TRAVELS FROM |
SPEAKING FEE RANGE ** Please note that while this speaker’s specific speaking fee falls within the range posted above (for Continental U.S. based events), fees are subject to change. For current fee information or international event fees (which are generally 50-75% more than U.S based event fees), please contact us. $25,000 to $30,000 |
BOOK ANNIE DUKE speakers@coreagency.com |
TRAVELS FROM |
SPEAKING FEE RANGE* $25,000 to $30,000 |
Book Annie Duke speakers@coreagency.com |
- World champion poker player.
- Cognitive science expert who delivers real-world lessons based upon her successful poker career.
- Gifted storyteller whose work has been featured on public radio’s “The Moth.”
- Philanthropist and founder of Ante Up for Africa and How I Decide.
Top poker player, student of cognitive psychology, master storyteller and philanthropist – Annie Duke is a woman of many talents, and she enjoys using them in service of inspiration and education.
While she was awarded a fellowship from the National Science Foundation to study cognitive psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, it was a suggestion from her brother, champion poker player Howard Lederer, that first propelled Duke into the public arena. Following his suggestion that she try the game of poker, Duke became one of the male-dominated poker world’s top professionals. She won her first World Series of Poker championship in 2004, beating 234 others en route to the title, and the same year she won the invitation-only WSOP Tournament of Champions. Duke beat poker legend Erik Seidel in the 2010 NBC National Heads-Up Poker Championship to win that prestigious competition.
Duke’s academic expertise and the lessons in decision-making she learned as a poker champion grant her unique insight into the fields of decision fitness, emotional control, evaluation of feedback, prospect theory, and negotiation tactics. Skilled at applying decision science ideas in real-world environments, Duke has become a sought-after speaker in the business and financial sectors.
Duke is not just an applied theoretician; she is also a gifted storyteller whose repeat performances on “The Moth” radio storytelling program have garnered acclaim. One of her stories was featured as among the program’s 50 top stories, earning her a place in the radio program’s first book. Duke is a published author in the field of poker theory, as well, with books including Decide to Play Great Poker and The Middle Zone: Mastering the Most Difficult Hands in Hold ‘Em Poker (both co-authored with John Vorhaus).
While she has fundraised for a number of charities, Duke’s heart has been particularly touched by the plight of Sudan conflict victims and by a call to help young people master the essential life skills of critical thinking and decision making. In 2006, she joined actor Don Cheadle and Norman Epstein to found Ante Up for Africa, which has raised over $4 million for Africans in need. In 2014, she helped launch How I Decide, a nonprofit with the goal of helping young people in the United States.
Poker is a great starting point for understanding all kinds of decision-making behavior that are fundamental to the way all of us think. | |
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What types of audiences would most benefit from your message? | |
When I first started speaking, most of my speaking engagements came from the financial sector. I think people in finance saw a direct correlation between the challenges at the poker table and challenges in finance. As I’ve become better known as a speaker, business and professional groups (regardless of industry), are realizing that poker is a great starting point for understanding all kinds of decision-making behavior that are fundamental to the way all of us think. And since it is about how all of our brains works, any sector can benefit from the lessons poker offers.
Poker is fun. It’s an unusual profession but a common game. Even if you don’t really know much about poker, you understand the common features I discuss. Ultimately, my message is about fundamental ways in which we process information. Everybody wants to understand that better. Just about any audience can make a connection between what I learned playing poker and lessons they can use in their work. | |
What inspired you to start doing speaking engagements? | |
Erik Seidel’s distaste for doing them. Erik Seidel is one of the world’s best poker players. He has won $25 million in tournament poker. He is also a good friend, and he doesn’t like giving speeches. In 2002, a friend asked him to speak at a corporate retreat. He knew I’d been a teacher and had a background in cognitive psychology. So he begged off and said, “Ask Annie Duke to do it. She’d be good.”
