The Relationship Renaissance | Pete Blank | TEDxKelly Ingram Park
We are living in a time of incredible technological progress—AI is writing code, answering emails, and even giving career advice. But as we speed up digitally, we risk slowing down relationally. No app can replace trust, empathy, or the joy of human connection. In this Relationship Renaissance, it’s time we start valuing people as much as we value progress. Pete Blank brings a wealth of leadership experience from his 13-year career at Disney, where he helped shape the company’s world-renowned employee culture. At the Disney University, he led the Traditions program and trained thousands of college interns, later serving as a Segment Learning Manager for Walt Disney World, Disneyland Resort, and Disney Cruise Line.Currently the Training and Organizational Development Manager for the Personnel Board of Jefferson County, Pete also speaks nationwide on leadership, employee engagement, and customer experience. He holds the Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) and Certified Facilitator of Training (CFT) credentials and received Disney’s prestigious “Partners in Excellence” award.Pete is the author of Employee Engagement: Lessons from the Mouse House and 55 Ways to Add Disney Magic to Your Organization. With humor, insight, and actionable strategies, he helps leaders create meaningful workplace experiences that drive results. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx
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- 8:38Hedging: The language tool that can change your life | Alice Ashcroft | TEDxScarisbrickIn this talk, researcher and writer, Dr Alice Ashcroft, explores how the subtle language pattern of "hedging" (those small words like "I think," "maybe," and "sort of") shapes our professional and personal lives in ways we rarely notice. Drawing from her research in gendered language and technology, she reveals how hedging isn't linguistic filler but a tool that reflects power dynamics, gender expectations, and the double bind many women face: speak directly and face social penalties, or hedge and undermine your own authority. Through examples from software design meetings to childhood memories, she demonstrates how understanding hedging can transform it from an unconscious habit into a strategic choice.Rather than advocating for the elimination of hedging language, Dr Alice Ashcroft, reframes it as a skill to be refined and deployed intentionally. She introduces practical tools like "The Button Example" and "The Power of Why" to help audiences recognise when hedging serves them and when it doesn't. The talk challenges conventional wisdom about confident communication, arguing that mastering intentional hedging isn't about speaking more like men or removing uncertainty from our language, it's about making conscious choices about how we use language to navigate systems that weren't designed with everyone's voices in mind. The result is a fresh perspective on communication that empowers people to maintain their authentic voices while claiming the space and authority they deserve.Dr Alice Ashcroft is a researcher and consultant who analyses the impact of identity and gendered language in software design and technology use. Alice has been published in peer-reviewed academic publications, and her PhD, titled “Design, Innovation and Software: The Impact of Gender and Language”, focused on how gender affects communication and teamwork in software design and innovation workshops. Their work highlights the need for more inclusive practices that give everyone a voice, helping to improve creativity and collaboration in the design process.This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx




