Tag Archives: pitchcoach

THE BUSINESS PITCH MORE ETHICAL THAN THE POLITICAL?

The Observer today had this headline to an article on its Comment page, “When government propaganda is disguised as fact.” It argued that propaganda is a damaging and divisive tool, referencing  the currrent ‘health tourism’ dispute.

Last week an official government report announced that the NHS is spending up to £2bn on foreign visitor and short-term migrants with Jeremy Hunt saying we couldn’t afford “an international heath service” with fewer than 50% of ‘chargeable’ foreign nationals. Continue reading

CAMERON, MASTER OF GESTURE POLITICS

The dictionary definition for gesture politics reads: “Any action by a person or organisation done for political reason and intended to attract public attention but having little real effect”. A recent example was the high profile use of Home Office Vans telling illegal immigrants to GO HOME!

David Cameron is no more guilty of gesture politics than the rest of them- Milliband, Clegg, Osborne, Balls-it’s a staple of political life.

Where he is the master  is in his powerful, practised use of gesture when speaking. Continue reading

PITCHING TO ALAN SUGAR. CAUSTIC JIBES ‘PUT OFF’ ASPIRING TYCOONS.

The Apprentice and Dragon’s Den never were about pitching and a recent YouGov poll, reported in  the Sunday Times today puts their ‘value’ to business practice in doubt.

It suggests 88% of small-business leaders believe contestants’ behaviour on The Apprentice puts off aspiring entrepreneurs.

“The programme’s producers seem to be deliberately portraying young entrepreneurs as greedy, self-regarding and frankly a bit dim-witted” Continue reading

IF ANGELA MERKEL REARRANGES THE CHAIRS, SHOULDN’T YOU?

merkel 2With the  German election approaching newspapers are full of articles trying to get to the secret of the success of the world’s most powerful woman and what makes her tick.

We were given an interesting insight into what this could be in the Observer:

“It has been she – the first to admit she dislikes conflict – who has stood up and literally rearranged the chairs at a conference in a last-ditch and arguably maternal intervention to forge better communication.” Continue reading

IF YOU DON’T LEAD, NO ONE WILL FOLLOW.

leadlikeants  Leadership, or lack of it, is in the news right now and rhetoric lacking that leadership is less persauasive.

In America a war-weary public is no longer responding, as many of them did, to his often soaring rhetoric. The reason being they do not see him as a decisive President, one who leads. As Max Hastings writes “His rhetoric remains as impressive as ever, but his conduct of office is hallmarked by weakness and indecision.”  Conversely, while David Cameron demonstrated a specific lack of leadership over his Party when the ‘war’ vote went against him, he is still seen according to the polls as a strong leader. His defiant “I get it ” front foot approach hits the right note.

Britain's Labour party opposition leader Ed Miliband arrives at a polling station in north London

Meanwhile Ed Milliband, who is not without eloquence and subtlety as a politician, has not had the greatest success in taking his ideas to the TUC conference. His argument for a changed relationship, and promises that a Labour Government would stamp out ‘Victorian’ employment practices, failed to sway the Union bruisers.

He did not come across as a strong confrontational leader worthy of their attention. In the latest IPSOS MORI poll  58% rate Cameron as a capable leader and only 28% rate Milliband (same for Farage, ahead of Clegg.) He is seen as less good in a crisis, with less sound judgement, all aspects of leadership.

All this is, of course. a question of perception as it is in the business pitch where leadership is operating on two levels. The first of these is the corporate. No matter how open-minded they aim to be anyone on the recieving end of a pitch will already have an opinion of the company they are seeing.

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This will be partly based on facts of market share and business performance but as much on the intangibles of innovative thinking, decisiveness, positive attitude- characterisics of leadership. If you are pitching a company without some level of perceived leadership you are going to have a problem. However, by the time you are invited to do battle you must assume your rivals are as good as you, with similar corporate reputations, or they would not have been short-listed. In other words, in battle parlance, their troops are your equal in numbers and weaponry and disposition.

The winning difference is leadership. In preparation, in the signals of a meeting well managed, with clarity and certainty, but above all in the intangibles of attitude.

Spirit, desire, courage, camaraderie. These are what win battles, hearts and minds.

Shakespeare said it best:

“..But when the blast of war blows in our ears, then imitate the action of the tiger; stiffen the sinews, summon up the blood..” Henry V,