New Brainzooming Articles at Brainzooming.com

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

How Are You Staging Your Next Idea?

My wife told me about a home staging TV show where they have $500 to get a home ready to sell. In one episode, the homeowner had already moved their furniture, so the show's designer created cardboard furniture before the open house.

Since cardboard furniture obviously isn't functional, why would they do that?

When trying to sell a house, furniture isn't there for function. Its presence helps prospective buyers visualize the possibilities the house offers, and move them from cursory interest, to motivation, and to purchase.

That's a great example when trying to sell early-stage ideas.

In communicating a relatively new idea, many people limit their options because they assume without a relatively fully-designed and functional concept they'll undermine the sales effort. On the contrary, something merely suggestive of your full concept can be the difference in helping decision makers VISUALIZE the idea you're pitching.

Think how ad agencies pitch ideas. Invariably there's some type of visual - a storyboard, a relevant video snippet, sounds, role playing, etc. Again, none of them are functional, but they are all great at helping depict and sell-in a concept.

So don't let a lack of time, creativity, or initiative thwart your success at pitching ideas. Instead, figure out what your best equivalent of cardboard furniture is and improve your odds of creating a motivated buyer for your idea! - Mike Brown


TweetIt from HubSpot

2 comments:

Dave J. said...

The one trap of 'staging' your proposals is that people focus on the details and ignore the concept.

Cardboard furniture is a good signal to say 'this is a concept', but our computers are too good at spitting out stuff that looks finished.

Mike Brown said...

Great point Dave. There probably has to be some proportional relationship between the fuzziness of the concept and the fuzziness of the staging presentation. If one is very defined and the other less so, it is bound to lead to disconnects.

Mike