When I spoke before that group of financial traders, I remembered what I enjoyed and loved so much about academics and teaching. From there, I got more opportunities to speak, rekindling my passion for teaching and challenging my thinking and learning. | |
The common thread of my speeches is pretty general: our brains operate in some fundamental ways that interfere with making good decisions. | |
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What kind of special prep-work do you do prior to an event? How do you prepare for your speaking engagements? | |
I really like to collaborate with the people that I'm working with. The common thread of my speeches is pretty general: our brains operate in some fundamental ways that interfere with making good decisions. My twenty years in poker was a great behavioral laboratory for witnessing (and experiencing) those difficulties, and learning how a group of exceptional thinkers worked through them.
From that base and all the behaviors that can encompass, I consult with the group asking me to speak. What are their needs? What are the decision-making and learning challenges that audience faces? Do they want to hear about developing a more productive culture? Do they want to discuss dealing with risk and uncertainty? Are they challenged to interpret and apply new information? How do they view colleagues and competitors? Those are just a few examples where those pre-speech consultations can go. My goal is to understand the particular needs of the audience and give them something that authentically speaks to them. | |
I have to succeed in entertaining and challenging my audience. We need to have fun together. | |
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How much do case studies, personal stories and/or humor factor into your keynote speech content? | |
For me to realistically deliver something audiences can use (“educational value”) I have to succeed in entertaining and challenging my audience. We need to have fun together. That definitely includes humor and personal stories. I’ve encountered a lot of interesting, unusual people and situations in poker. People enjoy hearing about that, especially when they can relate to the reason I’m telling the story.
The key is finding things the audience can relate to. I have four children, ages 14 to 21. When I say, “Have you ever had a kid who did poorly on a test tell you, ‘It’s because I didn’t study’?” everybody with kids knows what I’m talking about. Kids seem universally wired to say the same things: the test was hard, the teacher doesn’t like me, everybody had trouble on the test. People understand, and that makes it easy for me to explain how we all do that. I find other relatable examples using sports, politics, and recent news. The audiences I speak to are generally composed of people who are pretty knowledgeable and successful in their businesses. Unless I have a very specific understanding of particular issues in the audience’s business, I don’t try to fake an understanding or use general or stereotypical knowledge of that business. I can entertain – and teach – much better when I start with examples we both know, like Bartman, the baseball fan blamed for continuing the curse and keeping the Chicago Cubs out of the 2003 World Series. Or things about which we’d like to know more, like John von Neumann, the basis for the title character in Dr. Strangelove, who worked on the Manhattan Project by day and invented Game Theory by night. From these examples, we can talk about some relatable lessons concerning decision-making behavior. I think audiences have fun and respond to topics that are a little “outside the box.” Even for people who have never played a hand of poker, the people and situations I’ve encountered are fun and easy to understand. After that, it’s up to me to explain how I’ve learned from these things, and how they can as well. | |
What do you want people to learn and take away from your presentations? | |
I want people to understand that our brains are built a certain way. We have a lot of thinking processes skewed toward irrationality. Those processes exist for some good reasons, and they aren’t going anywhere. There are practices you can put in place that reduce the negative effects of these thinking patterns on your life. The great news is that if you can reduce them just a little bit, you will see really big effects. |
Annie spoke at an annual meeting of the International Association of Trial Lawyers in Chicago. Other speakers at this event included Senator Durbin, Rahm Emmanuel, and Governor Pat Quinn. The speech was a rousing success:
“Annie Duke was a homerun at the Mid-Year Meeting of the International Academy of Trial Lawyers in Chicago. The title of her presentation, ‘Better Decision Making: From the Poker Table to the Courtroom’, had people intrigued even before the program began. Her engaging style and informative insights on how lessons learned at the poker table might be applied in the business arena, including the trial of cases, kept her audience of lawyers, spouses and guests riveted from start to finish. Annie won rave reviews—deservedly so.”
Herman J. Russomanno, President, IATL
“There’s a lot of advice that I’m actually going to take into my day-to-day from … as a manager at a startup we constantly talk about our wins and losses, but we never really talk about the bad decisions within the wins, and I think that’s really important.”
Jenna Flateman Posner, Sales Executive
“Annie Duke’s presentation at our law firm retreat was one of the highlights of the weekend. Her message focused on how to best benefit from feedback to assist in critical decision making. Her presentation was lively, informative and fun. Annie’s background as a champion poker player and her studies in cognitive psychology provide a terrific example of how an academic foundation can infuse and inform business practices. Annie’s tales from the poker world provided an interesting way to think about good decision making.”
