“Being known for what you do – no matter how well you do it – makes you a replaceable commodity,” says Ken Schmidt. “Competitive dominance comes when your market knows you for who you are, associates you with positive human attributes and rewards you with their loyalty.” This talk is rooted in the highly unconventional ideas that drove Harley-Davidson’s transformation and unlikely return to dominance, as Ken and his team shifted the company away from its commoditized “product-first” mindset to a fiercely committed “people-first” mindset that takes advantage of key drivers of human behavior.
Ken’s high energy, humor, amazing visuals and actionable take-aways abound as he shows businesses of every size and scope how to tap into the behavioral drivers that ignite employee and customer passion, build marketplace preference and fuel tattoo-worthy levels of customer loyalty.
AUDIENCE TAKEAWAYS
What does it take to get your customers to share compelling stories about your business and recommend it to others? Specifically, what would you want them to say? Engaging stories, paired with distinct and unexpected language, are highly memorable and help shape perceptions, boost advocacy, and drive demand. Ken Schmidt knows that powerful stories are essential for distancing your business from competitors and building a rock-solid reputation. In this presentation, Schmidt outlines simple, actionable strategies for companies to develop their own distinctive voice and create stories that resonate, leading to lasting differentiation and loyal, vocal customers. What are your customers saying about you right now?
AUDIENCE TAKEAWAYS
Ken Schmidt is best known for his leadership role in the celebrated turnaround of Harley-Davidson Motor Company, where he helped transform the brand from near collapse into one of the most admired organizations in the world. With deep insight into customer behavior, market psychology and competitive positioning, Ken shows audiences how to rise above sameness, build reputations that spark preference and create loyalty that competitors cannot copy.
For more than 1,000 keynotes worldwide, he has delivered high-energy, story-driven presentations that challenge companies to stop blending in and start standing out for who they are rather than what they make. His work centers on a simple truth: when customers cannot associate positive human qualities with a business, they can buy from anyone and feel satisfied. This reality opens the door for bold brands to dominate through personality, emotional connection and authentic human impact.
Ken is the author of Make Some Noise: The Unconventional Road to Dominance, host of the Tailgating with Geniuses podcast and co-founder of Torque Sessions Leadership Training. Across all platforms, he encourages people to embrace his credo: Never do what is expected, make yourself noticeably different and have more fun than you are supposed to.
Ken Schmidt is one of the world’s most admired authorities on competitive differentiation, brand loyalty and the power of authentic human connection in business. Best known for his leadership role in the legendary turnaround of Harley-Davidson Motor Company, he helped pull the brand back from the brink of collapse by reigniting passion, rebuilding trust and shaping one of the most iconic customer communities in modern business history. Ken’s work demonstrated what he teaches today: people do not form deep loyalty to products, features or price points. They form loyalty to identity, belonging and memorable human qualities that competitors cannot replicate.
Early in his career, Ken Schmidt recognized a challenge shared across industries. When customers cannot quickly associate any positive human attributes with a business, they know they can buy from anyone and feel confident they will receive something “good enough.” Most organizations, instead of pushing against this reality, unintentionally reinforce it by copying competitors, minimizing risk and weaponizing price. Ken saw a different path forward. At Harley-Davidson, he helped steer the company toward standing out rather than fitting in, creating a brand personality that was bold, unmistakably different and unapologetically human. The result was an emotional connection so strong that customers literally tattooed their loyalty onto their skin.
For more than 1,000 keynotes worldwide, Ken Schmidt has inspired audiences to rethink how they show up in the marketplace and in their customer relationships. His style is fast-paced, high-energy and deeply story-driven, blending humor with hard-earned lessons from the front lines of business transformation. He teaches that competitive dominance is not achieved through conventional marketing or operational efficiency alone, but through consistently memorable interactions that elevate a company’s humanity. By focusing on the simple drivers of human behavior, organizations can create experiences that delight, build reputations that stand out and generate preference that lasts.
Ken Schmidt is the author of Make Some Noise: The Unconventional Road to Dominance, in which he explores the philosophies and strategies that shaped his career. He is also the host of the Tailgating with Geniuses podcast and co-founder of Torque Sessions Leadership Training, where he guides leaders in applying the same principles of differentiation and relationship-building to their own teams and industries.
Across all his work, Ken Schmidt lives and teaches his defining credo: Never do what is expected, make yourself as noticeably different as possible and have far more fun than you are supposed to. His mission is simple and powerful: help organizations become unforgettable for all the right reasons.
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A fast-paced introduction to Ken Schmidt’s philosophy on differentiation, human connection and the distinctive “noise” that makes brands unforgettable.
This 1m46s showreel captures Ken Schmidt’s core message about competitive distinction and the human drivers behind brand loyalty. He opens by asserting that loyalty to hardware is “counterhuman,” emphasizing that people are loyal to people, not products. Businesses that glorify the human element and center their identity on people naturally attract attention and emotional resonance, which is far more powerful than traditional selling.
Ken then draws from the Harley-Davidson example, explaining how the company has produced a uniquely recognizable sound for more than a century. The low, thundering boom instantly signals “Harley,” not simply “a motorcycle.” This distinction reflects the deeper emotional attachment customers feel toward the brand’s identity and community.
He expands the concept by noting that every business makes “noise,” defined as what people say about a company when discussing it with others. For most organizations, that noise is indistinguishable and forgettable, limited to generic descriptors like what they make or sell. This creates sameness, making companies difficult to remember and easy to replace.
Ken contrasts this with a different kind of noise, one earned when customers describe how a business makes them feel and why it stands apart. He argues that companies often focus on the wrong priorities because they were taught to concentrate on products, sales and competition.
His closing message is a call to action: stop chasing competitors and instead operate in a way that forces them to chase you. He urges leaders to take risks, break free from conformity and carve their own distinctive paths. By embracing differentiation and injecting more fun and boldness into their identity, organizations position themselves to be rewarded with stronger reputations, deeper loyalty and greater market dominance.
Ken Schmidt recounts Harley-Davidson’s dramatic fall from market dominance and the pivotal mindset shift that rebuilt the brand into a global powerhouse.
This 3m16s video features Ken Schmidt explaining how Harley-Davidson collapsed from near-total market dominance to a marginal player in less than a decade, and how the company rebuilt itself by shifting its focus from products to people.
Ken begins by describing his arrival at Harley in 1985. He jokes that he could spend hours detailing every mistake the company made, but he offers the core story instead. Harley had once controlled over 95 percent of the heavyweight motorcycle market in North America, a near monopoly. Within ten years, that market share had fallen below 20 percent. He explains that the brand’s collapse was self-inflicted: Harley glorified its product and centered its entire business around the motorcycle itself, mistakenly believing that was what customers valued most.
Competitors saw this vulnerability, quickly producing lookalike bikes priced 40 to 60 percent lower, and they captured Harley’s market simply by offering similar features at a lower cost. Ken emphasizes that these rivals didn’t “take” anything from Harley; Harley gave it away by mirroring the competition. By matching the same messages about quality, reliability and engineering, Harley inadvertently endorsed competing brands and made itself indistinguishable, raising an unavoidable question for customers: if both companies say the same thing, why pay more?
On his first day, Ken was assigned to “improve the company’s image,” a directive he calls naïve given how deeply product-centered Harley had become. Sitting behind a typewriter, he drafted three crucial questions that would reshape the company’s future. Those questions formed the foundation of Harley’s rebirth: understanding what makes a business attractive, what inspires advocacy and what differentiates a company in a crowded market.
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