The Leadership Keynote Speakers Who Change How People Lead
Leadership is decided in behavior, not titles, which is why the right leadership keynote speaker can shift how an entire organization shows up. The ones who teach it best are usually the ones who’ve led, fallen, and led again.
The best leadership keynote speakers refuse to traffic in clichés. Each takes a sharp, specific angle, trust, resilience, listening, accountability, change, or presence, rather than a generic call to inspire.
A great leadership keynote speaker tells the truth, makes it usable Monday morning, and models the leadership they teach. The speakers below each bring a different edge to that.
A note on selection and order: I’ve personally seen every speaker here present; that’s my bar for including anyone. They’re listed alphabetically by last name, not ranked, because this is a curated selection rather than a leaderboard. And yes, I’ve included myself; it would be odd to leave my own name off a list I stand behind.
Simon T. Bailey
Simon is the one to reignite a room that’s lost its spark. A former Disney leader, he speaks on brilliance and human potential, moving people and organizations from stuck to soaring. His warmth is impossible to fake, which is exactly why audiences trust him with the hard stuff. For teams that need their belief restored before their behavior can change, Simon is the one.
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Ty Bennett
Ty’s lane is influence that comes from connection, not authority. A masterful storyteller, he shows leaders how to inspire rather than direct and build the kind of buy-in that actually lasts. His Partnership is the New Leadership message reframes the boss-employee dynamic as a genuine alliance. For leaders shifting from command to collaboration, Ty makes the transition feel both doable and overdue.
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Ross Bernstein
Ross spent years and more than a thousand interviews decoding what separates championship teams, and turned it into The Champion’s Code. His angle is integrity and accountability, how the unwritten rules of elite sports translate into winning the right way in business. The stories are vivid, but the throughline is always culture and ethics. For leaders building a culture of excellence with a moral compass, Ross delivers both inspiration and a standard.
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Sylvie di Giusto
Full disclosure, that’s me. I focus on leadership presence: how a leader’s appearance, behavior, communication, digital footprint, and environment (my ABCDE Power of Choice framework) quietly decide whether people trust and follow them. Drawing on two decades inside Fortune 100 organizations, I help leaders turn the signals they send on autopilot into deliberate choices. And I deliver it as the world’s first 3D immersive holographic keynote, so the lesson is experienced, not merely heard.
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David Horsager
David built his career on one measurable idea: trust is the bottom line. His Trust Edge framework turns trust from a feel-good value into a concrete driver of performance, retention, and growth, with eight pillars leaders can actually work on. The research backing makes it credible to data-minded executives. For any leader who knows trust matters but has never had a real way to build it, David provides the blueprint.
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Carey Lohrenz
As one of the first female F-14 Tomcat pilots, Carey speaks on fearless leadership and high performance under extreme pressure. She teaches teams to execute with clarity and courage when the stakes, and the speed, are at their highest. Her flight-deck stories make abstract leadership ideas suddenly concrete and urgent. For organizations navigating high-stakes change, she brings a calm, commanding credibility few can match.
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Allison Massari
Allison survived burns over half her body and turned that fire into one of the most moving messages in our field. Where others frame resilience as strategy, Allison speaks to the human spirit, compassion, healing, and the strength to keep leading through pain and change. Audiences are visibly transformed, not just informed. Especially powerful for healthcare and any room carrying a heavy load, she leaves people changed.
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Joe Mull
Joe tackles the retention crisis head-on. His Employalty work shows managers how to become bosses worth staying for, making commitment, not just engagement, the goal. He’s refreshingly specific about what managers should actually do differently on Monday. For any organization quietly bleeding good people, Joe turns a vague worry into an action plan.
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John Register
A Paralympic medalist and Army veteran who lost his leg clearing a hurdle, John teaches resilience as a discipline, not a slogan. His “hurdling adversity” and Amputate to Elevate frameworks help leaders decide what to release so their teams can move through change. He’s living proof that a setback can be re-engineered into an advantage. For organizations facing hard transitions, John offers both heart and a method.
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Mark Sanborn
Mark’s gift is proving leadership has nothing to do with title. His classic The Fred Factor turned an ordinary mail carrier into a global lesson on everyday excellence, how anyone, at any level, makes their work extraordinary. Decades in, his message has only grown more relevant as organizations flatten. For companies that want leadership living everywhere, not just at the top of the org chart, Mark is foundational.
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Mark Scharenbroich
Mark’s Emmy-winning “Nice Bike” message is about the small acts of acknowledgment and connection that make people want to belong. He shows leaders how recognition, done genuinely, builds engaged, connected teams. He’s disarmingly funny, which lets the deeper point about human connection land without feeling soft. For cultures that have gone transactional, Mark is a warm, memorable course-correction.
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Marilyn Sherman
Marilyn’s message is simple and sticky: stop sitting in the balcony, get in the front row of your own life and leadership. She moves leaders and teams out of excuses and into ownership of their goals, with infectious energy. Behind the motivation is a real push toward accountability. For events that need a high-energy lift that still leaves people with something to do, Marilyn fits.
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Liz Weber
Liz tackles the unglamorous work that decides whether a company outlasts its founder: leadership depth, succession, and accountability. She’s blunt in the best way, pushing leaders to build a bench instead of hoarding decisions. For organizations that depend too heavily on a few stars, her message is a wake-up call with a plan attached. She’s the strategic, no-excuses pick for serious succession work.
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Cassandra Worthy
Cassandra brings a genuinely fresh take on change: instead of managing resistance, harness the hard emotions of change as fuel. Her Change Enthusiasm framework helps leaders turn the friction and discomfort of transformation into momentum. With a chemical-engineering background, she makes the emotional surprisingly practical. For any organization in the middle of a merger, restructuring, or pivot, Cassandra reframes the whole experience.
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Don Yaeger
A longtime Sports Illustrated writer, Don has studied greatness up close for decades. Don distills the habits of champions and high-performing teams, what the great ones do differently, every day. As a journalist, he tells it through unforgettable stories that audiences repeat for years. The storyteller’s pick for teamwork, culture, and sustained excellence, Don makes greatness feel learnable.
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Heather Younger
Heather makes the case that caring isn’t soft, it’s strategic. Her work on caring leadership and active listening shows leaders how genuinely hearing their people drives trust, retention, and engagement. She turns “listen more” into specific, teachable behaviors rather than a platitude. For organizations that want a culture that actually holds under pressure, Heather is the right voice.
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About these credentials. CSP (Certified Speaking Professional) is the National Speakers Association’s earned designation for proven platform competence, held by roughly 17% of NSA members worldwide. CPAE (Council of Peers Award for Excellence) is the NSA Speaker Hall of Fame, the association’s highest honor for professional excellence.
⇢ Learn more: What is a CSP and the CPAE Hall of Fame.