Joel Zeff
Most large organisations have run out of patience with engagement programmes that produce slides but not behaviour. The real tension is harder. People will commit when work feels alive, and most workplaces have quietly drained the energy out of the room. The question is how to put it back without another initiative.
Joel Zeff is a keynote speaker, work culture author, and professional improviser who uses live improvisation with the audience to shift how teams communicate, collaborate, and show up to work.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Joel Zeff
- He pulls people out of their seats and into the room. Improv games run live with audience volunteers, not slides about engagement, are the mechanism the audience remembers a week later.
- He has done this more than 2,500 times since 1997, for buyers including Wells Fargo, Samsung, KPMG, PepsiCo, Walmart, and the IRS. The format is tested at scale.
- His book Make the Right Choice (Wiley, 2nd edition) gives leaders a written reference for the principles, so the keynote leaves a tangible artefact for managers to apply.
- He writes and performs his own material. The journalism background, including a recruited move to the Dallas Times Herald and freelance work for Newsday, shows up in tight scripting and audience-aware writing.
- For internal sales kickoffs, leadership offsites, and culture moments where the room needs to be activated rather than briefed, Zeff is one of the few keynote speakers whose primary craft is the performance itself.
Biography highlights
- Author of Make the Right Choice: Lead with Passion, Elevate Your Team, and Unleash the Fun at Work, second edition published by Wiley
- More than 2,500 keynote events for corporate and association audiences since 1997
- Former newspaper journalist; recruited to the Dallas Times Herald in 1991, with freelance bylines for Newsday and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram
- Former account executive at Edelman Public Relations
- Appeared on CNBC’s The Big Idea with Donny Deutsch
- Named clients include Wells Fargo, Samsung, KPMG, PepsiCo, Walmart, and the IRS
Biography
Engagement is the corporate problem that has resisted three decades of solutions. Surveys, town halls, pulse tools, and culture decks all describe it well. Almost none of them change the temperature in the room. Joel Zeff’s keynotes start from a different premise. If the room feels alive, the conversation about engagement starts to mean something. If it does not, no framework will fix that.
Zeff trained as a newspaper journalist before he was a speaker. He started at the Saginaw News covering crime and accidents, was recruited to the Dallas Times Herald in 1991, and freelanced for Newsday and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram after the Herald closed. He then worked as an account executive at Edelman Public Relations and founded his own consulting practice in 1994. The improv comedy he was doing on weekends turned into his career when Texas Instruments asked him to bring the act to an executive retreat.
The format he has built over 2,500 events since 1997 is unusual in a corporate setting. Audience members come on stage, play improvisation games, and produce, in real time, the behaviours the keynote is describing: listening, building on each other’s ideas, taking initiative, recovering from mistakes in front of a crowd. Wells Fargo, Samsung, KPMG, PepsiCo, Walmart, and the IRS have all booked the act. His book Make the Right Choice, now in its second edition with Wiley, sets out the principles in writing for leaders who want a reference after the room has gone home.
What organisations actually buy from Zeff is a live demonstration that the soft skills they keep training for are produced under pressure, not in workshops. The improv stage is a faster way to see them than any management exercise.
Key speaking topics
- Employee engagement
- Workplace culture
- Team collaboration and communication
- Change and adaptability at work
- Creativity and innovation in everyday work
- Leadership and motivation
- Workplace humour and human connection
Ideal for
- Sales kickoffs and annual conferences where the opening or closing keynote needs to lift the room, not brief it
- Leadership offsites focused on team behaviour, communication, and collaboration
- Culture, engagement, and HR-led events where managers leave needing something they can act on with their teams
- Association conferences and customer events that combine substance with a live, interactive set piece
Audience outcomes
- A shared, recent experience of what genuine collaboration looks like, generated live in the room rather than described in slides
- Specific language and prompts from improv (listening, “yes and”, supporting the person on stage with you) that managers can carry back into team meetings
- A reset on the role of humour, energy, and play in serious work, with named examples from organisations the audience recognises
- A written reference, via Make the Right Choice, for leaders who want to extend the keynote ideas into team practice
Talks
A keynote on how teams hold together and keep performing when the work, the structure, or the strategy keeps moving.
Key takeaways:
- How improvisation principles translate into team behaviour under uncertainty
- Practical habits for listening, supporting, and building on each other’s ideas in real time
- How leaders set the tone for adaptability without losing pace or accountability
A keynote on the link between energy, humour, and performance in the workplace.
Key takeaways:
- Why play and celebration are practical levers for engagement, not soft extras
- How managers create the conditions for people to bring more of themselves to work
- Concrete examples of the everyday behaviours that signal a healthy team culture
A leadership keynote on holding a team’s energy and confidence through periods of change.
Key takeaways:
- The leader’s role in setting and protecting the mood of the team during disruption
- Communication habits that keep people informed without draining momentum
- How to make space for initiative and ideas when the instinct is to centralise