Perfect Pitch Jon Steel
interviews Jon Steel at the APG review of Perfect pitch |
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(45MB) entire audio interview with Jon Steel - March 13th 2007
- the man entrusted with improving the quality of the planning across WPP talks about Perfect Pitch, Truth Lies and advertising, how he got into planning. why he went to America, how to train planners, how to get a job in WPP and whether you can learn planning by blogging (well everyone else has taken a stance so why shouldn't he?)listen
to extracts from Jon Steel's presentation to
the APG
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Extracts
from the Jon Steel APG presentation
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Review of Perfect Pitch
Here's why. Firstly Jon Steel is a planner - he is paid to strategise. Most books about presentations and pitching steer away from the content - how can you advise on that? More peculiarly the point of making presentations is to achieve the outcome the presenter wants. And this doesn't often get talked about. Perfect pitch goes straight for the jugular. This book explains how to plan to win pitches - I've never read a book like it - I suspect this is the first of its kind. Secondly, Steel has been working in the USA as a partner in Goodby Berlin Silverstein and leading pitches to some of the world's most successful corporations. According to the book his success rate has been 9 out of 10 pitches. While he was a Goodby Belin Silverstein the agencies billings grew from some 35 million dollars to over 700 million. Pitches aren't won by individuals but if you want to find out what a winning formula looks like - you're more likely to find it here.
What Steel shows beyond doubt is that most agencies are playing at new business. No agency could sustain pitches of this intensity and run a pitch or two every week. It turns out that the Goodby Berlin and Silverstein winning streak came from pitching at most 4 times a year and spending as much time deciding if they wanted to pitch and if the client was worth working with as pitching for the business itself. If there is a flaw in this perfect account of the art of 'high' pitching it is that if this book is only read by the foot soldiers in a rare moment between being orderered out of the trenches into another yet another ill conceived charge across no man's land, then little is going to change. If agency managers pay attention and if any have the courage of Steel's convictions then perhaps the quality of pitching can be raise. But it needs discipline. As Steel says in the interview - the key to successful pitching is resisting the instincts which if given their head are wreck pitches every single time. But after this eloquent and passionate account they can't say he didn't make his case.
Click here to order your own copy of The Perfect Pitch
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