The One About the Pitchy Pest who Claimed Not to Pitch

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A guy named “James” invaded my LinkedIn direct-message box yesterday with a note that started like this…

Hi Tom,

Unlike most on this platform who immediately pitch you, Iā€™d actually like to start a genuine conversation.

Then he told me how “…from (his conversations), many service providers like yourself are facing stagnant or declining sales.”

He said, “I approach business differently — I aim to make your service a ‘treasure’ for your clients.

He continued by citing those Mastercard commercials that used to describe “priceless” moments. That’s what he can help me do, he said, create those “invaluable experiences that your customers cherish.”

After telling me he’d “love” to hear my thoughts…

…James pitched me…

…to attend a workshop to “delve into strategies for creating these ‘priceless’ moments.” I could attend as his “guest,” he said.

šŸ™„ šŸ˜’ šŸ™„

Okie-dokie, then, Mr-I’m-Not-Like-All-Those-Other-Pitchy-Pests!

Thanks for the pitch! But I’m not attending.

Don’t get me wrong. I have nothing against promoting your products and services.

In the Story Power Profit Pack (pointer #18), I write:

Itā€™s OK to Sell ā€“ Almost Always

Some people make a distinction between content that provides value and content that sells. They say send ā€œvalue-onlyā€ emails some of the time and ā€œsalesā€ emails other times.

I donā€™t buy that. That fosters a business-crushing mindset ā€” as if content without a pitch is valuable and content that sells is not. Donā€™t fall in that mindset trap.

Everything you do for your audience is valuable ā€” including revealing how your products and services can serve them.

Iā€™m not talking about hard-charging pitches every time (see Pointer #16). Iā€™m talking about informative, entertaining content that inspires your audience to take a next step with you (and tells them how to take that step). You might be ā€œsellingā€ a free report, event, or email opt-in. Or you might be selling a product or service.

Whatever youā€™re selling, it is valuable to your audience. Donā€™t forget that.

I don’t have a problem with James pitching his workshop.

I have a problem with James pitching his workshop in a cold direct-message — after claiming he’s not like the others who pitch immediately.

And why do I call him out? Behold Pointer # 31 from the Profit Pack with the most relevant bits highlighted…

#31: Call Out Bad Behavior

…Iā€™ve called out:

Pitchy pests who pound me with offers that are irrelevant to me.

ā™£Ā A ā€œprofessional appointment setterā€ who showed up at the Zoom meeting arranged ā€“ with no idea what I do.

ā™£Ā The bait-and-switch artist who promised to help me get a speaking gig at a big event only to reveal when we met that he didnā€™t have the connections he first claimed to have.

ā™£Ā The guy who sent me an incoherent, illogical complaint about my ā€œtoo longā€ emails.

I donā€™t share these stories to complain or vent. I share them as cautionary tales to reveal important lessons. I share them to define my way of doing business. I share them because theyā€™re informative and entertaining stories. My goal isnā€™t to embarrass or humiliate the one who behaved badly. My goal is to show my audience what I stand for and to say, ā€œJoin me if you stand for the same.ā€

When you do this, you may offend and repel some people ā€” those who probably werenā€™t going to do business with you anyway. But youā€™ll increase your authority, magnify the value you bring, and build stronger bonds with your best prospects and clients.

Here comes my pitch…

The Story Power Profit Pack contains 52 strategies, tips, and tactics (a.k.a. Pointers) to transform your content from ignored to adored…

…so prospects tune in, turn on, and buy.

I just shared two of the 52. If you’d like the other 50…

you can get theĀ Profit PackĀ here.

Don't go away yet..

p.s. Coaches, authors, and consultants hire me to power-up their creative content and storytelling to captivate prospects, stand-out and book more business.

Whenever you're ready, here are several ways I can help you become a storytelling stand-out so you'll land more clients without pitching and prodding:

1) Get theĀ Story Power Profit PackĀ -- 52 Strategies, Tips, and Tactics Ā to Transform Your Content from Ignored to Adored.

2) Watch theĀ free, 7-minute Micro-Training: ā€œThe 3 Most Important Storytelling Keys to Captivate Prospects and Inspire Them to Act -- Without Pitching and Prodding.ā€

3) Become a Story Power VIP: Master how to discover, assemble, and deliver business-building stories. Twice-monthly live masterclasses. Members-only content. One-on-one feedback and consulting sessions. And moreā€¦ If you'd like to learn more about our VIP program, just reply to this email and put "Story Power VIP" in the subject line. Iā€™ll contact you with more details.

4) Work with me one-on-one: If youā€™re interested in working directly with me -- to discover, assemble, and deliver powerful, business-building stories -- simply reply to this email and change the subject line to "Private Client." Tell me a little about yourself, your business, and what you'd like to accomplish, and I'll reply to discuss options.

5) Invite me to speak at an event: I can tailor a presentation that meets the specific needs of your organization. Informative. Entertaining. Virtual or live. Potential for continuing education credits when applicable for your group. If interested, reply to this email and change the subject line to ā€œSpeaking Engagement.ā€ Iā€™ll circle back to discuss the possibilities.

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Tom Ruwitch

Tom Ruwitch is the founder and CEO of Story Power Marketing. For more than 30 years, he has helped businesses grow by delivering powerful stories using a variety of different media.