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[Music]
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DAN PINK: One of my favorite things to write was the pitch chapter because y'know I'm a
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writer and I find myself pitching all the time and I wanted to learn how to do it better.
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I identified six new pitches for the 21st century. The Pixar Pitch is modeled on the
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narrative structure of Pixar films and a story artist for Pixar named Emma Coates essentially
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revealed the source code of this. Once upon a time, every day, one day, because of that,
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because of that, until finally—blank. Just fill in those blanks and it ends up being
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powerful. We don't see the world only as a set of logical propositions. We see it as
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a set of episodes. By enlisting the power of story in a pitch, which is something we
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don't do that much, it ends up being a very, very effective way to get your message across.
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Email is a pitch. Get over it. An email is a pitch. It's a plea for attention, it's a
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plea to engage. The effective email subject lines fall into two categories. They have
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to be either the category of utility—they're very useful to people or curiosity—they
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peak people's curiosity. Anything in between, anything that combines the two doesn't work
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very well. Obama did this very well in the campaign. He sent out a lot of emails, but
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the most popular email, the subject line was "Hey" Woah. Think about how many times you
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open an email that doesn't have a subject line. Some people end up opening those first.
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Why? Because they're curious. One of my favorites is the rhyming pitch. Seems kind of cheesy,
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if not sleazy which rhymes. Rhymes end up increasing processing fluency and when people
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are able to process something more fluently, they absorb it more, they understand it better.
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There was a trial of OJ Simpson, a former football star who was accused of murdering
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his wife and her friend. They found a glove on the crime scene, so the prosecutor said,
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well of course it's your glove. Try it on. And he can't get the glove on his hand. In
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the closing statement, the late Johnny Cochran said to the jury, "If it doesn't fit, you
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must acquit." What's remarkable is that 18 years later, people remember that. If it doesn't
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fit, you must acquit. Questions are active, statements are somewhat passive. So if I just
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make an assertion to you, you'd listen. Okay, cool. You're listening. But if I ask you a
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question, you inevitably have to respond. A great example of this is Ronald Reagan in
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1980 where the economy was in the tank and he could have said "Your economic condition
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has deteriorated over the last 48 months." Instead he said "Are you better off now than
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you were 4 years ago?" And that's more persuasive. That's more likely to move people because
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what happens? They think of am I better off? They start thinking about it and they begin
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to articulate their own reasons for agreeing with you. So, don't you think we should all
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use more question pitches? Tweeting is a form of pitching and there's some evidence showing
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the most important thing you can do in pitching via Twitter is giving people good information,
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even if it's self promotional, people tend to dig it. And also questions. Questions via
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Twitter end up being really effective, too. One of them is the one-word pitch. The idea
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in the world right now is you want ownership of one word. So when people think of you,
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they think of that word, when people say that word they think of you and actually turns
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out that President Obama did a pretty good job of this because his word in 2012 was "Forward."
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All of the ads, all of the public documents had that word. Forward. So he was able to
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distill his message into one word.
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The pitch process, when it works well, is inherently collaborative. In some ways, pitch
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is not the same word because pitch implies I'm gonna throw this to you and you're either
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gonna catch it or not. It's much more interactive. We have to think of pitching not as I'm gonna
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sell you on this right now, but essentially here's an invitation—an intriguing invitation—to
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have a conversation.
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- "To Sell Is Human" is about how to move people with authenticity, with passion, and
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with purpose." - One day, I went back and looked at my sent
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emails, I looked at my calendar, I looked at the tweets I sent. I realized that an enormous
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portion of my time involved selling. Not only selling books, but just convincing people,
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persuading people, cajoling people, I had this bizarre realization that I'm a salesman.
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- The book truly cemented a suspicion that I've had which is we're living in a world
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now where we're all sales people.