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How to introduce a speaker — the art of giving (and receiving) a great introduction.
A good introduction is essential to get a speaker off to a good start. The tendency for event hosts to go casual and say a few non-substantive words — or worse, to try to make a joke at the speaker’s expense — hurts both the speaker and the meeting. Here’s why, and how to give a good intro that will help the speaker — and the event — succeed.
Audiences want several things from a speaker, and some of them right away. First, audiences begin by asking why — why should I pay attention? Why should I care? Why is this going to be important to me? If a speaker is successful, the audience will start asking how — how do I get started? How do I make this my own? That’s success for a speaker — moving the audience from why to how.
Second, audiences test speakers for a few things: trust, credibility, likability. On these items, they’ll give a speaker a little time, but they make unconscious decisions very quickly, and those unconscious decisions are hard to turn around. So it’s better to get it right from the start.
That’s where the introduction comes in. An introduction can help answer the why question. And an introduction can help establish credibility, especially, but also trust and likability. The result of a good introduction is to greatly increase the likelihood that the speaker will do well. At least, she’s off to a good start.
A good introduction should answer 3 questions
A good introduction should answer 3 questions: why this speaker, on this subject, to this audience? A little humor is permitted, but an introduction should never denigrate the speaker, even in fun. The idea is to build the speaker up in the audience’s mind.
As an example, here’s a short introduction I provide for my own speaking engagements
Here at XXXXXXX, we live and die by our communications successes and failures. So it is with special excitement that I’m pleased to welcome Dr. Nick Morgan to our annual gathering. Nick is one of America’s top communication theorists and coaches. He has coached people to give Congressional testimony, to appear on the Today Show, and to take on the investment community. His latest book, Trust Me: Four Steps to Authenticity and Charisma , was published by Jossey-Bass last year. And he has one of the best blogs on communications.
Have you ever wondered why you can’t take your eyes off some charismatic public figures, while others put you immediately to sleep? Nick is going to demystify charisma and storytelling for us today, giving us lots of practical ideas we can immediately put to work when we’re back in the office on Monday…
Please join me in welcoming Dr. Nick Morgan!
I’ve often noted that a celebrity speaker can be mediocre and yet the audience can report that it had a good time. The reason is that the celebrity has already been ‘introduced’ to the audience — the audience knows the celebrity by advance reputation. The work of a good introduction is to raise the speaker to celebrity status for the purposes of that occasion.
Always end with an applause line for the speaker — “so please join me in welcoming Jane Doe!” — to allow her time to get up on the stage and ready to go. And it’s a very good idea to shake the speaker’s hand as he or she goes by on the way to the lectern. Shaking another person’s hand is grounding and comforting, and will help the speaker get off to a good start.
In terms of body language, the handshake gives the audience the sense that it has met the speaker close up, because a good introducer is the representative of the audience. So when the speaker and introducer shake hands, a bond is formed with everyone.
So don’t neglect the introduction.
It’s up to the speaker to prepare a good introduction
And speakers, prepare a good one. Don’t assume that the folks in charge will have a credible intro ready to go. Make it easy for them and write it yourself. You need the boost so that you can show up in front of that audience with credibility, trust, and likability.
Without a carefully prepared script, here’s what can go wrong. At best, the person introducing you, blandly reads your your bio that she’s printed from your web site. At worst, you get introduced by an enthusiastic ad-libber, and he starts by saying, “I’m not going to read the intro they sent me.” He adds some irrelevant comments about how he met you the evening before over the Spilled Bloody Mary Incident (his fault, not yours). What’s supposed to be charming self-deprecating humor is awkward and goes on too long. The rest of the introduction gets lost in the verbal shuffle, and the host gets key facts wrong, stumbling over the sentence structure and some unfamiliar words. He leaves out mention of your book, and ends with another half-hearted attempt at humor. You walk on stage to the sound of a lot of single hands clapping.
If you want to avoid this sort of disastrous incident and be guaranteed to get your speech off to the best possible start every time, create a DVD intro that showcases you and your history with some drama and excitement. The video will put you in the best possible light and get the audience keyed up to see you. You can do this in a carefully scripted 3-minute video, and the cost can be quite reasonable. In any case you should mentally amortize the cost over all the introductions that won’t be botched from here on.
What should go into those 3 minutes? Answer the question why? Why are you cool, why is your speech important, why should the audience care. Give a few salient details about your accomplishments, and end with the music amped up and the cheers already rolling in. Have the last words of the voice over be, “Ladies and Gentlemen, please welcome (You)!” and the applause will follow naturally. The great thing about video (with a compelling soundtrack) is that it can touch the emotions in a way that’s much harder for your host to do, statistically speaking.
