About Alex Goryachev · AI Keynote Speaker, WSJ-Bestselling Author & Former Cisco Innovation Leader

In the age of AI, you either stay above the algorithm, or you work for it.

Most people in the AI conversation are selling fear or selling hype. I have been in the rooms where AI actually gets created, and in the rooms where it gets deployed, and the honest answer is both. It is the most incredible tool we have ever built, and it will leave people behind unless we use it responsibly. The change is also moving faster than anything I have seen.

I view my mission simply: make sure that as the world races ahead, no one gets left behind.

Frequently featured in:

Every organization that fails at transformation fails the same way: they invest in the tools, and forget to invest in the people who have to use them.

The core conviction of Alex Goryachev

One belief, tested across every wave of disruption

My starting point

Let me be clear about where I stand on AI. It is the most incredible tool we have ever built, and it is also the one most capable of leaving people behind. Both are true at once. I have spent my career watching technology threaten people and free them in the same breath, and I will hold both truths honestly. The fear is real. So is the hope. The entire job is making sure hope wins, and that only happens when we use these tools responsibly, deliberately, and in service of the humans who have to live with them. The hard part is the speed: this is moving faster than any shift I have lived through.

AI becomes good or bad based on what we decide: how we build it, who we include, and whether it expands human agency or quietly erases it.

The early internet years

I was an early pioneer of the commercial internet, back when digital music and entertainment were the first industries the web rewrote. I was part of Napster, the peer-to-peer platform that upended the entire music business and showed the world how fast a digital shift can dismantle an established industry. Before that, at Liquid Audio, algorithmic distribution and behavioral data at scale were the product itself, not a pitch deck. My path also ran through IBM and Pfizer, delivering enterprise technology at global scale. Across all of it, one lesson held: disruption rewards the people who stay close to the humans, not just the technology.

Scaling innovation at Cisco

At Cisco, I built a global innovation function from the ground up: a $1.1B portfolio of work spanning 14 countries (I have personally traveled to more than 64), a 72,000-person workforce, co-innovation centers on five continents, and innovation programs for three Olympic Games. We earned the awards and the case studies. The lesson that stuck was simpler: the programs that worked were the ones that made ordinary employees feel their ideas mattered. The reskilling work I am proudest of reached more than 300,000 people, because of how it treated them.

The work that matters most now

Today the work that matters most to me is education and reskilling, which I believe is the single most important job of this century. As AI rewrites what work is, lifting every worker and learner with it is both a moral and an economic imperative. It is one of the honors of my life to work with the California State University system, the largest public university system in the United States, on its AI Insights strategy: understanding the impact AI has on learning and the workforce of the future, across 22 campuses and 460,000 students.

That commitment to education runs through my work across academia, as Innovator in Residence at Tulane University and as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. It is the same thinking I have carried into rooms for Google, AWS, Bosch, Coca-Cola, and Rotary International, and into advisory work, having advised both Dell, where I helped build a world-class AI consultancy, and Amgen, where I worked on early AI pilots. The tools keep changing. The conviction never does: innovation is never about the technology, it is always about the people.

The framework

Three moves to stay above the algorithm

A model I bring to every organization I work with, from Fortune 50 boards to the largest public university system in the country. As AI gets better at the work and the pace keeps accelerating, one position stays durable: keeping people above the algorithm, not beneath it. Three moves get you there.

Adapt or vanish

The tech cycle now moves faster than the org chart. Build the muscle to change continuously, with measured experiments, fast learning, and real outcomes, so you lead the pace instead of chasing it.

Invest in what only people have

Judgment, trust, creativity, and taste are the durable advantage. Develop the human capabilities AI amplifies rather than replaces, and point your people squarely at them.

Democratize the tools

Value compounds when the whole workforce can build with AI. Hand everyone a maker space, spread the skills wide, and let the best ideas come from anywhere in the organization.

Things I believe about AI and innovation

01

"Adapt or vanish" is a literal description of the timeline.

Most organizations are pricing in a slower AI timeline than the one actually arriving. The gap between the fast adapters and everyone else widens by the month, and it closes for no one.

02

Innovation is rarely born in corner offices.

The best ideas usually come from the people closest to the problem, not the people highest on the org chart. The organizations that win know how to pull them up from every level.

03

Education and reskilling are the defining work of our era.

As AI changes what work is, the highest-leverage investment any leader or country can make is in the skills of their people. Get that right and almost everything else follows.

04

It is not the future that kills great companies. It is loyalty to the past.

The most dangerous phrase in any boardroom is "this is how we have always done it." Incumbents rarely fall because the technology beat them; they fall because they defended yesterday's success long after the world moved on.

05

Automation is wonderful, right up until you automate the one person who actually understood how anything worked.

The org chart never shows where the real knowledge lives. Automate without understanding it first, and you scale the gaps right alongside the gains.

06

Get above the algorithm, or get automated.

Plenty of people will let the algorithm set the agenda and grade the work. The real advantage belongs to those who keep direction, judgment, and the final call human, and treat AI as leverage instead of a leash.

