Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Making Your Pitch Perfect
Making Your Pitch Perfect Making Your Pitch Perfect Double-tailoring your elevator pitch to the person and the event can be the key to projecting confidence in the job search.When networking, itâs important to talk about how you can help the person and add value to his organization. It may sound obvious, but people often get too caught up in trying to sound natural and overlook this key part of any communication.Mark Grimm, a public speaker and messaging strategist, said itâs easy to lose track of your core value and wander into personal areas. âSo many go about it the wrong way. They talk about the glee club.â Itâs fine to be authentic and discuss your interests on an interview, but not at the expense of missing your message. âIf I donât know how [what you are saying is] going to help me, youâre not going to get the job,â Grimm continued.Practicing an elevator pitch is good because it gets you to take ownership of your skill set and explain it with confidence - just make sure that it doesnât come off as âcanned ,â Grimm offered. The trick to mastering this type of effective communication in the job search is to prepare that message and make sure itâs tailored to a particular person.âThe first question is always, âWhat does the audience want?â â Grimm said. âDelivering value to the listener is the most important idea.â Job seekers can figure this out by thoroughly researching the company and making preliminary inquiries before the interview.But interviews arenât the only venue where one would want to explain her value. Networking events and social engagements can be equally effective forums for such an elevator pitch. These setting require a bit of double-tailoring - to the person and also to the event itself. Speaking to a CEO at a backyard barbecue should be more casual than a formal sales call. You wouldnât want to ruin the executiveâs hot dog because youâre yapping about your accounting accomplishments - but you do want to slip in a tidbit or two about how youâ ve saved companies small fortunes between the chicken wings. If delivered correctly, it could be the thing that lands you the big interview in the first place.No matter the person or the venue, though, the message wonât get through unless youâre sure of yourself, Grimm said. âPeople are impressed with confidence,â he said. âThe vocal issue is confidence. If you come across like youâre whispering, you wonât get it.âTo master that vocal sound, Grimm recommends practicing a variety of phrases in front of a mirror or on camera, even with someone who can provide feedback. âHow you come across and how you think you come across can be two different things,â he warned.But nothing beats the real thing. One of the best ways to gain confidence during an interview setting is to go on as many interviews as possible - and learn from each one. âIf you donât learn from your experience, then itâs not that valuable,â Grimm said. âItâs just a matter of moving forward until you get the job you want.â
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