow bigger, but more importantly better. Prior to her time at Salesforce she served as Gartner’s Distinguished Analyst and Research Fellow for ten years. Her latest book Growth IQ was a top pick for Inc. Magazine’s summer reads and provides insights from her research and work developing companies of all sizes into sustainable giants.

Bova simplifies the chaos of an exploding business by helping leaders learn to make the right series of choices at the right time. In her time at Salesforce, she has realized there are essentially only ten growth patterns that all companies fall into. But with her help, you can choose your growth plan and map out your route to success. Bova takes the guessing game out of growth and guides your company through the confusion.

She researched twenty-one companies whose growth made them number one in its industry, including Netflix, Kylie Jenner, Red Bull, Amazon, and Marvel; and nine companies who missed a rung on the ladder to the top and found themselves back at the bottom. Her unique insights will boost your Growth IQ and empower you to choose a growth path of your own that will make you the next Netflix of your industry.

Bova is a regular contributor to Forbes, Harvard Business Review, Marketing Matters on Wharton Business Radio – SiriusXM and Huffington Post in addition to a variety of industry-leading podcasts. Her own podcast “What’s Next! with Tiffani Bova” has featured guests from Guy Kawasaki to Dan Pink, became one of the top 100 business and marketing podcasts on iTunes in 2017, and won top Sales and Marketing Podcast by Top Sales Magazine. She was also recently recognized as one of Inc. Magazine’s 37 Sales Experts You Need to Follow on Twitter, a LinkedIn Top Sales Influencer, a Brand Quarterly Magazine Top 50 Marketing Thought Leader, and one of the most Powerful and Influential Women in California according to the National Diversity Council.

Tiffani speaks on…

Building Your Growth IQ: Get Smarter About Building Your Company’s Future: Why do so many of the most promising businesses fail to achieve consistent, sustainable growth? It’s because they try the same strategy as everyone else. There’s no one-size-fits-all strategy—a winning strategy for one business may spell doom for another. In this eye-opening talk, customer growth and innovation expert Tiffani Bova draws on her expertise as a consultant and practitioner to devise a new framework for business leaders looking to pursue growth. Audiences will come away with knowledge of the ten simple—but easily misunderstood—growth paths, how to get a handle on their particular business context, and the right combination and sequence of growth paths to take them into the future.

But Do They Love It? The Customer Experience Imperative: How can you grow your sales beyond your initial client bases? One of the best ways is to provide a positive customer experience. But with the proliferation of technology and devices, the customer is now smarter and more powerful than ever. Macro trends such as social, mobile, cloud, big data, and IoT are forging a new era of engagement where the consumers are more disruptive than the technology itself. So how will you help your customers—and your own firm—connect? In this engaging talk, Tiffani Bova, will address how companies of all sizes can create new business practices that leverage technology to strengthen customer relationships and accelerate sales and growth. Attendees will hear actionable takeaways on how to create a customer-centric business and long-lasting brand loyalty.

The Future of Sales: Creating New Buying Experience

Innovation + Culture Is the New Winning Combination

 

Kim Perell’s Execution Factor

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In her early 20s, Kim Perell was broke and jobless. By 30, she was a multimillionaire and running a $100 million dollar, global company. Now, Kim wants to teach all aspiring entrepreneurs and business owners her method for success in her new book, The Execution Factor: That One Skill That Drives Success.

Kim Perell is an award-winning entrepreneur, executive, angel investor, and CEO of a global marketing technology company, Amobee. Laid off from her first job at an internet startup, Kim began her journey as an entrepreneur from her kitchen, becoming a multi-millionaire by the time she was 30, and selling her last company for $235 million in 2014.

Kim has been named one of AdAge’s Marketing Technology Trailblazers, Business Insider’s Most Powerful Women in Mobile Advertising, is an Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year, and has been profiled by CNN Money, The New York Times, and Forbes. Kim’s passion is to help young entrepreneurs achieve success. She is an early stage angel investor in over 70 startups, 14 of which have successfully been acquired by some of the largest Fortune 500 companies.

