Pam Woon is a seasoned veteran of the broadcast television industry with extensive expertise in developing brand stories, coaching executive leadership teams in defining and delivering their own communications leadership story.  She is an award-winning producer and director. Pam embeds into organizations like a corporate journalist to help with Zoom presentations, speaker training, global product launches, executive announcements, and company events. She has an established, proven track record as a creator of high-impact communication campaigns creating internal and external content for enterprise and consumer audiences.

Pam was born to immigrant parents and was the first generation in her family to graduate college.  She grew up in an urban city behind a public housing project.  By the time she was in first grade she was fighting in the streets with the kids from the ‘hood and always had lots of stories to tell.  After one too many bloody knees, she was sent away to school in the suburbs by the third grade.  It was there in Mrs. Luksan’s third grade class that she found her love for writing and oration.  

As a young kid, she wrote letters to her local newspaper and television station asking for more diversity in the media.  Eventually a producer responded to her letter, and after seven grueling interview rounds later, she landed her first on-air TV job before she could legally drive.  She became a full-fledged member of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists union before she could even legally vote.  Nearly 28 years later, she is still working in content creation and television.  She’s served in senior leadership roles at CBS Warner Brothers, Comcast NBC Universal, ABC, and currently Charter Communications. Pam has developed executive communications for leading C-suite leadership teams at Microsoft, Yahoo, and Planet.

In the early days of mobile phones, Pam was the principal host for a subscription content video service on Sprint Mobile.  Subscribers paid $5.95 to watch pop culture entertainment content on flip phones – well before smart phones were even invented.  She was a trail blazer in mobile phone content creation and production with over 500+ shows garnering her an Emmy nomination.

Pam was recognized for her contributions & elected by her peers to serve on the Board of Governors for the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences in Seattle.  The City of Seattle mayor named February 13th "Pamela Woon Day" for her civic and community contributions.  That same year, she won the title of Miss Chinatown USA, a scholarship pageant that has been in existence for nearly the past 65 years.  She was the first person in 47 years to win the title from Washington state. Between the pageant scholarship award and bussing tables at her family’s Chinese restaurant she was able to graduate debt-free from the University of Washington in Speech Communication and Political Science. 

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