A Retail “Elevator Pitch” – Do You Have One?
Whether you are a retailer or a wholesaler, there will always come an opportunity when you need to share a condensed version of your business into a short elevator pitch. For wholesalers, this is particularly important since you are usually sharing these details with retailers in an effort to land a new account. For retailers it is equally as important since you often need to gain trust and respect from a valued vendor or someone from the press. The key to a successful elevator pitch is to keep it short and simple. Yes, you heard me right… simple. And short… about 30 seconds and no more than 45 to be exact.
[tweetmeme]Here are a few tips to help you create your perfect retail based elevator pitch.
1. Always think of the final consumer. Whether you are talking to the press, a vendor or a retailer, the ultimate goal is to make sales with the final consumer (last customer to make a purchase without plans to resell it) in mind. Make sure you recognize and respect who this consumer is at one point in your pitch.
2. Offer points of benefit about your business. But remember… don’t offer points of benefit that will influence you, but rather explain how your business benefits your audience, the final customer and possibly your demographics.
3. Don’t get into the little details. If a favorite song from your youth inspired you, there is no need to share these details in your quick pitch. Instead focus on the now and stress what your business currently offers, how it’s unique and who your customers are.
4. Keep an eye – and an ear – on the time.It’s easy to get lost in your words when talking about your business, so stay focused. If you practice your elevator pitch at home / in front of the mirror / with friends, it will get easier to recognize your strengths and weaknesses, as well as how you are doing with time.
5. Keep a mental checklist of points to cover. A perfect elevator pitch can exist, but remembering it can often be a challenge. Create a mental checklist of three to five points you want to cover in your elevator pitch, then mentally check each one off as you deliver your pitch . The goal is keep this pitch about 30 seconds long…. so remember, short, sweet and simple is the way to go!
If delivered effectively, questions will typically follow a great elevator pitch. So don’t worry about not saying enough – your time will come if you deliver your pitch right. Stay focused and practice if you need to. Afterall, practice makes perfect, so get started!
Wiktoria
Hi Adam,Thank you for this comment. You have urtensdood everything right: it is challenging ))I first opened the site public last July. But there were some serious system troubles. So I took time to improve the software (for example added the moderation before publishing business plans and investors profiles). And Invest Engine really went live late January this year. But development team is still working to improve the business plan software. For example, now we are finalizing the feature that allows users to change the projects’ start and end dates (it might sound simple, but from technical perspective is really tough).As for attracting users: this is probably even more difficult than developing the software. There many sites offering similar service (matching investors and entrepreneurs). But most of them have membership fees or special charges to contact other users. So basically people pay money, but get little returned value on it (as no website can guarantee that the project will be funded). And though my business model is different, the overall level of trust to such websites is low.But as with any community website: the quantity grows into quality. The traffic of Invest Engine is growing gradually: we started with 4M position in Alexa rating, and in three months reached 900K. I checked out your idea with ExecutivePlan app for LinkedIn and think it is a great idea. You might leverage the existing community and bring in additional value to LI users. As for your main question I can say, that investors really need quality projects. Unfortunately many entrepreneurs think that pushing out the blank idea is enough, and business plans are good for nothing (just take out time and efforts). They rarely associate their failure to find investors with their failure to present a well-though plan and convince investors they are capable of executing it.Adam, if you are interested we might discuss possible patterns of cooperation. Think it could be mutually beneficial. Mail me at info @ investengine [dot] com Tina