Nicholas J. LePore III, Attorney, Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis LLP
“Annie showed us how to scale thoughtful risk taking in a complex organization and in so doing realize the dream of Collaborative Agility! And she helped me hold up a mirror to my own biases and self-limiting beliefs, helping me let go and grow toward becoming the leader I have always wanted to be.”
Jeff Westphal, CEO and Co-Owner, Vertex Inc.
“She was one of us, an Entrepreneur, willing to sit down with a group of strangers (all be it fellow entrepreneurs) and share a life line of the ups and downs and the wisdom gained from the journey. What a gift."
Erick Slabaugh, Attendee, Entrepreneurs’ Organization Seattle
"Annie is a master at delivering an engaging talk that leaves the attendees thinking about the message and how it applies to their world long after her presentation concluded.”
Maria Himebaugh, Vice President, Revenue Management, Marriott International
Annie Duke has used her education in the field of cognitive science to inform how she plays the game of poker. Recognizing that players tend to make inefficient use of evidence, select irrational choices, struggle to manage emotion, and trade the future in favor of the presence, she learned how to minimize such shortcomings in her own play and maximize her chances of success.
Now, Duke shares these lessons with others. As with poker, so with life: we constantly face conditions of uncertainty that impact our ability to make informed decisions and learn from the feedback life continually delivers. Using gentle wit and humor, Duke shows audiences how they can use her tactics in ways that will improve their personal and professional lives.
Marrying her academic studies in cognitive science with the expert decision making experience gained through her years as one of the top professional poker players , Annie Duke has developed a series of educational and inspirational talks on topics such as how to properly evaluate feedback to become a better decision maker; how to avoid making emotional decisions; how to make the best decisions about resource allocation and avoid the Sunk Cost Bias; how to become a better negotiator and many other topics tailored to hone decision making skills.
Poker is a game both of making good decisions for yourself and taking advantage of the decision making errors your opponents make. That makes it ripe for exploration into the kinds of rampant errors, irrationalities and biases in our decision making lives. Annie Duke has a suite of talks applying the lessons learned from the poker table to our everyday lives.
HEARING IS BELIEVING: Belief formation and motivated reasoning
Once we form a belief, we have a robust tendency to reason around that belief, applying information that confirms our beliefs and ignoring evidence that disconfirms our beliefs. We will also actively work to discredit evidence that disagrees with us. This is a biased process, with different standards for evaluating evidence that agrees with our beliefs and evidence that disagrees with us. The process forms a vicious circle where we reason to support beliefs we already hold instead of updating and changing our beliefs as we gather new information. Annie Duke explains this robust cognitive error and how it impairs our decision making in business and throughout our personal lives. She traces the origins of this bias in memory and thinking and offers strategies to becoming better and more flexible thinkers.
BIG DATA: The good, the bad, and the ugly
As we become a more data-driven society, we face new questions of how best to use all this new data to improve human decision making. Annie Duke explores the ways in which big data has the potential to overcome robust irrationalities in how we process information and solve for the problem of uncertainty. She also points out the pitfalls and dangers of big data and provides advice about how data is aggregated and collected and where the “human element” still needs to be in control of the analysis in order to interpret and model the data.
EVALUATION OF FEEDBACK: The Rough Road of Learning through Experience
In Annie Duke’s twenty years playing poker, she noticed that most players quickly plateau in their learning despite an abundance of evidence about how they can improve. Players win or lose hands many times an hour and get feedback about the quality of their play almost immediately. Outcomes are closely tied in time to decisions. Poker provides a closed, tight feedback loop so it should provide an ideal environment for years of learning and improvement. Players also have the opportunity to watch others win or lose hands even more often than they play hands themselves. Yet most poker players repeat the same mistakes. Players have trouble incorporating both positive and negative feedback. When things go well, they give maximum credit to their skill. When things don’t go well, they blame luck. Wins, therefore, teach them to do exactly what they are already doing. They ignore losses, attributing them to factors outside their control. Of course, this occurs in every facet of our lives. Annie Duke examines this process with examples from poker, familiar personal and business decisions, and behavioral science research. She shares comprehensive strategies to mitigate these biases, embracing the feedback that our outcomes provide to become better long-term learners. These strategies can be adopted by individuals or at an organizational level.
