The Lavin Agency Speakers Bureau
A speakers bureau that represents the best original thinkers,
writers, and doers for speaking engagements.
A speakers bureau that represents the best original thinkers,
writers, and doers for speaking engagements.
In an era of irresistible products and experiences, you can use the psychology of choice to command attention and stand out from the crowd.
What separates the irresistible from the forgettable? Adam Alter knows. A star NYU marketing professor and the New York Times bestselling author of multiple books, he’s spent years investigating how an understanding of human psychology can help you direct and command attention. He explores how to make your products more memorable for consumers, how to identify your competition (and why it’s not who you might think), and how to use generative AI to set yourself apart from the rest of your industry. He also offers science-backed strategies for boosting your creativity and getting unstuck, both as an individual and as an organization. Whether you’re facing obstacles at work or looking to unlock revolutionary innovation, Adam’s smart, practical talks will help you and your team unleash your full potential.
“Adam Alter demystifies the science and practice of uncovering motivation, unlocking creativity, and unleashing change.”Adam Grant, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Think Again
Adam Alter is the author of Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked, a groundbreaking study on why tech-based products and experiences are so hard to ignore (or put down). Our obsessions with platforms like Netflix and TikTok are no accident, but the result of careful work by tech companies and marketers. Adam reverse-engineers behavioral addiction, explaining how we can harness addictive products for the good: meaning better savings, improved communications, and clearer boundaries between work and play, pleasure and business. He shared his insights on the TED mainstage, delivering a talk so popular—one of the top ten of the year—that he was invited back a second time.
In his newest book Anatomy of a Breakthrough, Adam draws on his academic background in psychology and behavioral science to look at case studies of people who’ve gotten stuck, and how they broke through that stasis to achieve great things—like the sub-average swimmer who became a two-time Olympic medalist, or the renowned painter who became paralyzed and relearned to paint with a brush strapped to his wrist. We can learn more about resilience, teamwork, and innovation when we get stuck than when we don’t, he says.
In his New York Times bestseller Drunk Tank Pink, Adam offers a revelatory look at how our environment unconsciously, yet dramatically, shapes the decisions we make. Rather than being in control of every single one of our choices, we’re powerfully influenced by a laundry list of external forces, often without ever realizing it. Adam reminds us that while our decisions do change, they often change for shorter periods than we anticipate. So what aspects of our lives right now will stick in the future? In brilliant, psychology-informed talks, he shows us how we can navigate shifting experiences, both inside the workplace and out, and increase our productivity, happiness, and fulfillment moving forward.
“Alter not only explains the source of many cognitive quirks, but convincingly argues that comprehending them affords a better understanding of broader behaviors, from cyclical poverty to altruism.”Publishers Weekly
Aside from his bestselling books, Adam has written for The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, WIRED, and Slate, among other publications, and has been featured on NPR’s Fresh Air, TED Radio Hour, All Things Considered, Science Friday, and Marketplace. He has shared his ideas at the Cannes Lions Festival of Creativity and with dozens of companies, including Google, Microsoft, Anheuser Busch, Prudential, and Fidelity, as well as with design and ad agencies around the world.
Adam is a marketing professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, and has an affiliated professorship with the university’s Psychology Department. He won both the faculty-voted and MBA student-voted Stern Professor of the Year Awards in 2020 and again in 2024. He currently sits on the World Economic Forum steering committee, a board dedicated to investigating the risks and benefits of emerging augmented reality technologies. Adam received his Bachelor of Science in Psychology from the University of New South Wales and his M.A. and Ph.D. in Psychology from Princeton University, where he held the Charlotte Elizabeth Procter Honorific Dissertation Fellowship and a Fellowship in the Woodrow Wilson Society of Scholars.
Adam Alter was engaging across demographics: from High School to Med School to the community at large. His message resonated. His delivery is endearing, informative, and engaging. His topic is critically important and his approach is informed, balanced, empowering, and relatable. From an event planning perspective, Adam was a sincere pleasure to work with.
University of Nevada—Reno, Division of Health SciencesOur experience with Lavin and with Adam was once again, excellent. We've had very strong feedback from the audience on the keynote, and Adam was a dream to work with prior to and at the event. He was very generous with his time in advance of the event in making sure that he understood the audience, which is critical.
