A Speech to Introduce a Keynote Speaker
A Speech to Introduce a Keynote Speaker
The Occasion
You've been asked to introduce the keynote speaker at a conference, awards night, or company event. Your job is small but mighty: warm up the room, build credibility for the person about to take the stage, and then get out of the way. The vibe is gracious and energizing — confident, a little warm, never about you.
This runs ~3 minutes (~480 words), with longer and shorter variations below so you can match your slot.
The Speech
Good [morning/afternoon/evening], everyone. If you could find your seats, we're about to begin the part of the program a lot of you came for.
I have the easy job tonight. The hard job — standing up here and actually saying something worth your time — belongs to the person I'm about to introduce. My only task is to make sure you know why you should put your phone down and lean in for the next [number] minutes.
So let me tell you about [speaker name].
Over the last [number of years], [speaker name] has [one big credential or achievement — built a company, led a movement, written the book on this]. But credentials are the boring part. What you can't put on a bio is the thing I actually want you to know: [speaker name] is someone who [the real reason they matter — sees what others miss, says the hard thing out loud, has done the work, not just talked about it].
I first came across [speaker name]'s work when [short, specific story — a talk you heard, a book you read, the day they changed your mind about something]. And I remember thinking, this is a person who doesn't just have answers — they have better questions. That's rare. That's worth your full attention.
Here's what I'd ask of you: don't just listen tonight. Take notes. Steal an idea. Walk out of here a little different than you walked in. Because the people who get the most from a talk like this aren't the ones who clap the loudest — they're the ones who do something with it on Monday.
So please, put your hands together and give a real welcome to someone who is going to be very much worth your time. Ladies and gentlemen — [speaker name].
Make It Yours
- [speaker name] — say it twice, clearly, the way they say it. Confirm pronunciation backstage beforehand; nothing deflates an intro like a fumbled name.
- [one big credential or achievement] — pick the single most relevant accomplishment for THIS room, not their whole resume. Swap ideas: a flagship product, a number ("grew it from zero to [X]"), or an award the audience respects.
- [short, specific story] — your personal connection is the secret weapon. Swap ideas: "the first time I heard them speak," "a line from their book I still quote," or "a piece of advice they gave me that I never forgot."
- [the real reason they matter] — finish the sentence honestly. Swap ideas: "tells the truth when it's unpopular," "has actually built the thing," or "makes a hard subject feel simple."
Delivery Notes
Walk to the mic with energy — the room takes its temperature from you. Pause after "So let me tell you about [speaker name]" so the name lands. Keep your eyes on the audience, not your notes, especially for the personal story; that's the moment they believe you.
Build your pace as you go, so the final line — "Ladies and gentlemen, [speaker name]" — is the loudest, warmest thing you say. Then turn toward the entrance, start clapping yourself, and step back. Do not linger for a handshake photo that steals their entrance; give them the stage cleanly.
If nerves hit, remember this is a gift you're giving the speaker, not a test of you.
Variations
2-minute short version (for a tight program): Open with "I have the easy job tonight" → one credential → one sentence on why they matter → "Please welcome [speaker name]." Cut the personal story and the Monday line.
Longer / more formal version (board dinner, gala): Add a second paragraph of context — why this topic matters to THIS audience right now: "We gathered tonight because [the challenge or theme of the event], and there is no one better to speak to it than [speaker name]." Then add a line of gratitude to the host or organization before the welcome.
This earns its length only at a formal event; at a fast-moving conference, stay short.
Bottom Line
Use this when you've been handed the honor of putting someone bigger than you on stage. The one thing that makes it land: make it about them, keep it tight, and let your last word be their name.