WHAT PAST WORLD-CHAMPION TITLES HAVE IN COMMON
Winning titles typically:
- Are short (2–4 words)
- Signal a central tension or question
- Thematic depth (signals understanding of message)
- Knowledge gap (creates curiosity)
- Make sense only after the speech is heard
- Makes sense only after the last line
- Sounds like an internal realization, not advice
- Avoid:
- Characters (“Angry Man”)
- Instructions (“Choose Love”)
- Explanations (“How I Learned…”)
- Echo a repeated phrase or idea in the speech.
- Are easy for the contest chair to say clearly once.
- Make sense even to someone who hasn’t heard the speech yet.
- Universality (applies beyond table tennis)
- Payoff alignment (lands cleanly with your ending
Examples (patterns, not quotes):
- Abstract but human (identity, choice, worth, silence, enough)
- Hint at identity or worth
- Often binary or paradoxical
- Feels slightly unfinished, arousing curiosity and opening a knowledge gap.
- Emotionally adult, not cute
Judges subconsciously reward titles that say:
“This speaker understands theme.”









