To start a speech, open with fire. Skip the thank-yous, the agenda, and the bullet points, and lead with a pattern interrupt: a bold or surprising statement, a vivid "imagine" or "what if," a short story dropped in mid-action, a direct question to the audience, a deliberate silence, a prop, or a counterintuitive statistic. The brain decides within seconds whether you are worth listening to, so the first thing out of your mouth has to earn the attention, and ideally hand the audience a real takeaway right away.
Here is how almost every speech begins. The speaker thanks the people in the room. They walk through what they plan to cover. They put an agenda on the screen, or worse, a slide full of bullet points, and they start reading. By the time they reach anything interesting, half the audience has quietly drifted to their phones.
It does not have to be that way, and it should not be. The opening is the highest-leverage moment of your entire speech. Get it right and the room leans in. Get it wrong and you spend the rest of your time trying to win back attention you gave away in the first thirty seconds.
Open With Fire
David Ogilvy, the advertising legend, said that if you are selling fire extinguishers, you should open with fire. When I first read that line, it reframed how I think about every speech and presentation. We should all be opening with fire. We should be opening with the single most compelling thing we have, not saving it for slide nineteen.
Most people do the opposite. They warm up slowly, build context, thank a list of people, and assume the audience will patiently wait for the good part. But we live in a time of shortened attention spans and a culture that is fluent in the language of the hook. On social media, the hook is the first second of video that decides whether you keep scrolling. Your speech opening is exactly the same mechanism. The hook brings them in.
The Brain Science: Why Boring Openings Lose
This is not just a matter of taste. It is wired into how the brain triages information. A lot of people assume we should be speaking to the neocortex, the reasoning part of the brain. But before anything reaches the reasoning brain, it passes the amygdala, which is the gatekeeper. The amygdala is best known as the seat of the fight-or-flight response, and it is constantly asking one question: is this important for my survival? Even my business survival?
So it is not simply that social media destroyed our attention spans. It is that we are running on hundreds of thousands of years of evolution that tells the brain how it needs to be communicated to. A boring, predictable opening signals to the amygdala that nothing urgent is happening here, and the gate quietly closes. A pattern interrupt does the opposite. It pings the survival brain, says pay attention, and keeps the gate open long enough for your actual message to get through.
Before information reaches the reasoning part of the brain, it passes the amygdala, the structure most associated with the fight-or-flight response. It decides, fast and below conscious awareness, whether something matters. A predictable opening reads as "not urgent" and attention drops. A pattern interrupt keeps the gate open.
Sources: Amygdala, Fight-or-flight response
What "Opening With Fire" Actually Looks Like
The biggest thing you can do is surprise people. Simply doing the opposite of what is boring is already a surprise. But we can do better than that. Here are the openings I coach, starting with the three that work almost everywhere.
1. A Bold or Shocking Statement
Lead with a claim that makes the room sit up. It does not need to be sensational, it needs to be unexpected. A statement that challenges what the audience assumes is true creates instant tension, and tension is attention.
2. "Imagine..." or "What If..."
Phrases like "imagine" or "what if" do something specific to the brain. They get people picturing and seeing what you are describing. You are no longer talking at the audience, you are running a short film inside their heads, and that is a very hard thing to look away from.
3. Drop Straight Into a Story
Opening mid-action in a story creates a pattern interrupt in the room. People start paying attention and wondering where this is going. They cannot help it. We are built to need to know how the story ends. Just make sure the story carries a powerful point or message, so the payoff earns the attention you borrowed.
Those are three. There are more, and you can build your own list from these:
- Ask the audience a question. Poll the room. See what they think about something. I always say do not ask questions that are too hard, but if you engage people from the very beginning, it means they are definitely not asleep, definitely not on their phones, and definitely paying attention. You are getting buy-in right at the start.
- Use silence before you begin. A deliberate pause before your first word is a pattern interrupt all by itself. It signals control and makes the room come to you.
- Bring a prop. A single physical object can redirect every eye in the room and anchor your message.
- Open with a surprising statistic. A number that genuinely lands as counterintuitive forces the brain to recalibrate, which is exactly the jolt you want.
- Say something counterintuitive. State the opposite of the expected wisdom, then spend your talk earning it back.
There are keynote speakers, often old school, who feel you should never talk to the audience because it makes the moment less of a performance. I think there is only one thing that actually matters here: that people get something they need, a takeaway. Performance is optional. Value is not.
Give Them a Takeaway in the First Two Minutes
Takeaway is the secret ingredient, and it is one you can include right at the beginning. Do not make people wait to get something important. When you give the audience real value in the first two minutes, their brains do the math: if I got this much out of the opening, how powerful is the rest of this going to be?
There is a hidden benefit to front-loading value, too. If you are worried that giving away something good early means you will not have enough interesting material left, you will almost always rise to the occasion. It forces you to include better content throughout, instead of parking your one good idea at the very end and slowly building toward it. The problem with the slow build is that people start to zone out, and their amygdala has already decided that what you are saying may not be that important.
"The audience was laser focused. It was unbelievable. We closed a million dollar assignment."
The One Rule: Do Not Open Like Everyone Else
Our brains love patterns. They want to follow the familiar groove. That instinct is exactly what you are working against. The single most important rule for opening a speech is this: do not give a speech or presentation the way every other person does it.
The thank-you, the agenda, the bullet points, that is the pattern. Breaking it is the whole game. A pattern interrupt is what separates a speaker the room remembers from one they politely sit through.
A Framework You Can Use This Week
Here is the practical sequence. Build it into your next opening before you rehearse it once.
- Find your fire. Identify the single most compelling thing in your entire talk, a story, a statistic, a bold claim, and consider opening with it instead of saving it.
- Pick your pattern interrupt. Choose one opening type: shocking statement, "imagine" or "what if," a story dropped mid-action, an audience question, silence, a prop, or a counterintuitive stat.
- Deliver a takeaway fast. Hand the audience something genuinely useful in the first two minutes so they feel rewarded for tuning in.
- Cut the throat-clearing. Move the thanks and housekeeping until after you have the room. Earn attention first.
This works for a five-minute update in a team meeting and a sixty-minute keynote on a conference stage. The scale changes. The principle does not. Open with fire.