INSPIRATIONAL PUBLIC SPEAKER
POLAR EXPLORER, WRITER & PRESENTER
In May 2003, Pen was catapulted to international fame when
he became the first person in history to sledge alone from
Canada to the North Geographic Pole without any outside help
- a feat of endurance thought to be harder than climbing Everest
solo, without oxygen. It had taken him three attempts and
fifteen years' dedication to achieve his goal.
Born in 1962, Pen was educated at Harrow, where he was head
of house, head of school, head of rugby, football and athletics,
and where he achieved his first feat of endurance: completing
a school marathon at the age of 15, the first time that any
boy had attempted the course for exactly fifty years, and
now an annual fixture for the school. Then came his 'wilderness'
years, when he struggled to resolve how best he could fulfill
his potential, and, once he had set his heart on the polar
regions, and the North Pole in particular, struggled even
more to finally achieve his dream.
Pen read Geography at University College London, and went
on to become the youngest-ever executive at Mark McCormack's
renowned International Management Group, where he was more
focused in helping others achieve rather than himself.
When he set up The Polar Travel Company he famously empowered
a group of allegedly 'ordinary' women to walk into The Guinness
Book of Records, by initiating, selecting, organizing, and
largely funding the first ever All Women expedition to the
North Geographic Pole.
Through The Polar Travel Company, the only specialist guide
service of its kind in the world, he dedicated himself single-handedly,
to opening up the Arctic and Antarctic to everyone. He even
enabled a child with cerebral palsy to fly to the North Pole,
and empowered a muscular dystrophy sufferer to cover the last
100 metres there.
Last February 2004, Hadow guided 63 year old international
businessman Simon Murray to the South Pole, thereby enabling
him to become the oldest person by a decade ever to walk to
the Pole, while Pen became the first Briton to trek without
re-supply to both Poles.
Presentations
"I am here to make a difference - not just entertain"
Pen Hadow, March 2005
Pen's defining quality is his natural ability - and passionate
commitment - to bridging the divide between the speaker and
his audience, to convince his audience that if even he can
achieve what he sets out to do, then there's no reason why
they cannot do the same - it's all about what goes on in your
head.
Coutts, Tetrapak, Tatler, Savills, Nike, Lloyds TSB, Novartis,
AC Nielsen, the MOD and England Rugby's Elite Coaching Programme
are just some of the organisations who have recently used
Pen to inspire, motivate and entertain their employees, customers
and management teams, at all kinds of events, from major conferences
to intimate dinners.
Engagingly self-deprecating, inspirational and focused,
audiences quickly identify with his themes. He integrates
his business experience, hard-won leadership skills honed
guiding novice teams in extreme environments, and his own
ground-breaking endeavours in the Arctic and Antarctic, to
apply fresh perspectives to clients' key messages.
Each of Pen's presentations is thoughtfully prepared according
to the client's brief, be it an intimate and informal 15 minute
after-dinner discussion of polar stories; a motivational talk
with high impact images and modern AV support; or a day of
workshops. Pen can talk with insight and genuine authority
about personal motivation, effective teamwork, and leadership
techniques, to support the people in any organisation in realising
their individual potential and achieving their team missions.
Pen's personal and thought-provoking style can also touch
on the less glamorous, but equally important, aspects of achieving
success, including the value of failure, attitudes to risk,
the work-life balance, and the issue of 'giving up'.
Whatever the subject, wherever the venue, and whoever his
audience; Pen will hold the audience in his thrall. Pen naturally
engages an audience and effortlessly inspires them, directly
relating the experiences he has endured out on the ice to
the challenges he knows all too well are presented by the
equally challenging work environment. Question time is his
forte, when he can enjoy direct interaction with guests.
Testimonials
"You have a gift - and should use it. Few can communicate
with a level of engagement and intensity like that."
Dame Anita Roddick, Founder of The Body Shop
"Outstanding in every respect ... amusing, terrifying,
engaging, inspiring. Terrific."
Vernon Sankey, Main Board Director of Pearson plc
"One of the best speakers we've ever had, in 200 lectures
over 18 years, given by Britain's best known adventure speakers."
Himalayan Kingdoms
"... the more he described the outrageously challenging
conditions and situations he has overcome, the more I and
the others around me found ourselves wanting to go on a polar
expedition ourselves, so engaging is his style … He's
a charismatic personality who can shift people's perception
of what is achievable."
Mark Taylor - Commercial Director, Unigate Dairies
''Property conferences have a reputation for ensuring sleep
for all attendees! However it can fairly be said that Pen's
approach to his incredible achievements in the polar regions
came as a complete breath of fresh air to the 140 delegates.
