I just put up a new post over at Working Smarter which you might find highly relevant.
How Not to Make a Marketing Presentation:
Recently, one of my coworkers slid a handout from a marketing presentation he had attended across my desk and asked me what I thought of the material. This company was trying to sell us something that would increase our revenue, cut our costs, etc… the typical promises in every business-to-business pitch. This company was trying to sell us on some new advertising opportunities, specifically, and we receive at least a dozen proposals of this sort per week.
The marketing materials were very polished and it was clear that the salespeople from this company had done their homework on the nature of our business—well, most of their homework anyway. The pitch was very detailed; it told us exactly what we were paying for and outlined how we would potentially benefit from this company’s services. It was, in my book, one of the best-presented pitches I’ve ever seen. But it contained a handful of fatal errors that forced me and others to say “no thanks.”
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