Today I
was asked to join the agency CEO and company secretary for a client pitch. The client was a small hospitality business looking for
public relations assistance in its launch. We all
sat down with a coffee, the CEO had a prepared PowerPoint presentation he
ran in the background throughout his speech. We had
bought along a projector, as is customary with pitches but the small business
did not have the office space to facilitate this so we had it running on the laptop at the end of the table. The CEO spoke with a confident and casual demeanor, drawing attention
to the parts of the presentation that were of particular importance or
relevance to this client.
The pitch presentation included:
- The agency’s
credentials including their multiple awards.
- Their selling
point: ‘Tailored press releases to each and every media outlet’.
- Working
process: Initial meeting and brainstorm with entire team.
- Past
projects specific to client's industry and goals. They gave the specific example of a past Burger
joint launch with a Barack Obama look alike. The client was impressed with the
way the launch built confidence with investors, gained wide media coverage and
lots of customers on launch day.
- Free
advice: Client wanted to hold its launch during Ramadan, the Muslim fasting month, the CEO warned against it.
- Budget:
The client did not have a set budget. The CEO
explained the importance of setting at least a rough budget for the benefit of
both the firm and the client; otherwise it is hard to gauge expectations of
both parties. Competing PR firms that the client had previously met with, had
given quite low quotes. The CEO was upfront and honest about prices (ie.professional fees, additional costs for events etc).
Today’s
venture beyond the office was a great learning experience. It was really
good to see the CEO, a winner of Best PR Practitioner, in action. I feel like I learned a lot today just from
watching the way he discussed sensitive topics with clients ie budgets and
telling a client when they are wrong. These
are things they don’t teach you in the classroom and things that are taught
best through practical experience.
Georgia Gunther
15560340
Georgia Gunther
15560340