Trust isn’t earned over time. In speaking, it’s earned in seconds. That first breath. That first beat. That first truth dropped like a stone in still water. You either build the bridge right there—or your audience starts looking for the exits, emotionally and otherwise.
That’s where storytelling comes in. Not just the art of narrative—but the intention behind it. As a spoken word poet and corporate keynote speaker, I’ve learned that when your story is real, specific, and in service of the room, trust shows up like an old friend. The story doesn’t have to be tragic or triumphant. It just has to be true. And it has to carry something useful.
One of the best-kept secrets of top motivational speakers is this: specificity builds trust faster than generality ever will. “I had a tough time” is vague. “I was sitting in a parking lot at midnight with a half-eaten burrito and no gas money” is real. And real resonates. Because it’s not about painting yourself as the hero. It’s about being the mirror.
In every keynote I deliver, every spoken word performance I craft, I start with one question: “How can I show them I see them?” Because when your story becomes a doorway, not a pedestal, people step inside. They lean in. They trust you—not just because you’re qualified, but because you’re relatable.
So ditch the generic anecdotes. Lead with lived truth. Craft your stories with care, wrap them in rhythm, and deliver them with open palms. That’s not just storytelling. That’s trust-building at the speed of soul.