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elevator-pitch-techniques

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Provides elevator pitch and verbal brand communication frameworks including Donald Miller's StoryBrand (SB7), Nancy Duarte's Sparkline, Chris Westfall's CLARITY, Andy Raskin's Strategic Narrative, Simon Sinek's Golden Circle, and time-based pitch structures (10s, 30s, 60s). Auto-activates during elevator pitch creation, one-liner development, brand pitch refinement, and verbal communication work. Use when discussing elevator pitches, one-liners, brand intros, verbal pitches, pitch coaching, spoken brand messages, or pitch variations.

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SKILL.md

name elevator-pitch-techniques
description Provides elevator pitch and verbal brand communication frameworks including Donald Miller's StoryBrand (SB7), Nancy Duarte's Sparkline, Chris Westfall's CLARITY, Andy Raskin's Strategic Narrative, Simon Sinek's Golden Circle, and time-based pitch structures (10s, 30s, 60s). Auto-activates during elevator pitch creation, one-liner development, brand pitch refinement, and verbal communication work. Use when discussing elevator pitches, one-liners, brand intros, verbal pitches, pitch coaching, spoken brand messages, or pitch variations.

Elevator Pitch Techniques

Quick reference for crafting verbal brand summaries that sound natural when spoken, using proven methodologies from pitch coaches and brand strategists.

"The goal of an elevator pitch is not to close a deal but to spark enough interest for a follow-up conversation."


Foundational Statistics

Metric Value Implication
Average attention span 8 seconds Your hook must land immediately
Expected iterations 20+ Refinement is normal, not failure
First version quality 8-10% You're only this far toward perfection
Success metric "Tell me more" The only reaction that matters

The 6 Core Frameworks

1. StoryBrand Framework (SB7) — Donald Miller

Core Principle: "Your business is not the hero of your brand story. Your customer is."

Step Element Question
1 Character What does your customer WANT?
2 Problem What PROBLEM stands in their way? (External, internal, philosophical)
3 Guide How does your brand act as their GUIDE?
4 Plan What STEPS do they need to follow?
5 Call to Action What ACTION should they take?
6 Success What SUCCESS will they achieve?
7 Failure What FAILURE do you help them avoid?

Template:

"For [target customer] who [has this problem], [your brand] helps you [achieve desired outcome] by [your unique approach]. Unlike [alternatives], we [key differentiator]."

When to Use: Customer transformation is central to brand story.


2. Sparkline Framework — Nancy Duarte

Core Principle: Great communicators create tension by contrasting "what is" with "what could be."

The Process:

  1. Start with "What Is" — the current painful reality
  2. Contrast with "What Could Be" — the better future
  3. Alternate between the two throughout your pitch
  4. End with "New Bliss" — the transformed state

Application:

  • What Is: "Competition is becoming more ferocious..."
  • What Could Be: "...but we can disrupt that competition with a new approach."

The S.T.A.R. Moment: Create Something They'll Always Remember — a moment so memorable it sticks long after the pitch ends.

When to Use: Contrast between current/future state is powerful.


3. CLARITY Framework — Chris Westfall

Core Principle: Deliver a message that makes your listener say "Tell me more..."

Letter Element Description
C Captivate Hook attention immediately
L Language Use clear, jargon-free words
A Authenticity Be true to yourself and your listener
R Relevance Make it matter to THIS audience
I Inspiration Connect to bigger purpose
T Tact Read the room and adapt
Y Yes! Find agreement and next steps

When to Use: When authenticity and audience connection are priorities.


4. Onlyness Statement — Marty Neumeier

Core Principle: If you can't say why you're different and compelling in a few words, fix your company, not your positioning statement.

The Formula:

"Our brand is the ONLY __________ that __________."

First blank: Your category Second blank: Your compelling difference

Extended Version:

"For [ideal customers], [your brand name] is the only [category] that [benefit] [how]."

Example:

"Cirque du Soleil is the only circus with Broadway sophistication."

When to Use: Category position is the key differentiator.


5. Golden Circle — Simon Sinek

Core Principle: "People don't buy WHAT you do; they buy WHY you do it."

The Three Circles (inside out):

  1. WHY — Purpose, cause, belief (core)
  2. HOW — Methods, values, differentiators (middle)
  3. WHAT — Products, services, features (outer)

Application:

  • ❌ Wrong: "We make great computers."
  • ✅ Right: "We believe in challenging the status quo. We believe in thinking differently. The way we do this is by making our products beautifully designed and simple to use. We happen to make great computers."

When to Use: Purpose is the primary differentiator.


6. Strategic Narrative — Andy Raskin

Core Principle: The most effective pitches never start by talking about yourself. They start by naming a big shift in the world.

