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Workplace culture speakers start at £5,000 for the UK market. Senior practitioners and C-suite-credentialled speakers typically sit between £10,000 and £25,000, depending on profile and sector depth. The top tier reaches £50,000, with celebrity speakers running 2–3 times above that. Format also affects fee — a 3-hour workshop commands a higher rate than a 45-minute keynote. For a full breakdown by profile and format, see our 2026 fee guide.
3 to 6 months is the standard lead time for in-demand practitioners — the speakers with genuine operational authority get committed early. Post-restructure or urgent culture events can often be accommodated within 4 to 6 weeks through our 1,190+ global network, but quality of fit narrows with shorter lead times. Confirming availability as soon as the event brief is set gives you the widest shortlist and the strongest sector match.
A keynote — typically 45 to 60 minutes — sets direction, shifts mindset, and creates a shared reference point across a large audience. A workshop — usually 2 to 4 hours — builds capability and produces tangible outputs. These are different disciplines, and a speaker who excels in one is not automatically effective in the other. Establish the format before shortlisting, as this single decision shapes every other selection criterion.
Yes — and sector specificity is one of the primary selection criteria, not an optional add-on. A speaker whose culture experience is rooted in financial services will frame accountability, psychological safety, and hybrid working very differently than one from tech or healthcare. Pre-event briefing 2 to 3 weeks before the engagement ensures the content is calibrated to your audience's actual constraints rather than a generic culture model.
Yes, both formats are available across the 300+ UK roster and wider global network. Virtual culture sessions require different room design — shorter segments, structured interaction, and pre-event participant priming — and the strongest practitioners adjust their delivery accordingly rather than simply transferring a stage keynote to a screen. Technical setup and rehearsal are included in the booking process to ensure the session lands as intended.
Standard scope covers a pre-event briefing call, content customisation to your brief, delivery of the keynote or workshop, and a post-session Q&A where agreed. Optional additions include pre-read materials, post-event reflection guides, follow-on workshop sessions, and internal cascade resources designed for middle managers to use with their teams. These add-ons are discussed at briefing stage and structured into the engagement where the organisation has a clear post-event behaviour-change objective.
Three things determine whether a culture session produces behaviour change or just applause. First, speaker selection — practitioners who held operational authority during a culture crisis carry a different credibility than commentators; senior rooms identify the distinction within minutes. Second, session design — the catalyst moment must be anchored to a specific behavioural question the audience is already wrestling with, not a general culture model delivered from the outside. Third, audience calibration — C-suite and director-level rooms need a speaker who addresses them as peers facing a real constraint, not an educator presenting a framework. The behavioural mechanism — what the audience will do differently on the following Monday — must be explicit in the session design, not left as an implicit aspiration.