Perell attributes her success to her ability to execute and believes that execution is a skill that can be learned. With The Execution Factor, she is outlining the five traits required to master the skill of execution and become a successful entrepreneur: vision, passion, action, resilience and relationships.

Designed to help entrepreneurs and business owners achieve their goals—rather than simply dream about achieving them—The Execution Factor is Kim’s first book.

10 Common Themes in Healthcare Leaders’ Strategies

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What’s going on in healthcare? How will changes in technology, law, and demographics change the type of care hospitals give—for the better or the worse? Healthcare keynote speaker and top healthcare futurist, Ian Morrison, has the answers. He examined the current climate of the industry and found 10 healthcare trends that will be shaping our doctors, hospitals, and insurance providers in the future.

The following trends were abstracted from his original article: read Morrison’s full article here.

1. Strategic growth

Every health system I’ve ever worked with is trying to grow.

The primary vehicle is not growth through acquisition (although mergers do continue) but organic growth from (1) increasing market share in primary service territory for key service lines and (2) extending into geographically contiguous markets by planting footprints such as ambulatory care centers or primary care physician networks to capture referrals from competitors.

2. Consumer engagement

Healthcare administrators are recognizing that they need to pay better attention to consumer decisions. Increasingly, consumers have high-deductible plans and more responsibility to select plans and providers and to decide on patterns of care (including forgoing care because of cost or seeking out lower-cost alternatives).

Health system leaders are focusing on engaging consumers by establishing convenient locations, flexible hours of operation and creative use of new consumer-facing technologies. Health systems such as Providence have been pioneers in this area.

3. Physician relationships

In every strategic plan I have seen in the last five years, physician relationships are among the top three priorities. This takes many forms. Much of the focus is on both clinical and economic integration with physicians to improve care performance and enhance provider loyalty. While not every health system is on the path to formal vertical integration such as Kaiser’s, almost all health systems have embarked on some form of economic integration with doctors.

4. Quality and patient safety

It has been almost 20 years since the Institute of Medicine recognized patient safety concerns in its landmark To Err Is Human report. Critics argue we have made very little real progress in two decades, despite significant attention to the problem.

But I take a more positive view: My experience is that every health system has put quality and patient safety high on its strategic agenda. Each picks an “operating system” or strategic framework for quality, whether it be Lean, Six Sigma or High Reliability. The systems develop focused initiatives within this broader framework, such as falls prevention or reducing health care associated infections. They select specific measures and develop an accountability path to monitor progress and take corrective action. And they develop governance frameworks (whether it be clinical councils, as in the case of Memorial Hermann in Houston, or “physician compacts,” as in Seattle’s Virginia Mason) to engage physicians directly in governing the activities of clinical improvement.

5. Innovation at scale

Over the last decade, partly as a consequence of investment under the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, American health care has come into the digital age—electronic health records in hospitals and physicians’ offices have become ubiquitous. The EHR has become table stakes for care delivery.

New opportunities are emerging with innovations: Some technologies support population health and data analytics; others such as consumer-facing apps will help engage consumers. Other promising technologies will assist physicians and other caregivers to manage the hassle factor of EHRs, including voice recognition technologies. For example, health care accounts for a full half of Nuance Communications’ business. (Nuance is the leading speech recognition technology vendor.)

6. Culture and people

Almost all health systems have a value-based culture that is manifestly important to the mission of the organization and guides the strategy and behavior of the organization. Many systems are faith-based and guided by the principles and values of their religious sponsors. Many systems have adopted Don Berwick’s Triple Aim as their north star.

Other systems such as OhioHealth or Atlantic Health strive to be a best place to work in their community and benchmark themselves against other leading national employers. Across the country, health system leaders are passionate about creating an engaged workforce, and are building respect, reliability, retention and resilience among their employees.