The 5 Elements:

Step Element Description
1 Name the Change What major shift is happening in the world?
2 Show Stakes What's at risk if you ignore this shift?
3 Tease Promised Land What does the future look like for those who adapt?
4 Magic Gifts Your product as the tool for transformation
5 Present Proof Evidence that this journey succeeds

Positioning: "Your prospect is Luke and you're Obi Wan, or your prospect is Frodo and you're Gandalf."

Never Start With: Your product, headquarters, investors, clients, or anything about yourself.

When to Use: There's a big industry shift to leverage.


The 6 Hook Types

Type Description Example
Surprising Statistic Lead with unexpected data "Did you know that 78% of..."
Thought-Provoking Question Create instant engagement "Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life?" (Steve Jobs)
Bold Statement Counterintuitive claim "Most companies are doing [X] completely wrong..."
Quick Analogy Instant understanding "We're the Netflix of [category]"
Story/Anecdote Relatable scenario "Imagine you're [situation]..."
The Contrast Unexpected juxtaposition "What if I told you the biggest problem isn't X, it's Y?"

The S.T.A.R. Moment

Create Something They'll Always Remember:

  • A dramatic statistic
  • An evocative analogy
  • A memorable demonstration
  • A shocking statement
  • A powerful visual

Time-Based Pitch Structures

One-Liner (10 seconds)

The briefest explanation — for casual encounters and "What do you do?" moments.

Template (Founder Institute):

"My company, [name], is developing [a defined offering] to help [a defined audience] [solve a problem] with [secret sauce]."

Purpose: Quick establishment, create intrigue, open door for follow-up.


Elevator Pitch (30 seconds)

The classic format — approximately 75-120 words.

Structure:

  1. Hook (5 sec) — Grab attention
  2. Problem (7 sec) — What your customer struggles with
  3. Solution (8 sec) — How you help
  4. Differentiation (7 sec) — What's unique
  5. Interest Close (3 sec) — Invite follow-up

Extended Pitch (60 seconds)

More depth — approximately 150-200 words.

Adds to 30-second version:

  • More detailed storytelling
  • A client example or proof point
  • Deeper emotional connection

Founder Story Pitch

When founder background adds credibility or emotional connection.

Use when:

  • Founder background is compelling/relevant
  • Authenticity matters to audience
  • The origin story demonstrates insight

Verbal Delivery Techniques

The 3 C's of Delivery

C Element Description
1 Clarity Easy to understand
2 Conciseness Brief enough for 30-60 seconds
3 Confidence Delivered with assurance

Tone

  • For brand pitches: warm, confident, passionate (not salesy)
  • Match tone to content and context
  • The same words can sound curious, decisive, or dismissive

Pacing

  • Target: conversational pace (~120 words/minute)
  • Speaking too fast muddles your message — slow down
  • Talking slower emphasizes important or complicated parts

Strategic Pauses

  • Create anticipation before key points
  • Allow information to sink in
  • Emphasize important statements by pausing after them
  • Don't underestimate the power of silence

Sounding Natural vs. Rehearsed

  • Practice with bullet points, NOT a memorized script
  • Make gradual changes in tone, pitch, and pace
  • Inflection must be "organic" — you cannot fake it
  • Record yourself and listen for robotic patterns

"The best elevator pitch isn't polished or memorized, like a college final exam. It's natural and sporadic, like chatting up a good friend you haven't seen in months." — Seth Godin


Brand vs. Investor Pitch

Aspect Investor Pitch Brand/Marketing Pitch
Focus Data-driven, metrics Story-driven, emotion
Content Market opportunity, traction Value proposition, transformation
Numbers Financial projections Customer benefits, outcomes
Length 10-20 minutes detailed 30-60 seconds conversational
Goal Secure funding Spark interest, create connection
Hero The company/founders The customer
Proof Revenue, users, growth Testimonials, transformations

Brand Pitch Must-Haves

  1. Emotional Connection — Stories make people feel; data makes them zone out
  2. Customer as Hero — Their transformation, not your features
  3. Clear Value Proposition — What makes you the "only" one?
  4. Authenticity — Your brand's genuine purpose and values
  5. Memorable Hook — Surprising fact, question, or vivid analogy

14 Common Mistakes

Content Mistakes

# Mistake Problem Fix
1 Too Vague or Generic Could apply to any company Be radically specific about your value
2 Focusing on Yourself Customers care how you help THEM Lead with their problem
3 Industry Jargon Alienates non-experts Use words a smart friend would understand
4 Overused Buzzwords Sounds presumptuous Avoid: "synergies," "empowering," "revolutionary," "disruptive"
5 Not Explaining Value Features without benefits Focus on what they GET

