Judd Shaw is a keynote speaker, author, and founder who works at the intersection of authentic leadership, organizational culture, and human connection. For more than two decades, Judd has built and led one of New Jersey’s most successful law firms. By every external measure, the organization was a success. His face was on billboards across the state. The firm was thriving. Clients were well served. The team was delivering. But a personal reckoning forced Judd to look at himself honestly, and the inner work that followed changed how he showed up as a leader.
When he brought that shift back into the firm, his team didn’t just accept it. They preferred it. And the organization got measurably better. Retention strengthened. Decision-making clarity improved. Trust accelerated execution. Through that process, Judd came to see something he now brings to every organization he works with: something doesn’t need to be broken to be made better. When leaders begin to operate more honestly, not more perfectly but more presently, something measurable changes in the culture around them. The leadership habits that build a high-performing organization are not always the ones that take it to the next level. He measured what shifted.
The results documented inside his own organization form the evidentiary foundation of his work: authentic leadership is not soft. It is brave. And it is the infrastructure of a sustainable, high-performing culture. His keynotes are built on that proof. Tailored to the specific moment an organization is in and grounded in a conviction he can back with data: the leaders who will define the next decade are not the most charismatic ones. They are the ones who can tolerate uncertainty without abandoning integrity.
Judd is the author of How to Live Authentically: The Surprising Cure for Loneliness and Disconnection (May 2026). He is the host of the Behind the Armor podcast, the founder of Brave Ideas Company, and the president of Judd Shaw Injury Law. He also writes the Sterling the Knight children’s book series.



“I don’t think enough people are talking about vulnerability… He was very vulnerable, and I think that encouraged the audience to be vulnerable. I definitely took a lot away from this presentation.”
“I don’t think enough people are talking about vulnerability… He was very vulnerable, and I think that encouraged the audience to be vulnerable. I definitely took a lot away from this presentation.”