Dominic Sandbrook
Leadership teams are pattern-matching to a present that feels unprecedented, but most of what they are facing is not new. Inflation, energy shocks, industrial conflict, technological disruption and political fragmentation have all shaped earlier eras of corporate decision-making, and the leaders who handled them well drew on a longer view than their successors usually do. The senior question is whether your organisation has the historical literacy to see the present clearly enough to act.
Dominic Sandbrook is a British historian, broadcaster and bestselling author who helps senior audiences read the present through the long arc of post-war political, economic and cultural change.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Dominic Sandbrook
- Reach and recognition that few historians can match. The Rest is History, the podcast he co-hosts with Tom Holland, was named Apple Podcasts’ 2025 Global Show of the Year, the first UK-based show to take the award.
- A serious academic record behind the public profile: Oxford, St Andrews, Cambridge, a Sara Norton Prize PhD, a visiting professorship at King’s College London and a fellowship of the Royal Historical Society.
- A specific body of work on Britain since 1945, five volumes from Never Had It So Good to Who Dares Wins, that gives him an unusually deep evidence base for parallels between the post-war decades and the disruptions leaders are now navigating.
- Storytelling craft developed across BBC Two documentary series, a national newspaper column and one of the world’s most-listened-to podcasts. He briefs senior audiences without lecturing them.
Biography highlights
- Co-host of The Rest is History with Tom Holland; Apple Podcasts’ 2025 Global Show of the Year.
- Visiting Professor at King’s College London; Fellow of the Royal Historical Society; trustee of the National Archives Trust.
- Author of five volumes on post-war Britain: Never Had It So Good, White Heat, State of Emergency, Seasons in the Sun, Who Dares Wins.
- Earlier US-history work: Eugene McCarthy and Mad as Hell, on American politics and the 1970s.
- Writer-presenter of BBC Two series The 70s, The 80s, Tomorrow’s Worlds, Strange Days: Cold War Britain, Let Us Entertain You, and Das Auto.
- Columnist for the Daily Mail and the Sunday Times. Nominated Critic of the Year (National Press Awards, 2018) and Comment Journalist of the Year (British Journalism Awards, 2021).
Biography
Britain since 1945 has lived through repeated cycles of inflation, energy crisis, industrial conflict, technological upheaval and political realignment. Dominic Sandbrook has spent two decades writing the definitive popular history of those decades, in five volumes running from Never Had It So Good to Who Dares Wins. That work gives senior audiences something rare: a careful, evidence-based account of how earlier generations of leaders, governments and companies handled the conditions that today’s executives often describe as unprecedented.
The academic foundation is serious. Balliol College, Oxford for an undergraduate degree in history and French; an MLitt at St Andrews; a Sara Norton Prize PhD at Jesus College, Cambridge that became his first book, a biography of Senator Eugene McCarthy. A lectureship at Sheffield and a senior fellowship at Oxford’s Rothermere American Institute followed. Since 2012 he has been a Visiting Professor at King’s College London, and he is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and a trustee of the National Archives Trust.
What sets his work apart is the public reach. Since 2020, Sandbrook and his co-host Tom Holland have built The Rest is History into the world’s most listened-to history podcast, named Apple Podcasts’ 2025 Global Show of the Year. He writes columns for the Daily Mail and the Sunday Times, with award nominations from the National Press Awards and the British Journalism Awards, and he has written and presented major BBC Two series on the 1970s, the 1980s, Cold War Britain and the cultural history of science fiction.
For a board or leadership audience, the appeal is the combination of scholarly authority and broadcast craft. Sandbrook makes the post-war record useable: how Heath, Callaghan, Thatcher and the country around them dealt with strikes, currency crises, energy shocks and rapid technological change, and what those episodes reveal about how senior decisions actually get made under pressure. He briefs the room without moralising or romanticising the past.
Key speaking topics
- Post-war British political and economic history
- The 1970s and 1980s as a leadership case study
- Cold War culture, politics and global influence
- Historical parallels for present-day disruption
- Storytelling and narrative craft for senior communicators
- American politics and society in the post-war era
Ideal for
- Boards and executive committees commissioning a long-view perspective on current economic and political volatility
- Annual partner conferences, leadership offsites and after-dinner events that want intellectual heft alongside broadcast-grade delivery
- Communications, public affairs and corporate-narrative teams interested in how serious storytelling holds an audience
- Member organisations and trade bodies marking anniversaries or commemorating institutional history
Audience outcomes
- A sharper sense of how earlier decades of British and Western history rhyme with present conditions, and where they do not
- Specific case material on how political and business leaders handled inflation, industrial disputes, energy crises and technological change
- A more confident vocabulary for putting current events into historical perspective when briefing teams, clients or stakeholders
- A reminder of how narrative authority is built: through evidence, character and pace rather than slogans
Talks
A guided tour through the social, political and economic shifts that reshaped Britain from 1945 to the Falklands era, drawing on Sandbrook’s five-volume history.
Key takeaways:
- How the conditions of the 1970s and 1980s map onto today’s debates about inflation, energy and the state
- What the post-war record shows about how leaders and institutions absorb sustained shock
- Where the popular memory of these decades departs from the documentary evidence
Case material on political and business leaders who made high-stakes decisions under pressure, and what their choices reveal about judgement, timing and political capital.
Key takeaways:
- How leaders in earlier crises read the room and acted, with and without good information
- The recurring temptations and traps in periods of rapid change
- How reputations are built and dismantled in the long run
A presentation of how the Cold War shaped political decisions, popular culture and the global order, with parallels to contemporary geopolitical tensions.
Key takeaways:
- How rival systems competed for legitimacy as well as territory
- The cultural and economic side-effects of sustained geopolitical confrontation
- Why the Cold War’s ending matters for the order leaders are navigating now