Delivery Mistakes

# Mistake Problem Fix
6 Too Long or Complex Loses attention (8-second span) Stick to 3 key points maximum
7 Too Salesy or Pushy Alienates listeners Focus on value, not selling
8 Speaking Too Fast Muddles message Slow down, breathe, pause
9 Unprepared or Nervous Fumbling, forgetting Practice to be confident, not robotic
10 Failing to Engage No connection Eye contact, read reactions, adapt

Structural Mistakes

# Mistake Problem Fix
11 No Time for Response Pitch was worthless Always end with space for dialogue
12 No Clear Next Step Conversation dies End with specific, simple ask
13 Not Adapting One-size-fits-all fails Tailor to context and audience
14 Starting with Yourself Loses them immediately Start with the problem or change

7-Day Testing & Iteration Framework

Day Activity Focus
1 Draft initial pitch Get something down
2-3 Practice out loud, refine Smooth the wording
4 Get feedback, tweak Input from trusted people
5 Test in real conversations Track responses
6 Review what worked Iterate on CTA
7 Finalize + document 2 backup variants Ready to deploy

How to Test

  1. Read out loud — Does it sound natural?
  2. Time yourself — Is it the right length?
  3. Share with trusted people — What do they remember most?
  4. Test with different audiences — How does each respond?
  5. Use at real events — Do they ask follow-ups?

Measuring Effectiveness

  • Track number of follow-up conversations
  • Count referrals or opportunities generated
  • Note which parts generate the most interest or questions
  • Watch for the "tell me more" reaction

Real Brand Example Patterns

Airbnb Pattern

"Tired of expensive hotels and lame vacation rentals? With Airbnb, you can affordably book unique homes and spaces from local hosts for your next trip. We're like the eBay of accommodations—our community already has over 2 million listings worldwide."

Structure: Problem → Solution → Analogy → Proof


Dropbox Pattern

"Tired of emailing files to yourself to access them from different computers and devices? Dropbox is a service that creates a shared folder accessible from anywhere—your desktop, laptop, phone, and the web. Any files you save to it are automatically synced and backed up in the cloud."

Structure: Relatable problem → Simple solution → Clear benefit


SpaceX Pattern

"Do you know how crazy expensive it is to launch stuff into space? Well, SpaceX builds affordable rockets and spacecraft to make space exploration and travel possible for everyone—not just governments."

Structure: Bold question → Mission statement → Democratization angle


What Makes These Work

  1. Start with relatable problem — "Tired of..." or provocative question
  2. Use simple, jargon-free language — Anyone can understand
  3. Include quick analogy — "like the eBay of..."
  4. Provide proof — Numbers, traction, scale
  5. Clear value proposition — What you get is obvious

CTA Options by Context

For Meetings/Calls

  • "Would you mind if I set up a quick call next week to discuss this further?"
  • "I'd love to grab coffee and hear more about your work. Would that be possible?"

For Interest/Demo

  • "Would you be open to a quick demo?"
  • "If you want to learn more, you can [specific next step]."

For Connection

  • "Could I get your card and follow up by email?"
  • "Would it be okay if I sent you some more information?"

Key Principle: Make the ask simple with little required on their part — you just met this person.


10 Key Principles

# Principle Insight
1 Customer is the Hero You are the guide, not the star
2 Start with Why Purpose before product
3 What Is vs. What Could Be Create tension through contrast
4 The Job of the Pitch Not to close, but to spark "Tell me more..."
5 Clarity Over Cleverness If they don't understand, you've failed
6 Conversation, Not Monologue Leave space for dialogue
7 Onlyness Matters If you're not different in a compelling way, fix that first
8 Stories Over Statistics Data informs; stories transform
9 Practice, Don't Memorize Know your points, create the words fresh
10 Iterate Constantly Your 20th version will be 10x better than your first

Templates

See reference/templates.md for:

  • Strategic Foundation Template
  • One-Liner (10s) Template
  • 30-Second Pitch Template
  • 60-Second Pitch Template
  • Founder Story Pitch Template
  • Hook Options Template
  • CTA Options Template
  • Context Variations Template
  • Testing Checklist Template
  • Quick Reference Card Template
  • Output Validation Checklist

When to Apply This Knowledge

During Pitch Development

  • Complete positioning work first (value proposition, Onlyness)
  • Select primary framework based on brand needs
  • Craft hooks using the 6 proven types
  • Create time-based variations (10s, 30s, 60s)
  • Add delivery guidance (pauses, emphasis)

During Evaluation

  • Apply the 3 C's test (Clarity, Conciseness, Confidence)
  • Check against 14 Common Mistakes
  • Read aloud for natural flow
  • Verify "tell me more" potential

During Finalization

  • Test with target audience
  • Create context variations
  • Document CTA options
  • Prepare follow-up responses