About AI Speech Writer
AI Speech Writer crafts a complete speech for a specific occasion — wedding toast, eulogy, graduation address, retirement send-off — calibrated to length and tone. You tell it the occasion, who is speaking, and the relationship to the audience, and it returns a structured speech with a hook, body, and a memorable closing line.
Who this tool is for
- Best men, maids of honor, and parents preparing wedding toasts
- Family members writing a eulogy in the days after a loss
- Managers and executives delivering all-hands or retirement speeches
- Students elected to give graduation or valedictorian addresses
- Nonprofit leaders speaking at fundraisers and gala events
Real use cases
- Write a 3-minute best-man speech that includes one inside joke and ends with a toast
- Draft a 5-minute eulogy that honors a grandmother who loved gardening and crossword puzzles
- Prepare a retirement speech for a coworker of 25 years that the whole team can sign onto
- Compose a CEO end-of-year address that thanks the team and previews next year's focus
- Write a TEDx-style 12-minute talk on a niche topic with a strong call to action
How to use AI Speech Writer
- In occasion, be specific: "best man speech, brother of the groom, wedding of 80 guests"
- In key points, list 3–5 things you want included — anecdotes, qualities, callbacks, the toast line
- Pick tone: Heartfelt for weddings/eulogies, Inspirational for graduations, Humorous for roasts
- Specify length in minutes — the model targets ~130 words per minute of speaking
- After generating, ask "mark places to pause" or "suggest where to wait for a laugh"
Tips for better results
- A speech is read aloud, not silently — read the draft out loud once and cut any sentence that trips your tongue
- Open with a specific story, not "tonight we are here to celebrate" — the audience tunes back in for concrete details
- For eulogies, include one small, true detail nobody else will mention (a habit, a phrase, a favorite snack) — it lands harder than anything grand
Frequently asked questions
How long should a wedding toast actually be?
2–4 minutes is the sweet spot. Past 5 minutes, even good toasts drag. Set the length to 3 minutes (~400 words) and trim from there.
Can I share private details about someone in the prompt?
Yes — none of it is stored or used to train models. Share whatever context will produce a better speech; treat the chat like a private notebook.
How do I make it sound like me and not generic?
Paste two or three sentences of your own writing or a previous toast into the prompt and say "match this voice." Also include phrases you actually say in real life.
Should I memorize it or read from notes?
Print large-font bullet points with full sentences only for the opening, key transitions, and closing toast. Reading every word verbatim sounds robotic.