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The Art of the Pitch

A thought that turned into a fun experiment today: prepare a pitch for anything.

I got really excited thinking up a sales spiel for a ball pen. Not because I believed the ball pen was good (I’ve never even seen it, it was hypothetical). And not because I like sales so much – it’s how I work, but not how I want to live everyday.
The reason is this: a sales process is art. In some cases it’s painful to watch, and in others just cheesy. But the right kind of sale seems to me to be a thing worth pursuing, and going through the spiel and the pitch might be a valuable step in the process.
Even if it rarely gets you there. Even if you would go through this only to remind yourself of the futility and theatricality of a pitch. Even if your heart wasn’t in it, as you sold an imaginary thing to a random person. Even if (crucially if) the purpose of this spiel is just to get it out of the system.

If Mr Burroughs is right about language being a virus –  

If Mr Durden is right about finding things out after work – 

If you are right about being fed up with sales that don’t connect, don’t deliver or convince –  

Maybe it’s necessary to get through a lot of the bad ones before you start having good conversations.  And maybe it’s the bad ones you need to simulate and practice, so that the good ones are free to happen for real.

Think about this: a group of people meets every month. They draw names of objects from a hat – or draw the objects themselves. They have 5 minutes to prepare their spiel. After 5 minutes, they will choose a “prospect” from the group and try to sell. Instructions to the salesperson: be as over-the-top as you like, use the oldest tricks in the dustiest books, con, cajole, say the first thing on your mind – without filtering. Instructions to the “prospect’ – be reasonable, object, ask sensible questions, interrupt and try to break the pitch mid-way, refuse to agree to stuff you don’t like (just as you would in real life). Others are free to look and comment (if feedback is asked for afterwards). The spiel is max. 3 minutes. After that, the next pair is on.

What doesn’t happen is a productive, healthy sale.

What will happen is this: you will get the TV salesperson out of your system, and be comfortable around your worst possible performance. The time limit, the random product, the simulated prospect – all are carefully chosen to ensure you do your worst. And this may bring about a positive change: you may become more relaxed and open to what the other person is saying, more inclined to keep eye contact, more aware of the body language and everything else that happens as you yammer away…

Repeat every month. And in between those grotesque anti-sales carnivals, make sure you leave the tricks behind and feel free to focus on finding out the important stuff about selling. 

(Oh, and don’t tell me you don’t really work in sales.) 

 

 

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BRAVE Blog

Makers are the new learners: language learning and the makers movement

 

If your idea of learning a language involves staring at whiteboards and wading through grammar books, here’s a different approach. By focusing on doing things – rather than learning about and around them – your foreign language skills can develop in a fast and meaningful way. Are you ready for the maker-oriented language learning future?

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Unfinished Business: how I failed as a Business English teacher (and why that matters)

 

Blog challenges are either super-exciting or super-awkward to respond to. This is both. It’s awkward and unsettling and difficult to re-live failures, and this is what the challenge is about. But at the same time, it is exciting to see what I can now learn from my failure – and it would be great to know that I helped some language learners or teachers out there. If you manage to avoid my mistakes – or if you recognize them and step into them more consciously next time – then this post will be a success.
Let’s get to it.

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BRAVE Blog

You May Not Enjoy This: Getting Through The Chore of Language Learning

sad

The myth of foreign language study is always similar: learn a new language, meet new people, have fun, explore, live the good life. Today, I want to write about the other perspective. What happens when learning languages is nowhere near that enjoyable? How to deal with this? Read on; we really need your input here.

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BRAVE Blog

What to do with language? Coding has all the answers

my Apple II IRC hangout

What’s it all for? What good is learning a language, really? Why should anyone bother, and what should we do once a language is learned and mastered? I found my answers on TED.com – and tonight I’m sharing them here. Feel free to add yours.

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BRAVE Blog

Guerrilla Language Learning Update: What Money Makes

When I was starting up my business, I learned a lot about marketing. And Guerrilla Marketing – which inspired this challenge – was a particularly strong inspiration. Among other things, it taught me a thing or two about money. Now, as a keen language learner, I’m using these lessons, and learning even more. Here’s how.