As consumer trends change at an unprecedentedly rapid rate, companies and brands find themselves trying to react quickly to protect and grow their brand. This is where CX comes in.
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Customer Experience speakers in the UK start at £5,000 for corporate-tier bookings, with the top tier reaching £50,000. Most corporate bookings fall between £5,000 and £25,000, depending on the speaker's profile, session length and level of content customisation required. Celebrity-level speakers typically command 2–3 times the top tier. For a full breakdown of fee ranges by speaker tier, the keynote speaker fees in the UK guide covers the detail.
Three to six months is the standard lead time for confirmed roster speakers — this allows time for pre-event briefing, content tailoring and any bespoke material development. Last-minute bookings under six weeks are workable through the wider 1,190+ global network, but the shortlist depth narrows considerably. For high-profile events or speakers with particularly busy calendars, booking closer to six months out is the safer approach.
A keynote runs 45–60 minutes and is designed to reframe how a room thinks about CX — delivering a sharp commercial argument to a large, mixed audience. A workshop runs 2–4 hours and is structured around group problem-solving, tool application and action planning. These are different disciplines, and most CX speakers are calibrated for one format rather than both. Confirm the format requirement before shortlisting, not after.
Yes, and sector fit matters more in CX than in most disciplines — retail CX, financial services CX and B2B SaaS CX each carry different metrics, stakeholder pressures and vocabulary. The best speakers adjust case studies and framing to match the audience's world. Request a pre-event briefing 2–3 weeks before the session to allow meaningful customisation rather than cosmetic adjustments to a generic deck.
Yes; most speakers on the 300+ UK roster and 1,190+ global network are experienced with virtual and hybrid formats. Setup requirements vary — some speakers use dedicated studio rigs, others work from home environments — and a technical rehearsal call is strongly recommended. Confirm technical requirements when requesting the shortlist so staging decisions can be made before contracts are signed, not the morning of the event.
Standard scope covers a pre-event briefing call, keynote delivery and a post-session Q&A. Optional add-ons typically include bespoke content development, workshop facilitation, green room availability and post-event advisory conversations with the leadership team. The scope should be confirmed at enquiry stage — CX briefs vary considerably between a board offsite, a contact centre forum and a large-scale conference, and the session design changes accordingly.
Speaker Agency's shortlisting process screens specifically for speakers who argue from hard commercial evidence — customer lifetime value data, revenue retention figures, NPS-to-revenue correlation — rather than conviction-led messaging. The pre-event brief is used to flag audience sceptic profiles so the speaker can calibrate examples and anticipate the objections most likely to surface from finance and operations leaders. A speaker who cannot absorb that pushback with data does not make the shortlist.