7. Value and affordability

As financial pressures intensify, with public payment rates likely to be constrained over the long haul and private purchasers concerned about their cost for health care, health systems are trying to work on their underlying cost structure and identify opportunities to improve value and affordability for various customers. But each stakeholder sees value somewhat differently.

8. Clinical differentiation

Most health systems have identified three or four top critical priority areas; however, in my experience, it always ends up being the same three or four: orthopedics, cancer, cardiovascular and neurosurgery, which happen to be where the money is. Very few hospitals claim to be specializing in morbidly obese patients with behavioral health issues or the frail elderly or care for the homeless. Just sayin’.

9. Financial sustainability

All health systems have a strategic priority for financial stability or financial stewardship. As the cliché goes: No money, no mission. Every health system must obsess over the financial hydraulics of payer mix (managing the relative balance of unprofitable Medicare and Medicaid business against more profitable commercially insured patients). As public payment grows because of an aging society and widening income inequality, health systems are anticipating a tightening financial future, a future that would be even tighter if coverage is eroded.

10. Population health and risk-bearing strategy

The one approach with a significant variation in strategy is population health and overall risk-bearing strategy. I have written at length on both of these, most recently about population health, so I refer you to a previous column.

Health system leaders diverge in their attitudes toward risk bearing. At one extreme are those who want no part at all of risk bearing in any form beyond modest pay-for-performance incentives. (This may be a third to a half of all hospitals in the country, according to Nielsen/Harris surveys.) In the middle of the spectrum is clinical integration, where administrators are beyond dabbling and are making very serious efforts to integrate with physicians to contract with health plans – and to embrace improvement in clinical performance on a systematic basis with an aligned medical staff.

BigSpeak President Barrett Cordero Awarded 40 Under 40

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BigSpeak is celebrating President Barrett Cordero’s success as he has been recognized by Pacific Coast Business Times as one of this year’s Tri-Counties 40 Under 40.

Since Cordero moved from Sales Agent and Consultant to President of BigSpeak in 2014, the company has nearly tripled in size. Within the last two years, BigSpeak has hired 17 new employees and grown their business internationally.

BigSpeak is proud to have such a dedicated and promising leader and intends to grow their business under his direction to serve even a larger percentage of the Fortune 1000 and other global leaders.

Under his leadership, the company has acquired top thought leaders and innovators as exclusive keynote speakers, including Marc Randolph (co-founder of Netflix), Tan Le (founder of Emotiv brainwear), Fredrik Eklund (Million Dollar Listing), Bethenny Frankel (Real Housewives), Adam Cheyer (co-creator of Siri), Molly Bloom (poker entrepreneur, subject of the 2017 Aaron Sorkin film, Molly’s Game), Chris Barton (co-creator of Shazam) and Jonas Kjellberg (co-creator of Skype).

Other additions to the 40 Under 40 list are AppFolio’s Nat Kunes and Whitney Kopf, Jillian Lipinski from American Riviera Banks, and David Valazques from the Santa Barbara Zoo. This next generation is reshaping leadership and the economy of the tri-county area.

EVP, Ken Sterling said about Cordero, “Working with Barrett over these last five and a half years has been epic.  He’s a great leader, very patient and growth-oriented. We’ve got a great team and that’s a big part of Barrett’s doing.” Our results over the last 5 years speak for themselves and if you like those – wait and see where we are in another 5.”

Matthew Luhn’s Business Book, The Best Story Wins, is Now Available

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Top creativity keynote speaker Matthew Luhn releases his business book today, The Best Story Wins: How to Leverage Pixar Style Storytelling in Business and Beyond, helping bridge the gap between cold, data-driven businesses and the story of their brand that warms our hearts and sells their product and service.

Animated movies have transfixed viewers around the world and stirred a hunger in creative and corporate realms to adopt new and more impactful ways of telling stories to reach audiences. Former Pixar and The Simpsons animator and story artist, Matthew Luhn translates his two and a half decades of storytelling techniques and concepts to the CEOs, advertisers, marketers and creatives in the business world and beyond. He has extensive experience in the world of storytelling due to helping develop the award-winning movies Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Monsters Inc., Finding Nemo, Cars, Ratatouille, UP, Toy Story 3, and Monsters University.

