Writing
Speech Writing Prompt Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A speech writing prompt generator gives you the structure of a talk that holds an audience, shaped to whether you want to inspire, inform, or persuade. Enter the occasion and goal, and it lays out an opening that grabs attention without the usual throat-clearing, a body of no more than three points each carried by a story or example, and a close that returns to the opening and lands a memorable final line. Speakers, executives, and event hosts use it to organise their ideas and to write for the ear rather than the page. A speech is not an essay read aloud: it needs short sentences, repetition, signposting, and built-in pauses, because the audience cannot reread a line they missed. Fill the structure with your real stories and message, keep to three points so people remember them, and rehearse it out loud to hear where it drags.
Read the complete guide — 5 min read
Loading usage…
Free forever — no account required
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Enter the occasion.
- Choose whether to inspire, inform, or persuade.
- Fill the three points with your stories.
- Rehearse it out loud to hear where it drags.
Use Cases
- •Outlining a keynote, talk, or presentation
- •Building an opening that grabs attention fast
- •Limiting a speech to three memorable points
- •Writing for the ear rather than the page
- •Shaping a talk to inspire, inform, or persuade
Tips
- →Open with a story, fact, or question.
- →Keep to three points so they are remembered.
- →Write short sentences for the ear.
- →Return to your opening image to close.
FAQ
why only three points
Because audiences remember little of any talk, and three is about the limit a listener can hold without notes. Cramming in more dilutes all of them. Choosing your three strongest points and supporting each with a story is what makes a speech stick.
how should i open
With a story, a surprising fact, or a sharp question — never "thank you for having me". The first thirty seconds decide whether the audience leans in. Earn their attention before you state your message, then make the message clear early.
how is writing for speech different
A speech is heard once and cannot be reread, so it needs short sentences, plain words, repetition of key points, and clear signposting. Reading your draft aloud reveals tongue-twisters and long sentences that work on the page but stumble in the mouth.
You might also like
Popular tools from other categories that share themes with this one.