Monthly Meeting

No one has the time, energy, or patience to sift through piles of seemingly unconnected, disorganized, or poorly prioritized information. In this presentation, national communications expert Tim Hayes unlocks the power of the Sunrise Statement – the key to clarity, understanding, and retention of your important messages.

Award-winning journalist and executive communications consultant Tim Hayes brings three decades of outstanding communications counsel and tactical experience – particularly at the leadership level – to clients. As President of Tim Hayes Consulting, Tim has provided individualized and group-based training in presentation skills and media interactions to clients across the nation.
He has been named winner of: the top speech in the nation with the PR News Platinum PR Award; a national Cicero Speechwriting Award; PRSA Renaissance Award for excellence in sustainability report writing; and the No. 1 Speechwriter by the Washington, DC, chapter of the International Association of Business Communicators. He is the subject of two USA Today articles, is a regular guest expert on regional and national radio programs, and has become recognized as a national resource regarding helping leaders perfect their public personas.
Tim has worked directly with CEOs and other senior executives of Chrysler, United States Steel Corp., H.J. Heinz Company, PNC Financial Services Group Inc., Mellon Financial Corp., BAE Systems Inc., Florida Power & Light, Flour Corporation, Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield, Banco Santander Corp., Federated Investors Inc., Wabtec Corp., Michael Baker Corp., Kennametal Inc., J.J. Gumberg Co., iGate Global Solutions Inc., GNC Inc., Universal Stainless & Alloy Products Inc., Allegheny Technologies Inc., PPL Corporation, Grant Thornton LLC, the University of Pittsburgh, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Edinboro University and the Pittsburgh Steelers.
His career began as a newspaper reporter, where he won awards for news coverage of IUP, from which Tim earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism in 1982.