In The Best Story Wins, Luhn gives a fresh perspective on the principles of great storytelling from how to hook an audience to using universal themes to help those in the world of sales, marketing, speaking, politics, and branding write a better story. Readers get an insider’s perspective on creative techniques and strategies to turn an average story into a great one.

Using personal stories and storytelling insights, Storytelling for Business and Beyond retells the “Hero’s Journey” story building methods through the lens of the Hollywood films to help business minds embrace the power of storytelling for themselves.

You can order your copy of Matthew Luhn’s The Best Story Wins on Amazon now to start putting your creative energy towards building a brand your consumers will remember and love.

Top 25 Most Watched BigSpeak Videos in July 2018

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Which keynote speakers are taking the internet by storm with their viral videos? What keynote topics are people most curious about? We went to our BigSpeak YouTube channel to find out.

Dr. Peter Attia, with his talk on longevity, holds the top spot on our list (and probably will if we all live longer). But our big movers this July are BigSpeak’s exclusive keynote speakers Molly Bloom and Mitch Lowe, jumping a combined 5 spots on this month’s list. Molly is motivating audiences everywhere with her thrilling life lessons from her memoir Molly’s Game and Mitch is not only disrupting the movie industry with MoviePass, he is also instilling the disruption mindset into his audiences.

Read the complete list to find out what ideas are moving the world today.

Top 25 Most-Watched BigSpeak Videos on YouTube in July 2018

  1. Peter Attia – Reverse engineered approach to human longevity
  2. Linda K Thaler – Grit and Resilience
  3. Bob Arno – Comedy Pickpocket show world’s best pickpocket
  4. Kevin O’Leary – Keynote at Notre Dame
  5. Molly Bloom – Summit 2018
  6. Marcus Lemonis – Business Advice from The Profit
  7. Marcus Lemonis – How to Move Your Business Forward
  8. Dave Dravecky – Two Comebacks
  9. Christopher Gardner – Motivational Speaker, Inspiration for the Movie “The Pursuit of Happynesss”
  10. Robert Herjavec – How Rich People Think 5+Things They Won’t Tell You
  11. Derek Sivers – How to start a movement
  12. James Lloyd – Motivational Humorist, Customer Service and Corporate Training Expert, Keynote Speaker
  13. Lisa Nichols – Motivational Speaker, Life Coach, Teacher and Best-Selling Author
  14. Erik Qualman – Socialnomics 2018
  15. Linda Cliatt Wayman – How to fix a broken school Lead fearlessly, love hard
  16. Mitch Lowe – The Culture of Disruption
  17. Molly Bloom – GeniusX
  18. Molly Bloom – International Women’s Day
  19. Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev – Renowned Yogi, Visionary & Guru, Isha Foundation Founder, Keynote Speaker
  20. Simon T  Bailey – The Experience
  21. Bob Nelson- Employee Motivation, Reward, Retention and Recognition Expert, Keynote Speaker
  22. Matt Abrahams – Workshop Compelling and Confident Communication 1
  23. Mitch Lowe – MoviePass CEO Looks to Blockchain for Business Boom
  24. Peter Zeihan – WM Executive Sustainability Forum
  25. Sebastian Terry – The List

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.

Woz and Bloom Placing Bets

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Co-founder of Apple Inc., Steve Wozniak, went big and took the pot at this year’s cryptocurrency convention, ChainXChange. Bold move going up against poker entrepreneur Molly Bloom. Whether she let him win or not is up for debate; either way, there was nothing but smiles backstage as they prepared for their keynote speeches.

The two turned out to be long-time fans of each other and we’re happy to share a round of poker (just for fun, no money lost) before hitting the stage.

Check out the full story at TMZ.com