It’s all about quality control. Create your own intro video and you’ll never have to suffer a botched intro again. Get the intro right, and the speech is half done.
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59 Comments
I am presenting a workshop to our employee self-help group at the Social Security Administration next week. The topic will be: “How to be a better meeting participant & take better notes”. They asked me for my bio. It is usually is read or paraphrased as an introduction. I have never been happy with the “Read the Bio” approach, but couldn’t elaborate a better method. I will share your posting with our core group so that the speaker introductions are more effective for the participants.
Your information eloquently states exactly what I want to hear from a speaker introduction and makes my job of writing up my own much easier!
Nancy, thanks for the comment and good luck with the event!
[…] Helpful Resources How to introduce a speaker — the art of giving (and receiving) a … […]
Nick……3 years later and your writing is still helping others. this is a fab piece, thank you!!!
I agree 3 minutes tops to introduce a speaker or anyone, a band, etc. and the introduction should not be read the audience came to see the band, speaker, etc. not the introducer
Love this! Doing my first speech and wanted to really nail and introduction knowing it could put me on good footing to start. I appreciate you writing and sharing this Nick.
Good luck, Thomas, and thanks for the comment!
I was asked to be an MC recently on a graduation ceremony for the first time in my life and truly speaking, this article comes to my rescue. Thanks so much Nick.
Great to hear — good luck, Joram!
I am going to be the master of ceremony on a graduation party for the 1st time today. Hopping these tips will help me a lot…I thank u so much.
From Duds wait
How can we write a good introduction for for a TED event speaker but is still in High School? (meaning s/he did not achieve much professionally or does not have much experience)
Talk about her enthusiasm, energy, vision — the things that great high school students have in abundance. An intro doesn’t have to be a resume — in fact it shouldn’t be.
thanks nick for all that information.. i think im ready to go and nail it this Friday!!!!
Break a leg!
Thank you! This was helpful to me in introducing a major artist at an upcoming event.
Thanks, Clara, for the comment. Glad it was helpful.
Thanks a lot for the useful tips, I am going to introduce my book in church.
You’re welcome — good luck with the introduction!
I am going to be MC at a graduation.. need help on how to introduce speakers
Search MC on our site and you’ll find some posts on how to do that well.
Thank you! This is very helpful for a first-time intro writer!
Thanks, Gretchen, and good luck!
Do you need to introduce a person in by their profession? Like this is Engineer Sam or this is Architect Sam? How about the teachers, do we need to introduce them as Teacher Sam? I just want to know because some people I know introduce them by their profession. And when do we need to use their profession.
Hi, Dennis —
An introduction answers several questions for the audience: why this person, why this topic, why this audience, why now. The speaker’s profession is almost always included in that answer. Not always (imagine someone talking about being a recovering alcoholic, for instance), but almost always.
Hello Sir Nick, I am invited to speak on a graduation day.. can i ask for a nice idea on how the they will introduce me on that day ..i want a very short introduction.. How i am going to start?
Yes, ask yourself, what is the one thing in my work that I am most passionate about? Then, get the introducer to tell a brief story that illustrates that passionate expertise. When you go on stage, then, be ready to talk about a related subject, since you will now appear to be expert in that area, thanks to the intro.
Woman’s Club meeting. Program within meeting. Who introduces program? Vp in charge of programs or chairman of the program?
Either one can; depends on VIP status of speakers. If more important, Chairman. If less important, VP is fine.
Hello Nick, I am asked to introduce a guest speaker at a ceremony who is well -qualified but has a reputation controversial. How can I do that highlighting the speakers expertise and at the same time setting a respectful tone for the audience? Kind share a sample
Tell the audience what about the speaker’s expertise and background is essential for them to know and to prepare their minds to hear the speaker’s expertise. Keep the focus on the expertise, not the biography.
What exactly are you waiting for? And who does the thank you
The same person who does the intro should do the thanks.
Hi mike, Can i ask for a basic script to intoduce a physicians and profisors in a ceremony , i have asked to be MC for the first time on my life, my event will be held on the next sunday Oct 15-2017
Thank you in advance. Aisha.
Hi, Aisha – each introduction is different — that’s the whole point of them. For a basic outline, answer the following questions: (1) Who is the person (what have they accomplished that’s relevant to this audience?); (2) What is their area of expertise (that is relevant to the audience?); (3) why is the topic (and the speaker) important right now?. Always end with the speaker’s name.
