Blog Archives

Yet Another PowerPoint Peeve: Ghost Boxes

February 7, 2012
By Rob Buccino
Yet Another PowerPoint Peeve: Ghost Boxes

Many PowerPoint users don’t like to use the prefabricated layout choices for slide headlines and text that come with the program. Rather than change their attributes (font, font size, style, position, borders, and so on), these users simply ignore them, adding a new text box every time they need a place to put their...

Read more »

What’s Up With “Doc”?

January 23, 2012
By Rob Buccino

I always cringe a little when I’m listening to a pitch team from a medical agency refer to physicians as “docs” — as in, “These docs say they’re only interested in efficacy”. How about, “physicians”? “Medical professionals”? Or even, “doctors”? What’s wrong with “doc”? To my ears, its lack of professional respect and specificity...

Read more »

Yes! &…

January 31, 2011
By Rob Buccino

Let’s all ban the phrase “yes, but” from the English language. Remember how you felt the last time someone yes-butted you? Didn’t really feel like a “yes” in any meaningful way, did it? Rather, it probably felt like your concerns or interests were being pushed aside so that someone else’s could get more airtime....

Read more »

How expert pitch teams handle tough questions

August 31, 2010
By Rob Buccino
How expert pitch teams handle tough questions

Once your prepared remarks are over, it’s your client’s turn. How your team answers tough questions and challenges – and how it behaves when answering – can make or quash the sale. Prospective clients often put more stock in things they hear during this part of the meeting than in any other. That’s because...

Read more »

An Einstein (maybe) quote applicable to ROI measurement

May 15, 2010
By Rob Buccino

“Not everything than can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.”

Read more »

Too many choices?

April 28, 2010
By Rob Buccino
Too many choices?

CBS News is catching up with decision scientists who recognize that emotions drive decisions more powerfully than logic—and that too many choices may dissuade consumers from choosing anything.

Read more »

Are your pitches ‘emotionally competent’?

April 27, 2010
By Rob Buccino
Are your pitches ‘emotionally competent’?

Here’s surprising, even shocking news from neuroscience that may sadden many a new business presenter: Unless your pitch evokes strong emotion among your audience, it’s likely to be almost instantly forgotten. “Emotionally competent stimulus”, or ECS, is just one of the gems I found while reading John Medina’s Brain Rules (Pear Press, 2008), a...

Read more »

The Delicate Art of Critiquing Pitch Creative

April 21, 2010
By Rob Buccino
The Delicate Art of Critiquing Pitch Creative

I have a modest proposal I’d like to make, in the interest of making your pitches more successful (and your celebrations more festive). As both a successful former creative director and an effective New Business director, I trust I have the credentials and experience to support the merits of this. Here’s the idea: Ban...

Read more »

‘Twas the Night Before Pitching

December 15, 2009
By Rob Buccino

(With apologies to Clement Clarke Moore.) ‘Twas the night before pitching and all through the firms, Not a worker was idle, not even interns, The slides were enduring their nineteenth revision, The art boards reflected abject indecision, The laptop computers were in IT hell, While Xerox machines chose this night to rebel, And during...

Read more »

Confident or Arrogant?

December 15, 2009
By Rob Buccino
Confident or Arrogant?

The agency team was smiling as it left the client’s wood-paneled conference room and headed to the parking lot. Once safely out of earshot, the team leader burst out with a “Yes!” and a fist-pump. “We nailed it!” said another, patting his team-mate on the back. “We were awesome!” shouted a third. Meanwhile, back...

Read more »

Tags