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Elevator pitch checklist

October 12th, 2010  |  Published in Blog, Tips Galore  |  2 Comments

Forget everything you have heard about elevator pitches, here is the real, working thing!

Your ability to present yourself and acquire new contacts is at the core of all business networking. For this you need an “elevator pitch”. Here you will find everything you need to know about creating an efficient, personal elevator pitch that really gives you results.

1. What is an elevator pitch?

The expression is derived from making contact very quickly when you meet an interesting person in an elevator. But an elevator pitch should be used in all circumstances where you get the question “What are you doing”. A good elevator pitch should present the advantages of your offering, and open up to further conversation and contact. That is all!

2. What should an elevator pitch contain?

To work well, an elevator pitch should answer three questions:
1. What do you do? Don’t focus on the products/services that you sell, but on how your customers use what you sell.
2. Whom do you do it for? What types of customers are you aiming at?
3. What benefits does it give your customers? How are your products/services helping your customers to earn money, save time, reduce stress, increase productivity etc?

3. What an elevator pitch is NOT

It should not be a mechanical sales pitch, but a time efficient way for you to start a conversation with the other person that can lead to something of mutual value.
You should NOT present everything you can do or sell! You should NOT try to make the other person buy something from you!
You should NOT ask if they use the kind of products that you sell! You should NOT ask whom they are buying from!
Key message here: An elevator pitch is not foremost about you; it is about how you add value to other people’s business.

4. What is the goal of an elevator pitch?

The goal is to stop the other person from saying: ”We don’t need that”, or “We already have people for that”, or “We don’t do that”. Instead, you want the other person to say: “Oh, how do you do that?”, or “That sounds interesting!”.

Then you have a golden opportunity to make the other person talk more about himself/herself, and then listen to your description of how you can be of help.

5. How long should an elevator pitch be?

The shorter, the better! Many people believe that it should be 30-60 seconds. That is too long; it sounds mechanical and quickly bores people. An elevator pitch should be under 10 seconds!The reason is that you want the other person to talk as much as possible, so that you understand his/her interests and needs. Tip: If you talk mostly about yourself you will be perceived as a bore, but if you encourage the other to talk about himself, he will think you are a brilliant conversationalist! That goes for everybody at all occasions.

6. When should you use your elevator pitch?

An elevator pitch is very useful in many more circumstances than you think. It reinforces your image and makes it easier for people to understand you and your business. 1. At all times when you are presenting yourself to others.

2. On you business card. Surprisingly many business cards do not have any information about the value that the person is adding to customers, or even what business sector he/she is working in! 3. On your web site.

4. When you introduce yourself on the telephone to people you want to connect with. 5. When you leave a message on a potential contact’s answering service. 6. On your letterheads and printed brochures etc 7. In your email signature.

7. After your pitch

When you have managed to get a persons attention with your elevator pitch, you want to extract more information about the other person’s interests and needs. Then you can discover together what you can offer that the other needs. Describe in more detail how you create value for your customers, and refer to a happy customer in the same type of business as the other person. Depending on the circumstances, you can either continue the discussion directly, or agree on a time for a meeting or lunch.

If you are in a hurry, e.g. in an elevator, just ask: “It would be interesting to have lunch together and get to know more about your business. Can I have your business card so that I can call you and set up a suitable time?”

Your goal is to exchange business cards and get permission to call.

Tip: Immediately make a note on the card about what was interesting and when and where you met the person. Another way, if you cannot write on the card, is to fold the upper left corner = “Hot prospect”, or the upper right corner = “Indirect contact”, or the lower right corner = “No contact”.

Happy pitching!

(See also my checklist for business mingling)

Download this checklist as a printable PDF: Elevator pitch checklist (English version) Checklista för Elevator pitch (Swedish version)


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  1. Elevator Pitch TemplateNo Gravatar says:

    January 7th, 2012 at 19:22 (#)

    Great elevator pitch example. I thought I would add an example elevator pitch as well:

    Do you purchase many of the same products at the grocery store each week or each month? [This leads the investor to say yes since we all do this at some level?]

    Don’t you hate the crowds at the grocery store, the lines to checkout, and unhappy workers? [Again you can lead them to say yes]

    What is those groceries you buy on a regular schedule just showed up at your doorstep? Each week you will receive an email with a list of the products that you typically purchase on that week of the month. You simply uncheck any items that you don’t need that week and we find the store with the best deals and have the products delivered to your doorstep.

    We currently provide this service in 2 of the top 20 largest US cities and have grown to over 7,000 customers since launching 14 months ago. Revenues are increasing 20% month to month. [Shows legitimacy, growth, and traction]

    We have raised 3.2 million in our Series A Round, and we currently need 15 million to expand our service to new markets.

    Might I have your business card so I can follow up with a phone call?

  2. Business mingling checklist :: Alfa Bravo says:

    February 8th, 2012 at 09:35 (#)

    [...] As soon as you are asked ”what do you do”, you use your elevator pitch. It should be brief, under 10 seconds, and answer three questions: 1. What do you do? 2. Whom do you do it for? 3. What benefits does it give your customers? (See also my elevator pitch checklist) [...]

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