Winning business through storytelling

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Winning business through storytelling

opinion

Sandra Davis explains how clear storytelling can improve your pitches and help you win more business.

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torytelling and professional services. Not what you would call the most obvious of partners. But unlike some one-hit-wonder business buzzwords, storytelling has stayed the course to become ever more familiar in the corporate world. Because far from some new-fangled fad, storytelling has defined communication for millennia. And so long as business consists of humans selling to humans, telling a clear story about your offer will remain key to success. After all, engaging your audience can be the difference between a pitch that succeeds — and one that fails. And winning new business has never been more important. The pressure to land new business is growing across professional services. Firms need to compete harder than ever before. New competitors are emerging. Technology continues to rewrite the rules across the sector. And in just one example of firms trying to up their visibility, search giant Bing recently announced that ‘lawyer’ is now its most expensive keyword.

clichés that there was no room for anything else. But I have also been shown pitches that are clear, memorable, and absolutely focused on demonstrating how the client’s problem will be solved. So if there’s one thing I have learned from this, it’s that standing out from your competitors isn’t just about having a clear and compelling story. It’s also about telling it in an equally clear and compelling way.

I have worked as a presentation coach for over 10 years. I have helped train individuals and teams from businesses across the world, from financial services and law to construction and consultancy. And during this time I have seen a huge range of pitches, from the woeful to the wonderful. I have been shown pitches without any reference to the people being pitched to, and pitches stuffed with so many

Innovative. Market-leading. Deep industry expertise and comprehensive global reach. We’ve all grown weary of hearing the same old corporate speak. But in a world like professional services, it can be hard to avoid cliché and talk about your offer in a way that’s honest, distinctive, and unique to your business. Even harder is finding a way of describing your business that everyone can get behind — and

Getting your story straight

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pm | Summer 2016

You can’t sell anything if you can’t tell anything.

Beth Comstack, Vice Chair, GE

Simple ingredients

This article originally appeared in PM magazine. For further details go to www.pmforum.co.uk

deliver confidently to external audiences. This is an even bigger problem in pitching. With such a small window to communicate who you are, the temptation to fall back on the cliché and the overblown can become almost irresistible. But remember: no one ever signed on the dotted line after a sentence like ‘we are an innovative, full-service firm with global capabilities.’ Instead, we need to give evidence of how we are innovative and global. That’s why one of the most powerful phrases in any pitch or presentation is ‘for example…’. Using hard facts might not seem like something that firms struggle with. After all, it’s something that senior business leaders and partners do every single day. But we believe that facts are only one type of evidence — and that they’re only really useful when backed up by more emotive language to appeal to both IQ and EQ. It’s by using a combination of hard facts and emotive language that you really bring your pitch-winning story alive. As a communications consultancy, we coach our clients in the four distinct types of evidence by grouping them all together under one easy to remember acronym: FOAM • Facts: Facts establish size, scale, and what’s at stake • Observations: Your expert perspective on the marketplace and the issues faced by your clients. • Anecdotes: Stories that bring your ideas to life. Relevant business stories are even better.


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