© 2014 Don Arday. |
What An Elevator Speech Is
Brief
First and
foremost an elevator speech is a short and concise statement. In fact is can be
as short as 10 seconds, or the infamous “in 25 words or less”. However,
depending on the setting it can also be longer. An elevator speech is usually
spoken in conversation, which may result in some verbal interaction.
By
comparison, not exactly an elevator speech, and even briefer, social media such
as Instagram limits bio statements to 160 characters. This compounds the
challenge to state your case briefly.
Personal
Your speech
contains chosen aspects about you, your activities, interests, and where
appropriate, even your sentiments. Even the very way it is composed and
presented can communicate how you think and view your profession.
Example: I’ve been an illustrator for 24 years, a graphic designer for 19 years, an art director for 6 years, a creative
director for 7 years, a copywriter for 13 years, an educator for 32 years, an
administrator for 9 years, and an author for 3 years. How old am I?
Example: I’m an illustrator who educates, a
graphic designer who writes, an art director who designs, a typographer who
illustrates, a creative director who writes, an illustrator who art directs, a
writer who types, an artist who designs, and a teacher who learns. I could keep
going if you’d like.
What An Elevator Speech Contains
All or some
of the items below can be combined to form your speech depending on the position
and vocation of the people you will have the occasion to speak it to, and the
amount of time that will be available.
• A personal
and or professional description of you.
Example: I recently completed my BFA Degree
in Illustration at the Rochester Institute of Technology, RIT.
Example: I just relocated from Minneapolis
to New York to illustrate entertainment and broadcasting commissions; my
favorite type of work.
• An
attention grabbing statement.
Example: I worked on an animation that just
appeared on Saturday Night Live.
Example: I designed the latest edition of “The
Winnie the Pooh” books for Penguin.
• A
description of what you do.
Example: I mainly create illustrated
characters that appear in various forms of print such as books and print ads.
Example: I create interpretive illustrations
of subjects that are to difficult to be photographed like schizophrenia or
indigestion.
• What is
unique about what you do or the way that you do it.
Example: I produce illustrations for
editorial articles that appear in medical journals and healthcare publications.
Example: My work is definitely
unconventional as I illustrate on sheet metal rather than paper.
• A statement
including your target audience.
Example: My latest commission had me working
on settings and characters that were animated in Houghton Mifflin Harcourt children’s
video books.
Example: Braintrust Creative, where I work,
has me creating storyboards for retail market clients like Premium Outlet
Centers.
• A
statement referencing your clients.
Example: I’ve illustrated for Forbes,
Business Week, The Atlantic Magazine, and others.
Example: I work on a variety of in-house
publications for Bank of America and Merrill Lynch.
• A concluding
statement of a goal or an aspiration.
Example: I feel a good place for me would be
working for an advertising agency or television network like ABC.
Example: I eventually want to write and
illustrate my own children’s books.
What An Elevator Speech Does Not Contain
• Long drawn
out statements or stories
• Any
type of criticism.
• Non-relevant
information.
• References
requiring further explanation.
• Commands
or directives.
• Excessive
background information.
• Excessive
emotion.
• Swearing
or slang.
• Mention
of other artists for the sake of comparison.
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