๐Ÿ’Ž On the lottery of pitches (I hate it / I love it)

Three main clients attended, the editor, publisher, and some bloke from distribution who kept talking about lorries and timetables! Well, he would, wouldnโ€™t he.

We diligently went over the strategy with heads nodding enthusiastically, even the man from distribution. And then I revealed the line that captured their positioning. The Mail on Sunday: โ€˜Depth without drowning’.

There was stunned silence. Finally, the publisher said, โ€˜I hate itโ€™. Every time I read the word โ€˜depthโ€™, I see โ€˜death!โ€™ This is not going well, I say to myself! No, no, no says the editor, thatโ€™s absurd. Thatโ€™s what we do, provide news in depth. I foolishly think weโ€™re back on track. Someone with a brain is thinking about this. And then he says, but I hate the word drowning. I have a fear of swimming. Jesus, I say to myself, I really am dealing with tabloid brains here. There are only three words in this line, what else can go wrong. So I turn to the distribution genius and say how do you feel about the word โ€˜without?โ€™

Excerpt from: Hegarty on Advertising: Turning Intelligence into Magic by John Hegarty