07

Hiring a Chief AI Officer to "handle the AI" is like hiring a Chief Electricity Officer in 1920.

AI is not a department you can delegate to. It is the new wiring in the whole building, and everyone has to learn where the switches are.

08

Your employees are already using AI. The only question is whether they will tell you.

Shadow AI is in your organization right now. You can pretend it is not and lose the lessons, or you can lead it and learn from what your people are already discovering.

09

Half of what gets sold as an "AI strategy" is a slide deck with a robot on it.

Real strategy survives contact with a P&L. If your plan changes nothing about how work actually gets done on Monday, it is decoration, not direction.

10

Innovation theater has better production values than ever. The plot is still the same: nothing happens.

Hackathons and labs and offsites are easy to stage. A genuinely changed organization is the only review that counts, and it is a lot harder to fake.

A personal note

Here is what keeps me in this work. In every organization there is someone in the back of the room who is afraid that AI is going to leave them behind. I think about that person constantly. The reason I write, and teach, advise and step on stages at all is to make sure they walk out believing they still have a place in what comes next. The speed of change is real, and for a lot of people it is frightening. But I have seen what happens when leaders choose to bring everyone with them, and it is the most hopeful thing I know.

Let's build that for your people.
Alex Goryachev on stage delivering an AI keynote to a live corporate audience

Why Audiences Love Alex

Eye-opening, refreshingly human, and capable of building a shared vision around agentic AI — that's how leaders at Coca-Cola, AWS, and Disney describe Alex Goryachev's AI keynotes and employee innovation workshops.

01

No canned AI keynotes

Across 310+ keynotes on 6 continents, no two have ever been the same. Alex builds every talk around your audience's challenges, industry, and goals — from agentic AI strategy to innovation culture.
02

Innovation for everyone

Alex turns AI into practical concepts — not techspeak — that land with HR, sales, marketing, and engineering alike. It's the same approach he honed building innovation centers across 14 countries, bridging cultures and generations.
03

Value beyond the stage

Most keynotes fade by Monday. Alex's leave teams with actionable frameworks from his WSJ-bestselling book Fearless Innovation — and optional workshops turn that momentum into lasting innovation habits.
04

Expertise with real ROI

A practitioner, not a futurist, Alex led a $1.1B innovation portfolio at Cisco — and runs his keynotes the same data-driven way. He uses AI to analyze pre-event sentiment to shape content, then delivers post-event metrics so you can see the ROI.
05

Flexible engagements

Live on stage, on webinars, or at virtual events — Alex delivers in whatever format fits your requirements. Whatever the setting, 98% of audiences say they would recommend him.

Request Alex's availability for your engagement. From Silicon Valley to Singapore, and everywhere in between.

Work with Alex

310+ Keynotes, Workshops & Advisory Engagements for Enterprises, Universities, and Associations:

Work with Alex

Turn your next event into AI and innovation action.

These aren't just better ways to use ChatGPT, or create short-term buzz. This is what the most influential organizations on earth use to shape the future.
Thank you for your message.
Alex will be in touch in 24 hours!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Frequently asked questions

If you don't see what you need, message Alex directly via the form below — answers usually within one business day.

Where is Alex Goryachev based?

Alex Goryachev is based in San Diego, California, and speaks worldwide—he has delivered 310+ keynotes across 6 continents, in person and virtually. His San Diego base makes him an easy choice for West Coast and Southern California events, while global time-zone flexibility covers international audiences. Wherever your event is, start the conversation through the Work with Alex page.

What makes Alex Goryachev qualified to speak on AI?

Alex's qualification is a rare combination: enterprise operator, published author, and trusted advisor. He ran a $1.1B innovation portfolio at Cisco, wrote the WSJ bestseller Fearless Innovation, is a LinkedIn Top AI Voice, and serves as Innovator-in-Residence at Tulane University. Clients from Google and IBM to SHRM and IEEE rely on that depth. Put it to work for your event via the Work with Alex page.

What does Alex Goryachev speak about?

Alex speaks about agentic AI strategy, AI governance, fearless innovation, and the future of work—always customized to the audience's industry and AI maturity. His material draws on his WSJ bestseller Fearless Innovation, his Forbes writing, and his work with the California State University system on AI and AI governance. Browse topics and formats on the Work with Alex page.

Is Alex Goryachev a practitioner or a futurist?

Alex is a practitioner—he spent his career building AI and innovation programs inside global enterprises before ever stepping on stage. At Cisco he created university-anchored innovation centers across 14 countries and delivered innovation tracks for 3 Olympic Games. That operating record is why audiences get implementable strategy rather than predictions. Experience the difference by booking through the Work with Alex page.

Who is Alex Goryachev?

Alex Goryachev is an AI keynote speaker, workshop facilitator, and strategic advisor, and a leading voice on the future of work and learning in the age of agentic AI. He is the Wall Street Journal bestselling author of Fearless Innovation (Wiley), a Forbes contributor, and a LinkedIn Top AI Voice. As former Managing Director of Innovation Strategy at Cisco, he led a $1.1 billion innovation portfolio and created innovation tracks for three Olympic Games.