Imagine a listener’s day: deadlines, commutes, quiet worries, small ambitions. Topics resonate when they intersect with lived reality. Draft three possible topics, then write one sentence for how each solves a listener’s real problem. Share one in the comments.
Know Your Audience Before You Name Your Topic
Great topics answer questions that already smolder in your audience’s minds. Skim community forums, team chats, and event briefs. Which frustrations repeat? Turn a recurring pain point into a guiding question, then build your topic as a promise to answer it clearly.
Align Passion With Purpose
List three subjects you could talk about without notes. Now, for each, write why it matters beyond you. When your excitement has public value, your topic earns natural energy, authenticity, and momentum that keeps listeners leaning in for the next surprising detail.
Start broad, then slice. Not “Leadership,” but “Leading remote teams during ambiguous change.” Not “Health,” but “Building a sleep routine after shift work.” Each constraint adds clarity. Ask readers here to suggest one constraint to help sharpen your working topic today.
From Broad Idea to Sharp Angle
Questions pull focus. Reframe “Digital privacy” as “What can ordinary users do this week to protect their data without becoming tech experts?” A good question suggests structure, urgency, and outcomes. Comment with your question-form topic and invite one suggestion for improvement.
Evidence, Timeliness, and Trust
Look for recent reports, new case studies, or emerging conversations that refresh your angle. A familiar problem with a newly uncovered twist feels irresistible. Note the date and origin of your sources, and keep a shortlist ready to cite clearly during your speech.
Describe your topic in one sentence to five different people. Watch their eyes, not just their words. Do they ask follow-up questions? If not, refine. Share the version that sparked real curiosity and invite our community to rate its clarity and pull in the comments.
Validate Your Topic Before You Commit
Post two topic angles in a quick poll. Write a 100-word micro-introduction for each and measure reactions. Engagement is a compass. Keep the winner, salvage the best line from the other, and invite subscribers to help you craft a sharper, more irresistible final framing.
Validate Your Topic Before You Commit
Title, Hook, and Promise
Create an Outcome title, a Question title, and a Surprise title for the same topic. Compare reactions and choose the one that best reflects your promise. Post your three versions here and ask the community which one they would click or lean in to hear first.
Title, Hook, and Promise
Replace generic phrases with concrete outcomes. Not “Better public speaking,” but “How to pick one topic that keeps a restless audience engaged for fifteen minutes.” Specifics create credibility and curiosity together. Challenge yourself to swap every vague word for a vivid, measurable detail.
Title, Hook, and Promise
End your title or subtitle with the practical gain listeners will walk away with. People invest attention when they see payoff. Share your final title and benefit line below, and subscribe to receive weekly title templates tailored for audience type, context, and speaking length.