Hi Dr. Nick,
I have been told to introduce a few couple of Physicians at a Conference. It is a medical conference and the audience are also physicians. I have been given the CV of speakers and I need to highlight their expertise, experience and accomplishments.
Any Tips, Please?
1. Don’t read the CV. Just give highlights in the form of a story relevant to the audience. 2. Ask the speakers for a human detail or story or two. 3. Tell the audience why this speaker is important to this audience today.
As I am a TMOD of the meeting. How do I introduce a word and a thought master? Please help as this is my first time and I don’t want to screw this.
Start with why this person is so impressive — what wows you about him or her. Say a few words about what the topic is and why it’s relevant to the audience. And then explain why now is a particularly good time to hear from this speaker. End with the speaker’s name, and start the applause.
Hello Sir Morgan,
Today I learnt that speech of introduction is equally important to the actual speech by the speaker. Thank you for the wonderful tips. It’s useful for my Speech course at my university.
Thanks, Inba.
Good morning Mr. Morgan; Can this introduction be used for a sermon introduction as well? How can I include their character and love to teach and share ministry into this introduction ? I am new at this and really want to do a good job. The topic is on family Reunion and this person is a minister in the family.
Hi, Trina — yes, you certainly can use the general structure here for a sermon introduction. You would include the details you mention under the heading of “why this person,” because the character, love to teach, and share ministry are presumably all good reasons for this person to speak. Hope that helps.
I’M ASKED TO INTRODUCE A PARAMOUNT CHIEF TO CHAIR AN OCCASION. THIS WILL HELP ME.
[…] were reviewing the stats on this blog recently, and one of the surprising numbers is that the blog post that consistently gets the most views is one I did over a half-dozen years ago on how to introduce a speaker. I suppose that’s where […]
Nick, This is a great resource for students in public speaking courses. You inadvertently have help hundreds of students get good reviews and great grades.
Shawn, that’s a good thing, right?
Hey nick, I have to welcome series of speakers and I really dont want to end with “Lets welcome him/her with huge round of applause”. ao, can you put out the alternatives for “to present his/her speech”. Thanks much for the article, btw.
Hi, Prithak — If I understand your question, it’s how to end each introduction? You should always end with the person’s name, as a trigger for the applause: “Please welcome James Blunt!” Don’t vary that formula. The variation comes in what you say about the person before the ending of each introduction.
Thanks for mentioning how they need to provide a good introduction. Having someone that is prepared can be nice. Choosing a good master of the ceremony could help a lot.
This is really amazing. It’s a very grateful blog for me. Thanks for sharing it.
This is an amazing article that I found through Brian Dodd. This will help me to help the speaker when we have special ministries come to our church.
Thank you, Sis, for the article, it was very helpful and I got new insight. I really appreciate it, I hope you are given health so that you can continue to write useful articles like this.
Thanks for sharing it, its really amazing
Youth conference speaker significantly impacts the youth listening and attending the conference, so it has to be motivational and inspirational. In this connection, the speaker should be reliable and trustworthy. Audiences expect various things from a speaker, some of which they wish for immediately if a speaker succeeds.
I’m introducing my daughter as Mother’s Day speak at my church on Sunday. Please give me some tips on how to introduce her She’s a great mother for over 20 years 30 years. She has to find boys Christian boys and she’s a great speaker.
Good introductions are short, and answer 3 questions: Who, what, why. Who is this speaker (very brief relevant bio); what is her subject mater that she is going to talk about; and why is she uniquely qualified to talk to this audience?
Great job, this blog is very informative. Thank you
Great tips on how to give and receive a good introduction! This post really highlights the importance of setting up a speaker for success with a well-prepared introduction. I love the idea of having a video intro to ensure everything goes smoothly. It’s clear that a strong introduction can make a huge difference in how a speech starts. Thanks for sharing these valuable insights!
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Speeches HQ
6 Introduction Speeches about Someone Else
Speaking holds immense power. Words shape perceptions, build connections, and leave lasting impressions on everyone who hears them. Presenting someone else brings added responsibility – you’re tasked with showcasing another person’s character, achievements, and influence accurately.
Need help with an introduction? These sample speeches will show you different ways to present a keynote speaker at a conference, honor a retiring colleague, or celebrate a family member at a milestone event. Each example demonstrates methods to grab attention, share meaningful details, and create an engaging atmosphere for both the audience and the person being introduced.
Introduction Speeches about Someone Else
These six carefully written introduction speeches will help you present someone else with confidence and style.
