Are You Looking for an Ikigai Keynote Speaker?
Many keynote speakers who present on ikigai rely on simplified, Western interpretations that overlook the concept’s cultural and psychological foundations.
If a speaker centres their talk on a Venn diagram, claims ikigai originated in Okinawa, or presents it as a “secret” to longevity or the reason Japanese people never retire, it’s worth pausing. These ideas are widely circulated, but they misrepresent what ikigai actually is—and risk leaving your audience misinformed.
IKIGAI IS NOT:
- the “sweet spot” of a Venn diagram
- something you find once and keep
- “your bliss”
- a word from Okinawa
- the idea that you never retire
- a concept the Japanese associate with longevity
- the pursuit of a single life purpose
- something all Japanese people experience

Ikigai is intrinsically motivating and often connected to one’s social world. It does not require payment or external reward.
It is not about what the world needs from you, but about what you need in order to keep going. For many people in Japan, ikigai functions as a coping mechanism within demanding and stressful lives.
You do not have to be good at your ikigai. If you are learning something new, even something you struggle with, yet find it life-affirming and meaningful, it can still be a genuine source of ikigai.
Ikigai may involve something you love, but more often it is something that gives you energy and motivates you to face difficulties and challenges.
In short, ikigai is something you feel, not something you achieve. Rather than a single “sweet spot,” ikigai exists as a spectrum of people, activities, and experiences that make life feel worth living.
What Ikigai Actually Is
Ikigai is not a slogan or a life hack. It is a psychological concept closely aligned with positive psychology and eudaimonia, and has been explored extensively in Japanese research. At its core, ikigai relates to how people experience life as worth living.
Research links ikigai to psychological elements such as life affirmation, personal goals and aspirations, meaning in life, a sense of existence, life satisfaction, resilience, environmental mastery, social connection, autonomy, personal growth, physical health, and enjoyment of life.
Importantly, ikigai is not only about the self. It includes a sense of growth over time and a sense of social affiliation—feeling connected to others and aware of one’s contribution. This awareness of contribution is a powerful asset for any audience, particularly in leadership and organisational settings.
A thoughtful ikigai keynote should leave people with clearer language, deeper self-awareness, and a more grounded understanding of how meaning, contribution, and wellbeing are experienced in everyday life—not just inspired for the moment, but better equipped to reflect and act.
Ikigai Keynote Speaker Checklist
Ask these questions to your "ikigai expert" or keynote speaker:
- Have you lived in Japan?
- Can you speak Japanese?
- Have you built connections with Japan's leading ikigai academics?
- Have you read the Japanese literature on the ikigai concept?
- Have you spent years researching the ikigai concept?
- Are you published on the ikigai concept?
If your keynote speaker can't answers yes to most of these questions, then most likely they will misinform your audience with western interpretations. They have no place on your stage.
Don’t make the mistake of hiring a keynote speaker who misinforms your audience with Western interpretations and romanticised ideas about ikigai. I bring lived experience in Japan, long-standing relationships with leading Japanese academics, and years of research into ikigai and Japanese psychology.