Elisabeth Leamy is best known for her decade as consumer and investigative Correspondent for ABC’s Good Morning America. She has interviewed presidents and first ladies, CEOs and celebrities, but is more proud that her stories spurred congressional inquiries, lawsuits, and … Continued
Elisabeth Leamy is best known for her decade as consumer and investigative Correspondent for ABC’s Good Morning America. She has interviewed presidents and first ladies, CEOs and celebrities, but is more proud that her stories spurred congressional inquiries, lawsuits, and … Continued
Elisabeth Leamy is best known for her decade as consumer and investigative Correspondent for ABC’s Good Morning America. She has interviewed
presidents and first ladies, CEOs and celebrities, but is more proud that her stories spurred congressional inquiries, lawsuits, and legislation that helped the underdog. It wasn’t always pretty. Network news is a pressure-cooker world blunders and bloopers are made on national TV for all to see.
Elisabeth’s own struggle to juggle inspired her to create The TRIoritize Technique, the three-part system she credits with helping her win 13 Emmys and four Edward R. Murrow awards, while also writing two books and a Washington Post column on the side. She survived—and eventually thrived—by using this technique to corral her competing priorities and do quality stories amid the chaos. The surprising secret to doing the best work of your life? Not always striving for your best. It is this counterintuitive discovery that Elisabeth shares with audiences today.
Before unveiling The TRIoritize Technique, Elisabeth spent years and tapped into her journalism skills to figure out why it works. She unearthed neuroscience that shows why pushing our hardest all the time hurts rather than helps our performance. And she dug up business studies that prove the astonishing power of focusing on just a handful of strategic priorities at any one time.
Elisabeth is an original thinker who has forged a path of trial-and-error success from on-air to on-stage. Her clear but colorful communication style has been an asset throughout her journey. Today, Elisabeth’s mission as a keynote speaker is to help others who are determined to conquer their competing priorities and accomplish great things at work—and in life.