He genuinely captivated the audience with a humbling, matter-of-fact
repartee so seldom heard any more. He has a made a big impact
on our audience and we would thoroughly recommend him as a
highly professional speaker full of integrity and obvious
grit. Many attendees have said he was truly the highlight
of their day."
David Williams - Director, Commercial Agency, FPDSavills
Pen's faultless delivery, captivating anecdotes and straightforward
honesty about his extraordinary achievements held us all in
his thrall. He is the living embodiment of achievement through
sheer hard work, determination and fastidious planning. He
inspires everyone he touches and reminds us that there is
everything to play for."
Tatler Magazine
"Pen Hadow's presentations get to the heart of the
matter, this is a man who has achieved great things - he not
only tells you what he has done but more importantly he goes
much further and deeper to the why and the how. Pen's style
is generous and welcoming and he encourages you to look for
and achieve your personal necessary endeavour. Not your average
hero stuff - much more about motivation, self awareness, endeavour
and achievable achievement"
Ashridge Business School
"... inspirational and well communicated..."
AC Nielsen
"Pen went down very well when he was here speaking
to our clients a couple of weeks ago, our major clients were
blown away by his achievements, it was a great lunch and a
real pleasure to meet Pen and I am grateful to him for giving
up the time to honour this commitment."
Coutts Private Banking
"Jonathan Dimbleby, Pen Hadow and Simon Murray gelled
to provide one of the most revealing, provocative and entertaining
evenings we've had the privilege to organise."
Dr Rita Gardner CBE, Royal Geographical Society
"Pen Hadow was a guest speaker at our 'Savill's Commercial
Directors' Conference in London in November. Pen gave an inspirational
talk and captured the full attention of an audience that is
notoriously critical of public speakers! He was amusing, stimulating,
informing and uplifting and is clearly a man for whom the
word "impossible" does not exist! I would thoroughly
recommend him to any audience that wishes to be inspired and
Savills will undoubtedly utilise his services again in the
future."
Jeremy Helsby - Chairman & Chief Executive, FPDSavills
International
"Pen's unique vision has earned his company an international
reputation, supported by his outstanding ability to challenge
and prepare individuals and teams for the most challenging
places on Earth.
I recommend strongly his presentations to those interested
in the valuable lessons to be learnt from the most extreme
conditions on Earth where they are applicable to individuals
and teams operating in corporate environments today."
His talks are seriously inspirational, relevant to company
teams and a real must for those who need to think outside
the box."
Jack Russell - Director, Personal Development Coaching
"... thank you so much for coming to talk to our sales
team yesterday. They were hugely impressed and even more enthusiastic
about Solo as a result."
Tom Weldon, Managing Director, Penguin.
Profile
The past twelve months:
Publication of 'SOLO, the North Pole Alone and Unsupported'
by Penguin. Sunday Times Book of the Week. Christmas best
seller.
TV Documentary screened on the National Geographic Channel.
International Winner: "Most Outstanding Outdoor Adventure
Challenge Worldwide" La Marca Newspaper (Spain)
Awarded Honorary Doctor of Laws by Exeter University, and
became first ever 'Freeman of West Devon'.
Raised over £250,000 to help restore the Royal Geographical
Society's polar archive.
Appearances on:
BBC Radio 4's "Desert Island Discs"
BBC Radio 4's "Excess Baggage"
BBC Radio 4's "Broadcasting House"x2
ITN News Channel
Radio 5 Live
The Sunday Times x2, The Sunday Telegraph, The Times, The
Independent (x3), The Daily Mail, The Guardian; Metro, The
Evening Standard
Esquire (x2), Mens Fitness, Geographical Magazine (x3)
In the pipeline:
· w/c April 4th: Pen presents a series of five programmes
on BBC Radio 4 for 'Testbed Productions', about author Jules
Verne's stories of exploration.
· April 9th: Pen contributes to a two hour Channel
4 Election Special, featuring a host of Britain's higher profile
personalities, giving his 'manifesto' on the importance of
increasing the volume and range of outdoor learning experiences
in schools (provisional broadcast date)
· May: the paperback edition of 'SOLO' will be published,
publicity campaign to be orchestrated by Penguin.
· October: the launch of Pen's next expedition to take
place in the first ever International Polar Year: 2007. An
extremely high profile project relating to global climate
change , reaching almost every man, woman and child in Britain.
It will involve politicians, scientists and celebrities at
the very highest level, and we will be working closely with
national and international press and broadcast media partners.
There will be ongoing publicity as it builds towards its start
date in 2007. Nothing like it has ever been attempted before.
Fees
Fees at this stage are very flexible, according to requirements.
