Neil Pasricha

Author of Ten #1 International Best Sellers Including The Happiness Equation
Expert on
- Business
- Happiness
- Emotional Intelligence
- Leadership
- Mindfulness
- Motivational
- Peak Performance
- Personal Development
Fee Range
$40,000–$70,000Travels from
CanadaBiography
A Harvard MBA, New York Times best-selling author, award-winning blogger and one of the most popular TED speakers in the world, Neil Pasricha is a “pied piper of happiness” (The Toronto Star) who dazzles audiences with ideas and frameworks that skyrocket organizational happiness and engagement.
Pasricha spent a decade inside Walmart, the world’s largest company, working for two CEOs directly and then as director of Leadership Development. He complements this “what’s worked” authority with infectious enthusiasm and heartfelt authenticity. He builds trust with audiences quickly and then challenges them to elevate expectations of themselves and commit to the habit of happiness every day.
Pasricha has spoken to royal families in the Middle East, Ivy League deans, and CEOs at organizations such as Audi, Microsoft and GE—all using research and models that enhance individual performance and create a more positive and productive workplace.
Neil is the the author of ten books including The Happiness Equation, a science-backed habit-filled guidebook to living a happy life, Two-Minute Mornings, his simple daily practice to win your morning, and The Book of Awesome, a spinning rolodex of gratitudes based on his 100-million-hit, award-winning blog 1000 Awesome Things. Neil’s books are New York Times and #1 international bestsellers, have spent over 200 weeks on bestseller lists, and have sold over 2,000,000 copies across dozens of languages.
Neil hosts an Apple “Best of” podcast called 3 Books where he’s on an ‘epic 15-year-long quest to uncover the 1000 most formative books in the world.’ Each of the 333 chapters discusses the 3 most formative books of an inspiring person like Brené Brown, David Sedaris, Malcolm Gladwell, Daniels, Roxane Gay, and Quentin Tarantino.
Neil has his MBA from Harvard and writes for Fast Company and Harvard Business Review.