Keynotes as Creative Experiences at CES

Key Takeaways for Creators 

By Tripp Underwood, VP of Content

CES is one of the world’s most highly attended, business-focused events—and its biggest stages are dominated by brands selling complex, often invisible technologies. It’s a tall order for the creative directors and experience creators in charge of the shows. Turning matrixed organizations, abstract systems, and future-facing ideas into engaging experiences people can feel in the room isn’t easy. Below are a few observations on the on-stage storytelling choices we liked best this year—and why we thought they worked as well as they did.

The strongest performances had a thesis — and stuck with it.  

CES is designed to overwhelm. Thousands of talks, product launches, and big ideas make it so even sharp audiences may struggle to retain what they just heard — or worse, blur one company’s story into another’s. 

That’s where a crisp keynote thesis can help. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang clearly understands the power of a unifying theme, because he did a great job anchoring a dense, multitopic keynote to a single, tangible idea: the future of AI is physical.  

This elevated but accessible concept carried everything; his vision for where AI is headed, his argument for an industry-wide reset on computing stacks, even a somewhat gratuitous detour into autonomous vehicle technology worked well for him.  In his hour plus of stage time, he covered a lot of ground but always stayed grounded in his core idea—a masterclass in messaging discipline that positioned his company as both visionary leaders and practical partners.   

Key takeaway: it’s fine to say a lot — but make it easier on your audience by asking them to remember just one thing. A clear thesis makes all your messages stickier. And the editorial discipline of forcing every talking point to earn its place strengthens delivery, whether you’re on a stage or a sales call. 

Thought leaders didn’t explain complexity, they made it felt.

CES was packed with big concepts: AI infrastructure, digital twins, ambient computing, etc. Many speakers explained what’s coming; few made the opportunities feel tangible. Siemens AG stood out by doing just that.  

After a visually dynamic (if slightly indulgent) opening timeline of the company’s innovation legacy, the keynote got down to business: demystifying industrial AI, shifting it from abstract capability to real-world credibility. Roland Busch, President and CEO of Siemens AG, clearly showed how AI moves through the industrial value chain, and why that matters in practical terms like resilience, sustainability, and productivity. 

His approach was especially effective in the digital twin segment. Plainspoken narration paired with literal but satisfying visuals made a buzzword-heavy topic feel concrete, and worth the investment. Throughout the talk credibility was backed by a wide range of specifics: different case studies, multiple voices and presenters, and a polished explanation of Digital Twin Composer that made real-time simulation/ problem-solving feel plausible. 

Key takeaway: if you’re dealing with complex ideas, don’t over-invest in explaining the stakes. Use your stage time to help people see the solution.  

Proof is the new persuasion (but small, ownable moments matter more than ever) 

AI dominated CES content and nearly every speaker was eager to prove their technology was pragmatic and real-world ready. Cue the slides packed with animated graphs, charts, and metrics. 

The problem is: when everyone is saying the same thing (“AI is real now”), audience fatigue sets in fast. Data is persuasive — until it all starts to blur together.  

The speakers with the most credibility weren’t those with the most proof; they were the ones who found distinctive ways to claim their piece of the AI story. Joe Creed, CEO of Caterpillar, did this especially well. Not by avoiding numbers or case studies (he had those too), but by layering in three subtle, but highly ownable moves. 

  1.  He framed mining — and by extension, Caterpillar — as the upstream enabler of AI. Without copper, lithium, rare earths, and steel, there are no data centers, chips, or infrastructure. This was just a quick aside in his talk, but in just a few sentences he managed to position Caterpillar as foundational to AI in a way no one else at CES could credibly claim. 
  2. He consistently tied AI, autonomy, and smart machines to safety not just productivity. The message wasn’t futuristic or profit-driven; it was empathetic. Technology that removes people from danger and makes hard work less risky is a tangible, human idea that everyone can relate to. 
  3. He shared an archival drawing from the 1930s—a Rube Goldberg–style illustration that a company engineer drew nearly 100 years ago that eerily anticipated modern technologies like video conferencing. Unlike typical corporate nostalgia, it felt personal, like someone proudly showing off something their grandfather built. A quiet way to establish innovation credibility without ever saying the word innovation. 

Key takeaway: when a category gets crowded, persuasion doesn’t come from piling on proof. It comes from finding proof that only you can show — and delivering it in ways people remember. 

 

 

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