
A Keynote Experience Built to Reconnect Your Staff
Every teacher has tricks up their sleeve to reach a room of kids.
Tim uses a different set of tools: comedy, illusion, mentalism, storytelling, and engagement, to reach a room of adults.
The message: the work matters, no one's carrying it alone, and everyone on staff, from the front office to the custodian's closet, is in this together.
The same energy Tim brings to keynotes and staff events nationwide.
Bring Tim to Your Staff Day
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Real Feedback
Real Feedback, From Real Staff Days
Two schools, two honest reactions, no scripts, just administrators talking about what actually happened.
We're Always On Stage
Every teacher already knows this. The real work isn't just the lesson plan.
- The hallway.
- The parking lot.
- Lunch duty.
- The kid you greeted by name because you noticed he needed it.
- The parent conversation nobody applauds.
- The coworker you encouraged on a hard day.
Tim sees his own version of this constantly.
- An audience of hundreds, watching how Tim will react to a parent and a crying child during his Family Night show.
- Quietly adjusting a routine for a student with special needs, without ever making it a moment.
- Working to earn a smile from the one adult with arms crossed.
- Walking into a gym sixty minutes before showtime and finding nothing ready:
- Nothing set up.
- No stage.
- No principal.
- No one remembers he's coming.
- Yet Tim still decides he has to deliver the exact same show, because the kids walking in soon have no idea any of that happened, and don't deserve a version of Tim that does.
Every person in that room is carrying something, their own story, their own worries, whatever role they walked in wearing that day. Part of the job is creating a space where they can set all of that down, even for an hour, and just be a kid again, or a parent again.
Tim wrote a book about this, called Perform. His version starts before the lights come up, the moment someone visits his website, how fast he returns a call. People size him up long before he does a trick.
Every classroom is different. Every audience is different. The good ones, teachers and performers alike, don't run the same show twice. They read the room and adjust.
One Story Tim Tells In This Keynote
A Family Night show. 400 people in the gym.
Tim noticed something was wrong with a child on stage.
What happened in the next sixty seconds is the real story.
Quiet thinking. Fast decisions.
Talking in code with the principal and the assistant principal.
Protecting that child's dignity in front of the entire room.
Almost nobody in that gym ever knew why.
The few who caught a glimpse of what was really happening backstage said it made them feel more connected to their school than anything else that year.
It's not a story for this page.
It's one you'll have to have him in the room to hear.
That's the idea behind this program. Just like a teacher keeps a few tricks up their sleeve to reach a room of kids, Tim uses a different set of tools to reach a room of adults, and to remind them why the work matters, that they're not carrying it alone, and that everyone on staff is in this together.
Ready to book Tim for your staff day?
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This Is What Tim Already Does For Rooms Like Yours
Most people who find this site know Tim from school assemblies.
Fewer know he's also brought the same comedy, magic, and message to staff trainings, conferences, and corporate events, everywhere from school gyms and auditoriums to conference ballrooms.
Same connection, wherever the room happens to be.
A Closing Moment They Won't See Coming
Near the end of every keynote, something happens that nobody in the room ever forgets, quiet, unexpected, and impossible to fake.
It's not a trick. It's not a prediction.
Everyone in the room plays a small part, one that might not feel like much on its own.
But when those small parts come together, something happens that none of them could have created alone.
People don't walk away talking about how it worked. They walk away talking about how it felt, and about the part they played in it.
It's not something to describe on a webpage. It's something you have to be in the room for.
FAQ
Questions Schools Ask
How long is the program, and what does it actually include?
Can it tie into our theme for the day?
Is this just for teachers, or the whole staff?
If we're bringing Tim in for the keynote, is there anything else he can do?
How is this different from hiring a motivational speaker?
How far in advance should we book?
Any way to save if a neighboring district is booking around the same time?
Bring Tim to Your Staff Day
Reach out and we'll get right back to you.
