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The original title of this post was missing the word ‘creative’. Then, as I started to write more, I realized that anyone can sell crappy work to a client. That’s easy. And it happens every single hour of every day, which is one of the reasons why so many bad ads are soiling our environment right now.
No, it’s not hard to sell any old work to a client, other than getting over the fear of standing up in a room and talking. And if you’re in the ad game, you’ll have to do that sooner or later. Probably sooner.
Of course, there are some amazingly creative people who would rather die than present work. Public speaking rates higher on the fear scale than death! Like Seinfeld quipped, and I’m paraphrasing, “If you were at a funeral, most people would rather be in the coffin than giving the eulogy.”
I certainly don’t have the skills to get you over that fear in one or two pithy bullet-points. See a shrink, take pills, use hypnosis, just get to a point where you can stand up without throwing up.
There is one addendum to this though; if you’re completely, utterly, disastrously bad in front of clients, stuttering and sweating and forgetting everything, you need to hand over the selling of the work to someone else so that you don’t sink the campaign.
But that’s a temporary measure until you get more comfortable. No one knows your work better than you do, so make it a point to practice whenever you can.
Now, saying that, I should add that I’m no Luke Sullivan when it comes to presenting. I’ll just never be that charismatic. I do fine, I get laughs when I need them, and I get awkward silences, too. I have sweaty palms on occasion.
But there are some people who are just born to stand up and shine in front of a client. Rory Sutherland comes to mind. So too do David Abbott, Trevor Beattie, Bill Bernbach, Donny Deutsch, Alex Bogusky, Leo Burnett, Rosser Reeves, Lee Clow, Hal Riney, John Hegarty, Dan Weiden, and too many more to mention. I bow down to them all.
However, just because you don’t have the chops of the greats, that doesn’t mean you can’t sell work. It just takes a few fundamentals. Here is some advice I have collected over the years from those giants, as well as great account people and creatives I have worked with.
May it serve you well. And if you have more advice, please add it to the list. If you disagree with any of it, tell me why.
The work MUST be on brief
There’s no getting around this one. If you have a genius idea that is way off brief, the client has every right to shoot it down. You would, and so would I. So make sure everything is buttoned up long before you ever get into that board room.
Remember, the client has already signed off on the creative brief weeks (or even months) ago, so you can’t change that fact. However, when the work is on brief you have a fantastic weapon in your arsenal. This is the solution to the problem the client gave you. This is what the client asked for.
Sure, judging any creative is subjective, but you can at least definitively say that the creative you’re presenting meets the objectives of the brief. And that is half the battle right there.
Practice your presentation
I know some creatives who can walk into a room completely unprepared and sell absolutely anything. They are rare beasts and should not be considered the norm. Most of us need to practice this stuff, at the very least with the account team working on the job.
Practicing helps you work through any possible stumbling blocks, and it brings up questions you may not have thought of. It also helps you streamline the presentation. Be concise, you may love hearing the sound of your own voice but most people don’t.
Know the work inside-out
One of the most important reasons for creatives to present their own work is that they are the most familiar with it. They came up with the idea. They fashioned it. They made it what it is.
But if you’re a creative about to step up and talk about your work in front of a room full of people deciding the fate of your wonderful idea, you better be damned sure you know that work back-to-front.
If someone asks you why you chose a specific word or phrase for a headline, know why. If someone asks you how you arrived at the concept, know how. You did this work for a reason, hopefully. If you pulled that shit out of thin air or copied it from a One Show annual, you’re on shaky ground.
Pick the work apart first
Now, by saying this I am not giving every account team, owner, planner or production director the green light to shit on the work from a height. There is a time and a place to play devil’s advocate.
But once everyone is on board with the ideas, and you have a killer concept, it’s ok to ask questions that the client may ask. Bring up those doubts, without being a buzz kill, so that you can fully prepare a response that’s watertight.
The last thing you want is the client throwing a curveball at you and having no way to counter it. A stuttering, sweating, dumbfounded creative gives the client no confidence in the work at all. Congratulations, you’ve just helped the client shoot your killer idea down.
Be ready to fight for your ideas
Great ideas should be able to stand alone, but that doesn’t mean they can stand up for themselves. If the client is taking potshots at your hard work, defend it. Often, the client is asking questions that they genuinely want answers to.
Felix Unger is a site contributor, ranter and curmudgeon for The Denver Egotist. He’s been in the ad game a long time, but he’s still young enough to know he doesn’t know everything. The Denver Egotist features the best creative, the best talent and best resources in Denver, keeping it all in the greater context of what’s happening internationally.