How to Form a Successful Pitch

There is a big problem in the real estate world and business world in general: a lot of people donât know how to successfully pitch themselves to investors, clients, etc. John Livesay, who is an expert at helping people craft compelling messages to get customers and investors, realized the existence of this problem and started a podcast, co-founded a company, and wrote a book that was aimed at helping people overcome this deficiency. In our recent conversation, he explained the overall framework of a pitch and the main questions that it must answer in order to be successful.
Framework: The Pitch Ladder
John compares someoneâs investment or business career to a ladder. Everyone starts out at the bottom of this ladder:
âAt the bottom of the ladder, youâre invisible. Itâs also like dating. You maybe see someone youâre attracted to and they donât even know you exist. Same thing is true when youâre thinking about âoh, I would love to get that person to invest in my start-up or my building or whatever it isâ and they donât even know youâre around.â
The next rung up is where youâre insignificant. âThey see you and thatâs maybe where you have something but youâre not prepared yet.â
Then, you move to the next rung â the interesting rung. Back to the dating analogy, âmaybe you say something clever or witty and they go âhmm, Iâm interested. Iâm not going to go on a date with you yet, but Iâm interested.â So thatâs really where you want to start think about in terms of business. What can [you] do to become at least interesting?ââ Obviously, the goal is to transcend the first two rungs and become interesting as quickly as possible. (More on how to accomplish this later)
The next rung up is the intriguing rung. John has âliterally sent pitches to people or had conversation with them and they say âIâm intrigued, tell me more,â and thatâs really what you want.â
At the top of the ladder, youâre irresistible. âThis is where you have multiple people trying to give you money.â
Think of this ladder as the high level framework of how you will progress in your business. So, now the question is, what can I practically do in order to climb this ladder as quickly as possible, going from invisible to irresistible? Enter, the pitch.
How to Create the Best Ever Pitch
For someone who is on the lower rungs of the pitch ladder, when someone asks them, âwhat kind of business are you in?â or âtell me about yourself?,â they are unprepared. They just wing it. But, in order to be at least interesting, John says that you need to have a prepared pitch that answers at least these two questions:
- Who do I help
- What problem do I solve?
If someone where to ask John to tell them about himself, he would say, âIâm the pitch whisperer. I help people go from invisible to irresistible.â These two sentences provide just enough information to let others know who he is, who he helps, and what problem he solves, and if it is done right, they will be interested and ask for more. âYou just tell them a little bit to get them intrigued.â
Another example response that John would say is âI help tech CEOs who are struggling with their investor pitch to become irresistible by getting them in the right room with the right pitch and they get their business funded, and when that happens everyone scores.â
Letâs break this down:
- Who do you help? â âI help tech CEOsâ
- Whatâs their problem? â âStruggling with their investor pitchâ
- Whatâs the solution? â Helps them become âirresistible by getting them in the right room with the right sales pitchâ
- Whatâs the outcome? â âThey get their business funded, and when that happens everyone scoresâ
This pitch not only addresses the two-main questions (who do I help? and what problem do I solve?), but it takes it to the next level by addressing the solution provided and the outcome of that solution. And John pulled it all together into a âshort and concise way thatâs memorable.â
Advice in Action: Using Johnâs pitch advice, create your own 90-second pitch and leave it in the comment section below! Make sure that, at the very least, it answers the two main questions (who do I help? and what problem do I solve?). And if you want to go from âinterestingâ to âintriguingâ or âirresistible,â address the additional two questions as well.
Tomorrow, learn Johnâs top tips and techniques on the how to become a better storyteller and why storytelling is the best way to pull people into your business as opposed to pushing your message out with a standard sales pitch.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this blog post are provided for informational purposes only, and should not be construed as an offer to buy or sell any securities or to make or consider any investment or course of action.
