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A Speech for a Product Launch

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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A Speech for a Product Launch

A Speech for a Product Launch

The Occasion

This is the speech you give the moment the curtain comes down and the thing you have been building for months is finally real and in front of people. It might be a founder on a small stage, a product lead in a packed all-hands, or a team captain at a customer event. The room is buzzing, a little nervous, and ready to believe.

It is for the people who built it and the people about to use it. ~3 minutes (~470 words spoken).

The Speech

Take a breath before you start. Let the room settle. Then look up and mean it.

Thank you all for being here. I know how busy this week has been, and the fact that you carved out time to stand in this room with us means more than you know.

Name the thing plainly. Do not bury it under buildup.

Today we are launching [Product Name]. And I want to tell you why, because the "what" is on the screen behind me, but the "why" is the part I actually care about.

Now make it personal. Tell the origin in one honest beat.

This started with a problem that frustrated us every single day. [Describe the specific frustration in one sentence.] We kept thinking, surely there is a better way to do this. There wasn't. So we built one.

Give credit before you give the demo. Always.

Nothing about this was a straight line. There were late nights, there were rewrites, there were moments we honestly weren't sure it would come together. The reason it did is sitting in this room. [Name a teammate] carried us through [a specific memory]. That is the kind of stubborn, generous work that built this.

Then turn the spotlight outward, to the people who will actually use it.

But here is the truth: this product is not finished today. It is just beginning. The most important part starts the moment you put it in your hands and tell us where we got it right and where we missed. We are listening, genuinely, from day one.

Close with a clear, warm invitation rather than a hard sell.

So I am not going to ask you to love it yet. I am going to ask you to try it. Be honest with us. Push on it. Tell a friend if it helps you. And if it does what we hope, we will have done something rare together: made one small part of the day a little easier for a lot of people.

Thank you. Now let me show you what we made.

Then step to the demo with a smile. The applause is permission, not pressure.

Make It Yours

Delivery Notes

Speak slower than feels natural; launch adrenaline makes everyone rush. Pause for a full beat right after you say the product name so it lands. Make eye contact with the builders during the gratitude section and with the audience during the invitation.

If your voice catches on the thank-you, let it; nobody minds a launch that means something. Use notes for the structure but memorize the first and last lines so you can open and close looking straight at the room.

Variations

A 30-second version when you only have a moment before the demo:

Thank you all for being here. Today we are launching [Product Name]. It came from a problem that drove us crazy, and it would not exist without this team. It is not finished, it is just beginning, and the next chapter is yours. Try it, be honest with us, and let me show you what we built.

For a longer, formal version, add a short market-context section and a roadmap of what ships next quarter. For a lighter tone, open with a self-deprecating line about how many times the launch date moved. For a more solemn, high-stakes tone, anchor on the mission and the people it serves rather than the features.

FAQ

How long should a product launch speech be? Two to four minutes is the sweet spot. You want enough room for a real "why" and genuine thanks, but the product itself should be the star, not the speech.

Should I demo before or after the speech? After. Let the speech earn the room's attention and goodwill, then reveal the product while everyone is leaning in. The applause becomes your runway into the demo.

How do I avoid sounding like a sales pitch? Lead with a real frustration and real gratitude, and invite honest feedback instead of demanding adoration. People trust "try it and tell us" far more than "this changes everything."

What if something breaks during the live demo? Smile and narrate it. A founder who handles a glitch with grace builds more trust than a flawless recording. Keep a screenshot or short clip as a backup.

Who should give the launch speech? Whoever can speak most honestly about the "why" and credibly thank the team, usually the founder or product lead. Authenticity beats title.

Bottom Line

A product launch speech is not a commercial; it is a thank-you and an invitation. Name the thing, tell the honest story of why you built it, credit the people who made it real, and hand the next chapter to the room. Do that, and the applause will be for something true.

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