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How to Open a Speech with a Story

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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How to Open a Speech with a Story

How to Open a Speech with a Story

The Occasion

This is for anyone who has to stand up and hold a room — a best man, a retiring teacher, a team lead at the all-hands, a parent at a graduation party. It works whenever the first thirty seconds decide whether people put their phones away or not. The tone is steady and quietly confident, the kind you use when you have decided not to clear your throat and apologize for being nervous.

Plan on about ~3 minutes (~450 words spoken) for the opening sequence below, though the technique scales to any length.

The Speech

Here is the move: do not start with "Good evening, my name is, and I'd like to say a few words." Start in the middle of a moment. Drop the audience into a scene so specific they can smell it.

"It's 6 a.m. The kitchen light is the only one on in the whole house. [Name] is standing at the counter in a robe, stirring a coffee they are not going to drink, rehearsing a conversation they are terrified to have. That was twelve years ago. I want to tell you what they did next."

Notice what just happened. No throat-clearing. No "thank you all for coming." A clock, a room, a person caught in a true human moment. The audience is already leaning in because you handed them a question — what did they do next? — and you have not answered it yet.

That is the whole engine of a story opening: open a loop, then make them wait.

"Most of us think a speech starts with a greeting. It doesn't. A speech starts the instant someone in the back row stops thinking about their dinner and starts thinking about your sentence."

Build your opening from one concrete scene you actually witnessed. Not a summary — a scene. "She was generous" is a label.

"She gave the new kid her own lunch and pretended she wasn't hungry" is a story. The second one does the work for you, because the audience draws the conclusion themselves, and a conclusion they reach on their own is one they believe.

"I could stand here and list [their role]'s accomplishments. But you'd forget them by the parking lot. So instead, let me take you to a Tuesday afternoon in [a specific place], because that's the day I understood who this person really is."

Then — and this is the part people skip — close the loop you opened. Pay it off. If you started them at 6 a.m. In that kitchen, you must come back and tell them what happened. The relief of the closed loop is the feeling people mistake for "what a great speech."

"And that conversation they were so afraid of at 6 a.m.? They had it. It changed everything. That is the kind of courage we are here to celebrate tonight."

Now you have earned the right to say their name, raise a glass, get to your point. The story bought you the room.

Make It Yours

Delivery Notes

Start slower than feels natural — the scene needs room to form in people's minds. Pause for a full beat after "I want to tell you what they did next," and let the silence do the pulling. Make eye contact with one person while you set the scene, as if you are telling only them.

Keep the opening in your bones, not on the card — you can hold notes for the rest, but the first lines should come straight out of you, eyes up. If your voice catches at the payoff, let it. A small crack there reads as honesty, not weakness.

Variations

A 30-second version when you have almost no time:

"Picture [Name] at 6 a.m., terrified, rehearsing a conversation in an empty kitchen. They had that conversation. It changed everything. That's the person we're here for tonight."

For a longer or more formal setting, extend the scene into two beats — the moment of fear, then a second scene weeks later showing the change — before you ever state your thesis. For a lighter, celebratory crowd, pick a funny true scene and land the payoff on a laugh; for a solemn occasion, slow the whole opening down and let the closed loop arrive almost in a whisper.

FAQ

How long should the story opening be? Thirty to sixty seconds of pure scene, then close the loop within the first two minutes. Long enough to immerse, short enough that they trust you have a point.

What if I'm not a natural storyteller? You do not need to be. Pick one real moment you actually saw and describe it plainly, in order, with two or three concrete details. Plain and true beats clever and vague every time.

Do I have to "close the loop" I opened? Yes — that is non-negotiable. An unpaid-off opening feels like a song that never resolves. Always return and tell them what happened.

Can I open with a quote or a joke instead? You can, but a quote borrows someone else's credibility and a cold joke risks silence. A true scene from your own life carries weight nobody can argue with.

What if the audience already knows the story? Tell it anyway, but tell it through a detail they have never heard. Familiar story, fresh angle, and they will lean in to catch what you noticed that they missed.

Bottom Line

A story opening works because it skips the greeting and hands the audience a question they need answered. Drop them into one true, specific scene, make them wait, then pay it off — and you will own the room before you ever state your point.

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