Are you interested in hiring Harry Broadman to speak at your event, conference, trade show, meeting, or convention?

As a keynote speaker, he knows how to command a stage where he can deliver a powerful presentation that will captivate your audience.

On this page you can contact Harry Broadman’s speaker booking agency to learn more about his speaking fees and availability.

A booking agent will respond to you within two business hours to let you know if they are available and how much they cost.

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Speaker Bio

Harry Broadman is a highly-sought business keynote speaker and expert who covers such topics as US Trade Policy, globalization, Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), Corruption, Risk, and more. As a public speaker, he offers audiences a unique blend of fundamentally analytical perspectives and operational lessons about how market and policy dynamics will affect C-suites, boards, managers, and workers, as well as suppliers and customers, and how they will alter business fortunes. He has spoken at political and business conferences around the world and has been a pundit on major media outlets.

Harry G. Broadman was born in New York City on December 23, 1954. He is a corporate director and an executive in charge of investments worldwide. He is also very knowledgeable about business, antitrust, corporate governance, sustainability, and new ideas. He is a Partner, Managing Director, Chair of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) Practice, Professor, and Head of the Emerging Markets Practice at Berkeley Research Group LLC.

Harry Broadman was ahead of his time when he started a career 36 years ago that focused on business opportunities and risks in developing countries. He is now known around the world as an expert in coming up with and putting into action new investment strategies in these areas.

He does this so that companies can grow quickly and manage risks well. These methods focus on long-term cross-border trade and investment, strong strategic alliances and partnerships, flexible supply chains, strong corporate governance standards, strict compliance and anti-corruption measures, and incentives for constant innovation.

Before “globalization” was even made up, Broadman often changed to top positions in the private sector. He worked as a senior White House economic officer, a trade negotiator, and a professional staff member for a Senate committee. So, Broadman became an expert on the forces and patterns changing global markets and how they are changing.

Harry Broadman has worked in over 80 emerging markets on five continents, including China, India, and the rest of Asia; a large part of Latin America; Russia and almost every other former Soviet Union state; Eastern and Central Europe; the Balkans; Turkey; most of Africa; and most of the Middle East. G.E., IBM, Coke, Canon, Exxon-Mobil, Valmet, KIA, ITW, Abraaj, Corning, Heineken, Merck, Pepsi, Walmart, Deere, Mars, Avon, Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board, Intel, Temasek, Berkshire Hathaway, McCormick, ICANN, SunEdison, Westinghouse, Dow, and many more.

He talks to groups about how market and policy dynamics will affect C-suites, boards, managers, employees, suppliers, and customers and how they will change business fortunes.

Harry Broadman has a unique ability to look at these effects through a prism that shows the underlying non-linearities of market movements and from a truly forward-looking point of view, instead of the usual backward-looking extrapolations. And he did it all with a sense of humor that made him very interesting to listen to.

Broadman worked for the Rand Corporation as a consultant for energy security in 1979. From 1980 to 1981, he was a research fellow at the Brookings Institution.

In 1981, he became a fellow and assistant director of the Center for Energy Policy Research at Resources for the Future (RFF). There, he worked on estimating the social costs of fossil fuels, U.S. oil import policy, regulatory reform of the natural gas industry, and oil exploration and development in developing countries outside of OPEC.

Broadman took three different teaching jobs at Harvard University in 1984. He taught the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard how to invest in international business. He was a teacher at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard. He was also a faculty fellow at the Energy and Environmental Policy Center at Harvard. As an undergraduate at Harvard, he co-wrote an article that suggested putting a $10 tariff on imported oil to cut down on the U.S.’s oil use and the social costs of the country’s vulnerability to outside shocks in the global oil market.

When Broadman started working for the U.S. Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs in 1987, it was led by Senator John Glenn. In 1990, he became the chief of staff for the President’s Council of Economic Advisers when he joined the government of George H.W. Bush.

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Speaking Fees

Harry Broadman’s speaking fees can vary depending on the type of event you are producing and where it is located.

His speaking fee can also vary depending on whether you need them to deliver a live or virtual presentation.

Please note we do not work with organizations looking for speakers to speak for free, do podcasts or interviews, or do non-paid charity work.

Contact Harry Broadman

To inquire about his speaking fees and costs, contact Keynote Speakers Agency today to book Harry Broadman for a live or virtual event, meeting, special appearance, conference, or trade-show.

Our agent will respond within two business hours.