Saturday, April 11, 2020
4 Steps For Developing A Winning Elevator Pitch - Work It Daily
4 Steps For Developing A Winning Elevator Pitch - Work It Daily 4 Steps For Developing A Winning Elevator Pitch An elevator pitch is essentially used to help you gain the interest of people to talk to you when there is only a window of 20 seconds or less to speak â" the amount of time you may be in the elevator with the CEO of the company youâre dying to work for or in another similar scenario. Related: 3 Tips For Perfecting Your Elevator Pitch The mission is to get the contact to responds with âWhy donât you send me your resume?â or something similar like, âLetâs schedule a time to further discuss.â So, youâre probably wondering, âWhat makes a good elevator pitch and how can I compose one?â First off, remember that your mission is simply to get the conversation started. You want to keep it conversational as you point out what value you offer thatâs a competitive advantage over other potential candidates and how it may prove to be beneficial experience in helping to solve a problem for the employer. 4 Steps For Developing A Winning Elevator Pitch Here are some steps to help construct a good elevator pitch: 1. Think about your accomplishments. Pull together your top 10 accomplishments and use the C-A-R process (the Challenge, your Action and the Result of your action) for each accomplishment to help you tell a story. 2. Determine the theme. Go over what you wrote and look for the theme â" essentially, what are you recognized for? Are you the go-to-person for creative ideas, the troubleshooter around crises, or the networker with the ability to make connections and establish important relationships for business? 3. Narrow your story so that itâs brief and conversational. Stick to using the C-A-R process as you narrow your story down to one short paragraph. For instance: âWhen our new mobile app looked like it was going to miss its deadline by two months, Iâm the HTML5 subject matter expert who put it back on track.â 4. Refine. Refine. Refine. The more time and practice you have with your elevator pitch, the easier itâll be rolling off your tongue. Just remember to start with your theme and back it up with three supporting points to prove it. Just like customizing a resume for different jobs, your elevator pitch needs to do the same. You may have more than one elevator pitch under your belt to suit different contacts and scenarios to win your way to more job opportunities. This post was originally published on an earlier date. Photo Credit: Shutterstock Have you joined our career growth club?Join For Free!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.