HOW WINNING AND LOSING DRIVES IRRATIONAL CHOICES: Lessons from the poker table
In poker and throughout our lives, we should try to maximize the time we spend in favorable situations and minimize our time in unfavorable ones. Poker players are too quick to quit when they are winning. They look for any excuse to put the session in the (non-existent) win column. The same players will refuse to quit a losing game. The same thing happens outside poker: sales professionals not giving up on a dead lead; investors unwilling to sell their losing investments. Even something as pedestrian as picking the slowest line at a grocery store and being unwilling to change lines stems from the same bias. Annie Duke examines how the interaction of many cognitive biases (including loss aversion and sunk-cost bias) drives this behavior. These tendencies cause us to miss good opportunities and continue playing when the odds are against us. She provides insight into avoiding this costly decision-making error with strategies that prevent us initially making these poor decisions and how to take a longer term view so we are not as caught up in the emotion of the moment. The strategies apply in the workplace, to parenting and to other personal decisions.
TILT: Managing your emotions
Has anyone ever told you, “Why don’t you sleep on it?” or “Take ten deep breaths before you decide?” or even “Calm down.” If so, you (like everyone else) have been on tilt. Tilt is a state of distress that causes us to make emotionally-charged and irrational decisions. In poker, many talented players go broke because they play poker on tilt. Making decisions in this unproductive emotional state is not confined to the poker table. Tilt is common in corporate environments, in finance and sales, and, of course, in our personal lives as anyone with a teenager can attest. The best poker players in the world devote tremendous time and energy on how to reduce the effect of their emotions on their decision-making process. Annie Duke shares the secrets and strategies the top players employ to avoid emotionally- charged decision making.
TAKING CARE OF YOUR FUTURE SELF: Temporal discounting and the sacrifices we make to feel good now
One of the biggest challenges poker players face is how to maintain a long-term view that maximizes their results over their career when they are making moment-to-moment decisions in highly emotionally charged situations. One of the biggest obstacles to success as a player is not talent as most might suspect. It is the ability to balance the future against the present moment, to avoid making decisions that might feel good in the moment but will be costly to your future self. This, of course, is the same problem we all face in making decisions about just about anything: retirement savings, dieting, portfolio management, and procrastination, to name just a few. Annie Duke shows how temporal discounting, discounting the future in favor of feeling good in the present, hurts our overall productivity both in a corporate environment and as individuals. She discusses how this irrational weighting of the present interacts with other cognitive biases to prevent learning, to create emotionally charged decision making, to cost us wealth, and to prevent us from realizing our long-term goals. She offers concrete solutions in the form of both cultural and individual supports for making the kinds of decisions in the moment that more rationally take into account our future selves.
Decide to Play Great Poker
Ask the great poker players how they'd play a hand and the answer is always, 'it depends.' That answer can be infuriating. But guess what? It really does depend. The key to becoming a great poker player is in knowing exactly what it depends on. At last there's a book that gives you that answer.
Poker is a game of so many variables: table position, flop texture, the number of players in a hand, the personalities of your opponents, and so much more. Decide to Play Great Poker teaches you how to identify and analyze those variables, interchange them within basic game-situation templates, and become knowledgeable, comfortable, and confident in any poker situation. Instead of just dictating a bunch of rules that work only some of the time, this book teaches you to become a great poker thinker and strategist so that you can expertly navigate any poker challenge you encounter.
Most players think the goal of poker is to make money. They're wrong! The goal of poker is to make good decisions. Money is simply the way you measure how well you're meeting that objective. So if you're ready to start making world-class decisions at the poker table—and to reap the substantial rewards those decisions will yield—all you have to do is decide: Decide to Play Great Poker now. You'll never be vexed by 'it depends' again.
Annie Duke: How I Raised, Folded, Bluffed, Flirted, Cursed, and Won Millions
The top-ranked female poker player in the world reveals an insider's view of the World Series of Poker, a glimpse of her fascinating journey to the top, and keen analysis of winning hands.
In this interview, Annie Duke discusses: