Haiku Your Way to a Better Elevator Pitch
I'm a fan of Haiku, and have been doing an exercise based upon it for several years now at conferences and law firm retreats. Instead of the 5-7-5 syllable format, I ask my audiences to answer three questions, using just five words for the first question, seven for the second and five again for the third.
Though I'll use different questions depending upon the event, I recently spoke to the New York City Bar about in-person networking and gave these three questions as a way to quickly develop an "elevator speech" that responds to the "What do you do?" question we get all the time.
The three questions, which must be answered with the specified number of words, are:
- Who do I help? (Answer in Five Words)
- What do I do for them? (Answer in Seven Words)
- Why do they need me? (Answer in Five Words)
An example response to these questions from a business lawyer could be:
I help small business owners
incorporate their businesses and protect their assets
so they can sleep better.
Another example for a personal injury lawyer may be:
I help injured accident victims
understand their rights and recover medical expenses
from people who are responsible.
Give it a try. It isn't an easy exercise, but it will help you answer that all-to-common networking question with something other than, "I'm a lawyer."