Speech 1: Introducing a Business Leader
Ladies and gentlemen, Sarah Chen stands as a shining example of what determination and vision can achieve. Starting as a junior software developer in a small tech startup, she transformed that company into GreenTech Solutions, now a leader in sustainable technology. Her true strength lies in her dedication beyond business success. She mentors young women in STEM fields, has funded three innovation labs at local schools, and still finds time to coach her daughter’s robotics team. Today, she’ll share her knowledge about building ethical technology companies in our digital age. Please welcome our keynote speaker, Sarah Chen.
— END OF SPEECH —
Commentary: A punchy, achievement-focused speech that highlights both professional success and personal impact. Perfect for business conferences, leadership summits, or industry events.
Speech 2: Introducing a Community Volunteer
Meet Michael Rodriguez, who has powered our local food bank for the past decade. Many mornings, before sunrise, Michael would already be coordinating with local grocers, organizing volunteers, and ensuring thousands of families had food on their tables. His dedication turned our small pantry operation into a full-scale community support system that now serves five counties. But numbers don’t tell the whole story. Ask any volunteer or family who’s met Michael, and they’ll tell you about his warm smile, his encouraging words, and his ability to make everyone feel valued. Tonight, as we celebrate his service, we’re thanking someone who reshaped what community service means in our town. Please join me in welcoming Michael Rodriguez.
Commentary: A heartwarming speech that emphasizes personal impact and community connection. Ideal for charity events, volunteer recognition ceremonies, or community gatherings.
Speech 3: Introducing an Academic Speaker
Dr. Emma Thompson has changed how we understand early childhood development. Her pioneering research on play-based learning has influenced educational policies across three continents. Her work stands out because she turns brain science into practical teaching methods that parents and educators can use every day. She’s written four books, led numerous research projects, and still teaches undergraduate classes because, as she says, “The best ideas come from conversations with curious minds.” We’re fortunate to have her here to discuss the future of early education. Let’s welcome Dr. Emma Thompson.
Commentary: A balanced blend of academic achievements and practical impact. Well-suited for educational conferences, university lectures, or professional development seminars.
Speech 4: Introducing an Award Recipient
Tonight’s Lifetime Achievement Award goes to someone who set new standards in public service. James Wilson started as a beat cop 35 years ago. He walked the same neighborhood streets every day, learning names, stories, and dreams of every resident. He started after-school programs, organized neighborhood watches, and built strong ties between communities and law enforcement. But ask James about his proudest achievement, and he’ll tell you about the hundreds of young people he mentored who now serve their own communities as teachers, social workers, and yes, police officers. His influence reaches far beyond his badge, touching generations of lives. Ladies and gentlemen, please stand for Officer James Wilson.
Commentary: An emotionally resonant speech that weaves personal stories with professional achievements. Perfect for award ceremonies, retirement celebrations, or recognition events.
Speech 5: Introducing an Artist
Maya Patel finds beauty where others see ordinary life. Through her camera lens, she captures moments that tell stories of human connection, strength, and joy. Her photographs appear in galleries from New York to Tokyo, but she’s most proud of her work showing everyday heroes in small communities. Maya spent the last year photographing local shopkeepers, teachers, and farmers, creating portraits that showcase the extraordinary in ordinary lives. Tonight, she’ll present this new collection and share the stories behind these remarkable images. Please welcome Maya Patel.
Commentary: A creative and engaging speech that captures artistic vision and social impact. Suitable for gallery openings, arts festivals, or cultural events.
Speech 6: Introducing a Mentor
Rachel Martinez shaped countless careers in marketing. As head of digital strategy at several major firms, she could have focused solely on client work. Instead, she committed herself to helping others grow, particularly those from underrepresented backgrounds. Rachel established the largest mentorship program in the industry, connecting experienced professionals with rising talent. Her protégés now lead marketing teams at some of the biggest companies nationwide. But Rachel’s greatest gift might be her ability to help people believe in themselves. Today, she’ll share her philosophy on leadership and lifting others as you climb. Join me in welcoming Rachel Martinez.
Commentary: A powerful speech highlighting leadership and legacy through mentorship. Great for professional development events, leadership conferences, or mentorship program launches.
Final Thoughts
Effective introduction speeches share essential features. They catch the audience’s attention right away, give relevant background about the speaker, and build excitement for what’s ahead. Use these examples as guides to create memorable introductions that honor your subject and captivate your audience.
How to Memorably Introduce Another Speaker
by Deborah Grayson Riegel
As a professional speaker and facilitator for over 20 years, I’ve been introduced more than a thousand times, by countless meeting planners, conference organizers, and team leaders. Nevertheless, most of the introductions have fallen into one of four categories:
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