Margins for you will be generous because there are no middle
agents involved. End client price could be anything from £3,000
to £10,000 depending on what was wanted, where, when,
and for how long.
Please let me know if you need anything else, and we will
endeavour to respond with the utmost efficiency. In the meantime
we'll keep you advised of events you can attend to hear Pen
in action yourself. A high-res pic and leaflets will be with
you shortly, and a show reel within a few weeks. And don't
forget to listen out for Pen on Radio 4 at 3.45pm, on every
weekday next week!
Expeditions
Pen Hadow (43) is the first and only person in history to
have trekked alone without any outside assistance from Canada
to the North Geographic Pole. He is also the first and only
Briton to have trekked to both the North and South Geographic
Poles without air support - feats which he achieved within
a twelve month period.
Tetley South Pole Mission (February 2004)
Completed the 680-mile Tetley South Pole Mission trek to
the South Geographic Pole, making Pen the first Briton to
walk without support to both the North and South Poles.
In December 2003 Pen and British businessman Simon Murray
set off on the unsupported trek from Hercules Inlet at sea
level to the South Geographic Pole at 9,300ft, hauling sledges
initially weighing 28 stone, in temperatures as low as -40°C.
On 28th January 2004, at 63 years old, Simon became the
oldest person by a decade ever to have trekked to the South
Pole.
The 58-day ice odyssey raised over £250,000 to help
restore and digitally catalogue the Royal Geographical Society's
polar archive heritage. The archives are now accessible to
the public on site and via the internet.
The Omega Foundation Arctic Ocean Research Expedition (May
2003)
Pen became the first man to walk 478 miles from the northern
coast of Canada, across the moving, melting, rugged sea ice
of the Arctic Ocean, to the North Geographic Pole, alone,
without any outside help. On his final day, Pen completed
an astonishing 20 miles in 15 hours, and with only one hour's
rest, he embarked on the last 5 mile phase.
He began what explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes has described
as 'one of the last great endurance challenges on Earth' on
March 17th, and reached his goal, the North Geographic Pole
at 09.54 GMT on Monday, May 19th. Others have likened the
feat to climbing Everest - solo and without oxygen.
Along the way he saw no living thing, save a couple of seals,
a seal carcass left by a polar bear, and a small bird.
The expedition was funded by an American educational trust,
The Omega Foundation. This is a private, operating institution
dedicated to promoting scientific research, education, and
environmental protection, primarily in the high altitude and
high latitude regions of Earth.
At the start of the expedition, Pen was pulling a sledge
weighing 19 1/2 stone over chaotic jumbles of ice up to 20'
high. Sometimes the most he could achieve was one mile in
a day.
Just two-thirds of the way to the Pole, he lost a ski when
he broke through thin ice and fell up to his neck into the
icy waters of the Arctic, and he was forced to trek the rest
of the way on foot.
Pen accomplished his feat in just 64 days - more quickly than
some of the few teams who have preceded him, who were able
to share the weight of their tent, fuel and other equipment,
and had further heavy re-supplies of food, fuel, replacement
equipment and medical provisions flown in as required. He
arrived at the Pole one day ahead of his published 65 day
projected finish date.
Sir Ranulph Fiennes commented, "the man has a constitution
of iron".
The only solo, unsupported journey to the North Geographic
Pole to date has been from the Russian coast on the opposite
side of the Arctic Ocean, going with the flow of ice and wind,
by Norwegian explorer Borge Ousland (1994).
And so far only three solo journeys by the Canadian route
have been made, two were nearly twenty years ago, involving
a number of re-supplies by air. The first, by the Japanese
explorer Naomi Uemura (1978), involved a dog-team to pull
the sledge and seven re-supplies. The second, by French explorer
Jean-Louis Etienne (1986), was a sledge-hauling expedition
requiring five re-supplies. The third expedition was undertaken
in 2001 by Japanese explorer Hyoichi Kono, who had one re-supply.
Other Expeditions include:
Polar Orchid Challenge 2001
Pen guided Ben Saunders, the youngest person ever to attempt
an All The Way to the North Geographic Pole, without re-supply.
The team sledge-hauled 109kg sledges from Cape Arktichevskiy
(northernmost Siberia) 620km across the Arctic Ocean towards
the North Pole in the coldest season since 1987 reaching 86º43'North,
some 15 days short of the Pole.
The Last Degree - North Geographic Pole 2001
The Polar Travel Company organised an expedition out of
Borneo Ice Station (with clients arriving through Russia and
Spitsbergen) to the North Pole, led by polar guide, Ann Daniels.
In addition training was provided on the Arctic Ocean to two
private teams planning All The Way journeys to the North and
South Poles in 2002.