International Retail Design ConferenceAdam was amazing as the closing keynote for the GMAC conference in San Francisco! He clearly heard us during our prep call and incorporated what we talked about in his presentation. His talk was not only interesting, engaging, and fun, it was completely relevant to our audience. It was the perfect way to close out the week and send people back to their offices with tips they can implement immediately. He was a delight to work with and I will definitely keep him in mind for future speaking engagements.
Graduate Management Admission CouncilCEO of Phylagen, Inc. TED Senior Fellow
Microsoft VP of Design and Artificial Intelligence Author of How to Speak Machine
Global AI Advisor CEO & Co-Founder of XLabs and Ribo One of Forbes’ 30 Women in AI to Watch Artificial Intelligence Pioneer
Author of Rage Becomes Her and The Resilience Myth Award-Winning Journalist Co-Founder and Director of the Women’s Media Center Speech Project
New Yorker Writer Author of Antisocial
Author of Living in Data Former Library of Congress Innovator in Residence Former NYT Data Artist-in-Residence
First Deputy National Cyber Director for Technology and Ecosystem Security Former White House AI Council Member Former Google Global Head of Product Security Strategy
Professor of Organizational Behavior at London Business School Author of Alive at Work
Author of Jerks at Work and Job Therapy NYU Professor of Psychology
Author of Grit, the #1 New York Times Bestseller | Pioneering Researcher on Grit, Perseverance, and the Science of Success
2024 Nobel Prize Winner | 3rd Most Cited Economist in the World | MIT Institute Professor | Bestselling Co-Author of Why Nations Fail and Power and Progress
Pulitzer Prize-Winning Creator of The 1619 Project | Executive Producer of the Emmy Award-Winning 1619 Project Hulu Docuseries | MacArthur Genius
Nike's Former Chief Marketing Officer | Author of Emotion by Design
CEO of The Atlantic | Former Editor-in-Chief of WIRED
Why do people return to some ideas, products, experiences, and brands over and over again, while others fade from memory and interest almost immediately? In his acclaimed book on behavioral addiction, Adam Alter investigates what separates the irresistible from the forgettable. The answers draw from a broad range of case studies and research—from as far afield as the world of video game design and television script writing to app design and digital advertising. The answers apply broadly to all forms of business, from online and digital product development to consumer sales, packaged goods, services, politics, medicine, and law.
Why, for example, did Instagram succeed while Hipstamatic, a very similar earlier app, failed? Why do people play the lottery despite losing time and again and facing impossibly long odds? Should you release upbeat products when the economy is thriving or when times are tough? Adam answers these questions and more in a keynote that explains the sharp divide between the instant sensation and the forgotten disaster—and shows you how to harness it.
Feeling stuck? You’re not alone. Almost everyone feels stuck in some way, unable to push past some kind of roadblock. But it doesn’t have to be this way. Bestselling author Adam Alter has spent the past two decades studying the forces that keep us stuck—and how we can free ourselves to thrive. He says that most of the barriers we face are subjective, which means we have everything we need to get unstuck and push through to success.
In this ground-breaking talk, Adam draws on his new book Anatomy of a Breakthrough to weave together scientific studies, anecdotes, and interviews to teach us how to get unstuck from whatever’s holding us back. He reveals the formula that he and other researchers have uncovered: called the “friction audit,” the process helps you figure out why you (or your organization) are stuck, then suggests a path to progress by overcoming the three kinds of frictions (head, heart, and habit), so you can find the breakthrough that’s just around the corner. Full of practical strategies that you can put into play on your own or as a team—like sacrificing in the short-term for long-term gains, or taking challenges as a signal that you’re moving beyond the easy wins—this talk is a must-listen for anyone interested in innovation and high achievement.
Even the smallest environmental cues affect our behavior. The world around us—the weather, colors, geography and location—affects our moods and social interactions. Adam Alter offers a groundbreaking look into the complex relationship between environmental features and our thoughts, feelings, and actions. Humans respond emotionally, physically, and mentally to the shifting world around them. The names we assign, the language we use, and the symbols and images we deploy all affect how we behave as well.
Adam examines it all, delivering a fascinating overview of why we do what we do. He breaks down our cognitive responses to external influences, showing the effects that are driven by small cues. How are these cues cognitively processed? Where do they reside in our consciousness? Adam offers thoughts on how leaders, policymakers, and smarter organizations can change conditions, and create more cognitively healthy environments—and healthier human beings.