Dan Heath
Influence & Insights
- Four-time New York Times bestselling author of classic business books including Made to Stick, Switch, The Power of Moments, Upstream, and the forthcoming Reset.
- Writing honors include: One of the best nonfiction books of the year (Amazon). One of the best audiobooks of the year (Apple). The #1 business book of the year (Globe and Mail). One of the best 8 books on creativity (Ideo).
- His books have been translated into 33 languages, including Mongolian and Thai, and sold over 4 million copies worldwide. They’ve been read by senators, CEOs, Army leaders, ministers, human rights activists, superintendents, and two Presidents of the United States.
- His podcast, What It’s Like to Be…, explores the world of work one profession at a time, with episodes featuring a mystery novelist, a forensic accountant, a couples therapist, and more. It landed on Apple’s ranking of the Top 50 Society & Culture podcasts.
- A senior fellow at Duke University’s CASE center, which supports social entrepreneurs who are fighting for social good
- Co-founder of Thinkwell, an innovation education company that was one of the first firms to bring video courses to the internet
- MBA from Harvard Business School
- Reset: How to Change What’s Not Working
- Creating Moments That Matter
- Upstream: The Quest to Solve Problems Before They Happen
- Making Ideas Stick
- Leading a Switch
Reset: How to Change What’s Not Working
Changing how we work can feel overwhelming. Like trying to budge an enormous boulder. How do you move past “the way you’ve always done things”? Where do you find the time and energy for new efforts when you’re constantly fighting fires?
With the right strategy, we can move the boulder. The secret is to find “leverage points”: places where a little bit of effort can yield a disproportionate return. And that search requires us to observe our work with fresh eyes.
We’ll explore why getting “buy-in” is the wrong way to think about change. Why considering the “goal of the goal” is a critical discipline. And why the feeling of progress can be your secret weapon in accelerating change.
In this talk, drawing from his book RESET, Heath unpacks a simple framework for getting unstuck and making the changes that matter. What if we could unlock forward movement without the need for more resources? The same people, the same assets … but dramatically better results.
Yesterday, we were stuck. Today, we reset.
Creating Moments That Matter
Some experiences are vastly more memorable and meaningful than others: A moment of extraordinary service that a customer can’t stop talking about. A moment of insight that helps a group of employees embrace a new vision. A moment of compassion that makes a patient’s burden feel lighter. Everywhere you look, people are trying to craft memorable experiences—from customer experiences to patient experiences. Leaders are working hard to boost employee engagement, student engagement, and parishioner engagement. But these discussions have been dominated by a focus on fixing problems (what Dan Heath calls “filling pits”), rather than creating memorable experiences (“raising peaks”). Yet Heath’s research suggests that it’s far more valuable to build peaks.
How do you build peaks for the people you care about? In this talk, drawing from his book The Power of Moments, Heath will reveal the four elements that create defining moments. Armed with an understanding of these elements, we can be the authors of moments that spark delight, connection, and insight.
Upstream: The Quest to Solve Problems Before They Happen
So often in our organizations and communities, we fall into a cycle of reaction. A problem happens, and we respond. We fight fires. We contend with emergencies. Researchers call this “tunneling”: We don’t see the big picture, and we don’t think about the future, we just keep pushing forward from one crisis to the next. What if instead we could shift our energies upstream — uncovering and addressing the source of those problems?
In this talk, Heath will reveal how some leaders have learned to spot problems in advance: There’s a school district that can predict which students will drop out – a full 4 years before graduation. There’s an internet service company that can predict which customers are likely to cancel their subscriptions — as early as two weeks after they sign up! When we shift from downstream response to upstream planning, it can cause miracles: One company eliminated 20 million customer support calls by asking, “How can we make sure our customers never need to call us?” And one nation in Europe has almost eliminated teenage substance abuse by asking, “How can we create a teenage culture that offers such compelling sober activities that teens simply don’t feel like drinking or doing drugs?”
Heath will share the three forces that push us downstream, as well as the powerful levers we can use to start preventing problems before they happen.
Making Ideas Stick
In a world drowning in information, how do you make your idea stand out? It’s hard enough just to get an audience for your idea—and much harder still for it to be memorable and meaningful for your listeners. How much do you remember from the last PowerPoint presentation you saw?
Yet there are ideas that seem to stick naturally, ranging from urban legends to proverbs. Dan’s international best-seller Made to Stick revealed the surprising parallels between these naturally sticky ideas and ideas in the workplace that change attitudes and behavior, including successful corporate strategies, product visions, public health messages, and even coaching advice. As a result of the unexpected analysis and the practical advice that derives from it, Made to Stick was named the “Best Business Book of the Year” and was subsequently translated into over 30 languages.
In this talk, Dan will reveal that sticky messages of all kinds draw their power from six key traits, ranging from unexpectedness to emotion. If you understand these traits, you can communicate your own ideas in a way that is influential and lasting—in a way that sticks.
Leading a Switch
Why do some big changes happen easily while many small changes prove impossible? The answer hinges on some of the most fascinating findings in psychology. Our mind is divided into two different systems—an analytical mind and an emotional mind—that are often in conflict, particularly in situations of change. Building on this research, and based on the book, Switch, which spent 47 weeks on the New York Times best-seller list, Dan will reveal a simple, three-part framework that will help you change things in tough times.
All of us have things we want to change—in our families, our businesses, and our communities. Our goal might be as simple as losing a few pounds or as complex as changing the culture of an organization. Where do you start? And what do you do when you face resistance? This session is a must for any change leader who is struggling to make progress. Dan’s talk will give leaders the specific tools—and the inspiration—they need to make change happen.
"*" indicates required fields