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If you’re looking for corporate speakers with a $300 million track record, keep reading.
If you’re looking for corporate speakers with a breakout book, keep reading.
If you’re looking for corporate speakers who can electrify an audience, keep reading.
Several call Mark Hughes the $300 million dollar man, but Time magazine calls him the man behind “one of the greatest publicity coups in history.”
Hughes put Half.com on the map, literally, by convincing the 350 person Oregon town of Halfway, to rename itself to Half.com, Oregon. This single idea, as crazy as it may seem, has a method to its madness.
The payoff? eBay bought the company for $300 million dollars a mere six months later.
Corporate Speakers that Rock Have Top Ten Business Books
London’s Financial Times heralds his book one of the Best Business Books of the Year next to Freakonomics. Fast Company proclaimed his book one of "The Ten Best Business Reads of the year" in its first year of printing. How many other corporate speakers have their books published in 12 languages?
His book has been called better than The Tipping Point, and has been heralded by business moguls like the former CEO of Dow Jones, the former editor of The Wall Street Journal, the former Chief Marketing Officer of Pepsi-Cola, and Steve Forbes. A who’s who of praise rarely found for corporate speakers.
Corporate Speakers that Rock have Energy You Can Drink
Hughes has one of the most informative and energetic speeches which your attendees can use the day they get back to their office. His speaking agent is the former agent for another one of our prolific corporate speakers, Malcolm Gladwell.
Corporate Speakers that Rock have Been Around the Block
The list of blue-chip companies on Hughes’ resume include: PepsiCo's Pizza Hut Division (NYSE: YUM), Pep Boys (NYSE: PBY), American Mobile Satellite (transformed to XM Satellite Radio NASDAQ: XMSR), and eBay’s Half.com (NASDAQ: EBAY). He holds his MBA in from Columbia Business School in New York.
Are you ready to make Mark Hughes on of your most memorable corporate speakers?
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