To get leadership buy-in for a new media project, use a two-step pitch. First, show a best-in-class example from another company to paint a clear vision of the desired outcome. Second, explicitly anchor your project to a core strategic narrative or go-to-market message for that quarter.
Stop trying to convince executives to adopt your priorities. Instead, identify their existing strategic initiatives—often with internal code names—and frame your solution as an accelerator for what they're already sold on doing. This dramatically reduces friction and speeds up deals.
For content without direct attribution, prove its value by systematically collecting qualitative feedback. Create a 'Trophy Room'—a document with screenshots of positive social media comments, Gong call mentions, and Slack messages—to tell a compelling story of impact beyond hard metrics.
A simple, powerful framework for executive communication. It links a market shift to a unique strategic response, then frames it with clear negative and positive outcomes. This structure ensures the message is strategic, not just product-focused, and can be delivered in two sentences.
One-off creative hits are easy, but replicating them requires structure. Truly creative marketing integrates storytelling into a disciplined process involving data analysis (washups, SWAT), strategic planning, and commercial goals. This framework provides the guardrails needed to turn creative ideas into repeatable, impactful campaigns.
Don't just solve the problem a customer tells you about. Research their public strategic objectives for the year and identify where they are failing. Frame your solution as the critical tool to close that specific, high-level performance gap, creating urgency and executive buy-in.
Truly creative and effective B2B entertainment doesn't come from open-ended brainstorming. Instead, it thrives within the constraints of a well-defined strategic narrative or product message. This 'box' provides the necessary guardrails to ensure the content is both entertaining and strategically relevant.
Securing executive buy-in is its own sales stage, distinct from champion agreement. Don't just repeat the demo for the boss. Use executive-level tactics like reference calls with their peers, exec-to-exec meetings to build relationships, or roadmap presentations to sell the long-term vision and partnership.
Structure your final presentation by calling out specific problems you learned from individual contributors by name. Then, immediately pivot to show how solving their problem directly contributes to the high-level business objective owned by the executive decision-maker. This makes every stakeholder feel heard and demonstrates their strategic value.
To sell large transformation projects, present the ambitious "North Star" goal but break it into sequential stages. Critically, Stage 1 must deliver tangible business value on its own. This approach wins over skeptics by providing an early return on investment, securing the momentum and buy-in needed for subsequent stages.
A four-part structure for pitching a product: present a possibility ('what if'), state the direct benefit ('so that'), provide a concrete use case ('for example'), and add a compelling future-looking teaser ('that's not all'). This framework, taught in MBA programs, creates a comprehensive and persuasive narrative.