The Last Degree - North Geographic Pole (March & April,
2000)
Guided two expeditions, on skis hauling supplies, the last
110 kilometres across the Arctic Ocean sea ice to the North
Pole, with the first expedition approaching from the Canadian
side, and the second from the Russian side via Khatanga in
Siberia and the ice airport called 'Borneo' at 89° North
on the Russian side.
The first expedition was undertaken by a specially trained
team because of the particularly severe weather conditions
anticipated - no sledging expedition had ever been to the
Pole so early in the season, indeed the team experienced the
last place on Earth to witness the dawn of the new Millennium
as the sun rose at the North Pole in late March.
Crossing of Resolute Passage - Training Expedition (March,
2000)
Guided five person team, as part of preparation for a particularly
arduous Last Degree expedition in March, from Resolute Bay
airbase to the shores of Griffith Island and back to Resolute
Village.
The Last 50 Kilometres - North Geographic Pole (April, 2000)
Guided a private client on a bespoke, shortened expedition
to the North Pole from the Russian side via 'Borneo'.
M&G ISA Challenge 2000
Technical consultant in the UK, Chile and Antarctica to
the first all-women expedition to the South Geographic Pole
undertaken by Caroline Hamilton, Ann Daniels, Pom Oliver,
Rosie Stancer, and Zoe Hudson - all originally participants
on the McVitie's Penguin Polar Relay in 1997, the first all-women
team expedition to the North Geographic Pole
All The Way - South Geographic Pole (2000)
Promoted the first British guided expedition from the coast
of Antarctica (Hercules Inlet) to the South Geographic Pole
(1,200 Kilometres) enabling Catherine Hartley (the first of
two women to ever make such a journey) and Justin Speake (also
British) to reach their goal 61 days later, led by Geoff Somers.
The Last Degree - North Geographic Pole (1999)
Guided two separate expeditions, each of five-men, on skis
hauling supplies, the last 110 kilometres across the Arctic
Ocean sea ice to the North Pole, following a training and
acclimatisation phase at Resolute Bay, Canada .
National Polar Express (1998)
Ground-breaking, ultra-lightweight solo North Pole attempt
- reaching 87° 18 North faster than any previous solo
or team expedition, following a resupply at 86North. Medical
condition forced withdrawal.
McVities's Penguin Polar Relay (1997) - World First
Organiser of the first internationally renowned all-women's
relay expedition (22 women) to the North Geographic Pole from
Ward Hunt Island, Canada - including its promotion, fund-raising,
the selection process, contracting of female guides, physical
training, polar base management and media relations.
Oyez solicitor's Polar Expedition (1997)
Guide to a seven-man expedition to the North Magnetic Pole
from Resolute Bay in the Northwest Territories, Canada. (Private
clients).
That Last Degree (1997)
Guide to a five-man expedition on foot by a British team
from the eighty-ninth degree to the North Geographic Pole.
The Expedition raised over £75,000 for the British charity
Whizz-Kidz. (Private Clients). Enabled 12 year-old wheelchair
bound boy to reach North Pole.
North Magnetic Pole (1995)
Guide to a successful (200 kilometre) sledging expedition
across the frozen McLean Strait from Northern Bathurst Island
to the North Magnetic Pole by foot in the Canadian high Arctic.
(Private client)
'Search for Kruger' (1995)
Guide to a reconnaissance expedition for television, to
an islet in the Queen Elizabeth Islands of northern Canada
in search of evidence of Hans Kruger who disappeared without
trace in the locality in 1932. (Commercial client)
Solo North Pole (1994)
The first attempt to reach the North Geographic Pole on
foot, without air support, from Ward Hunt Island, northernmost
Canada. Membership of the No Limits Team an international
team for extreme athletes sponsored by Sector Sport Watches.
Trans Spitsbergen Exhibition (1991)
Guide to a successful two-way crossing by snowmobile of the
high Arctic Norwegian island of Spitsbergen. (Private client)
'Project Polar Night' (1991)
Guide to a sled-hauling crossing of the high Arctic Norwegian
island of Spitsbergen. (Private client)
Greenland by Foot (1990)
Guide to a series of extended tours by foot in the Angmagssalik
region of Greenland's east coast. (Private clients)
'Arctic Voyager' (1989)
Co-partner on the 'furthest north' voyage by open boat from
British shores - to east Greenland - and the longest voyage
(3,500 kilometres) by inflatable craft. (Sponsored expedition)
'Polar Bears in the Wild' (1989)
A seventy-day, two-man sledge-hauling journey, without re-supply,
across the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard photographing
polar bears. (Sponsored expedition)
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