NACE 
      2008 ANNUAL CONFERENCE & EXPOSITION  May 27 - May 30, 2008 New Orleans, Louisiana

Keynote Speakers

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All That Jazz Blog

Daniel Pink

Daniel Pink is a best-selling author and an expert on innovation, competition, and the changing world of work.

Daniel Pink
Daniel Pink

His latest book, A Whole New Mind, charts the rise of right-brain thinking in modern economies and explains the six abilities individuals and organizations must master in an outsourced and automated world. Reviewers have described the book as “an audacious and powerful work,” “a profound read,” “right on the money,” and “a miracle.” A Whole New Mind is New York Times, Washington Post, and BusinessWeek best seller – and has been translated into 12 languages.

Dan’s first book, Free Agent Nation, about the rise of people working for themselves, was a Washington Post best seller. His articles on work, business, and technology appear in many newspapers and magazines—including The New York Times, Harvard Business Review, Fast Company, and Wired, where he is a contributing editor.

A free agent himself, Dan’s last “real” job was chief speechwriter to Vice President Al Gore.

He received a B.A., with honors in linguistics, from Northwestern University, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and a J.D. from Yale Law School.

Dan lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife and their three children. He is working on his next two books, which will be published in 2008 and 2009.

 

Nancy Giles

Nancy Giles
Nancy Giles

“CBS Sunday Morning Contributor, comedian, and actress” hardly describes the wit, wisdom, and wackiness of Nancy Giles, the closing keynote speaker for NACE’s Annual Conference in New Orleans in May 2008.

“I want to make people laugh and I want to entertain them, but I also want to provoke thought and discussion,” says Giles. On topics ranging from popular culture and body image to creativity and racial bias, Giles is a commanding presence—someone with something witty and compassionate to say to all of us.

Giles is the writer and performer of the one-woman shows, Notes of a Negro Neurotic and Black Comedy: The Wacky Side of Racism, which the Village Voice called “smart and unforgiving.” A self-described “sixfoot, one-inch black woman who’s not model-thin,” Giles has made her mark dismantling misconceptions about race, feminism, and sexism.

Her acclaimed work on CBS Sunday Morning has provided the largest audience yet for her unique blend of laugh-out-loud humor and common sense wisdom. Whether she’s recalling the first rapper she ever heard (Robert Preston doing “Trouble” in The Music Man), celebrating Black History Month (as a schoolgirl she only had “Negro History Week,” and her mother, “Colored People Hour”) or decrying America’s obsession with Botox and plastic surgery (“when I stop having visible signs of aging, that’ll mean that I’m dead,”) Giles brings vibrant energy and a hip, alternative feel that helps distinguish the program from others.

Born in Queens, New York, she graduated from Oberlin College and spent three years with Chicago’s esteemed Second City improv troupe, an experience she describes as “freeing and horrifying.” Winner of the Theater World Award for the off-Broadway musical, Mayor, Giles appeared for three seasons as Frankie in the TV drama, China Beach, and played Connie the waitress in the sitcom Delta. She has guest starred on such programs as Spin City, Law & Order, and Fresh Prince. Her movie credits include New York Stories, Big, and Working Girl. When Giles realized that black actresses were mostly limited to playing “crack addicts, social workers, and boring judges,” and, at her height, “if I’m lucky, I will go up against Ru Paul for the callback,” she decided to strike out as a writer/performer on her own.