Pitching skills with presence: mastering the art of persuasion

Written by Dan Parry 16 April, 2026

Business pitching is more than presenting an idea, it’s leading people towards a decision. A glossy but thin presentation might only get you halfway. A well-structured persuasive argument is more likely to carry you through to your objective. Getting in front of a significant audience is no mean achievement. Here’s how to make the most of your opportunity.  

What are pitching skills?

Effective pitching skills are a two-step process. Firstly, recognise the purpose of your pitch. Your objective isn’t simply presenting information, it’s about securing support from your audience.

Secondly, the first step shapes everything else, particularly the logic of your argument, the structure of your pitch, and your choice of slides – all of which help to build self-belief. Confidence in your brilliant idea is an essential component of any pitch; if you don’t believe what you’re saying nor will anyone else.

Bringing together both parts of the process demands clarity, discipline, and an understanding that your pitch is worth little without an audience. Start where they are, not where you’d like them to be. Show them that you understand the challenge they face, not just your own offer.

Different people listen for different things, such as risk, return, practicality, and timing. Most people are simply looking for a clear line from ‘here’s the situation’ to ‘here’s what we could do about it’, and a sense that moving forward would be a sensible next step. Recognise their concern that something is not quite right – something you’re able to help them resolve, once they choose to move forward.

Business pitch presentation skills

Business pitch presentation skills are less about performance and more about control. Business pitching is an opportunity to win support, funding, time, or approval. Such moments can be significant, brief, and rare, so making them count is important. Avoid awkward missteps by getting the basics right:

What are the skills of pitching in business?
Clear thinking, concise language, steady delivery, and the judgement to adapt in the moment. Less about saying more, more about saying it well.

What are the components of a good business pitch?
Clarity, relevance, and focus. During your research and preparation, decide what matters and leave out what doesn’t so that you build a line of thinking that’s easy to follow.

Pitch storytelling
Storytelling techniques give structure to ideas, making them easier to grasp and remember. Getting your story straightencourages decision-makers to accept the proposal.

How to pitch to a CEO?
CEOs need clarity, practical suggestions, and effective solutions. Control nerves by focusing on your pitch, letting it unfold calmly, clearly, and above all concisely.  Be direct. Respect time. Focus on impact, risk, and outcome. Stick to what matters, and why it’s worth their attention now.

How to improve your pitching skills

Improving your pitching skills is a process that starts well before you get into the room (or join the call). Think about the people you’re pitching to: what makes them tick, the challenges they face, and the solutions they’re likely to consider.

What’s more important to you, the significance of the audience or your allegiance to your proposal? If one is a priority, you might need to approach the other with a little flexibility. Work out, in advance, what you’re really trying to say – not everything, just the few points that genuinely count. If there’s too much content covering a lot of broad ground, the pitch can drift and quickly leave the audience behind.

After clarifying the key points you need to make, you’re ready to think about your slides. Be selective, only choosing images that support your argument. Your deck is simply a tool, it’s not a substitute for the argument itself. If you think about your slides before anything else, the pitch will feel slightly lost, and so will the audience.

When you know what you need to say, practise your pitch, saying it out loud. Hear where the stumbles are, notice what feels forced and what sounds natural.

What are the stages of pitching?

A successful pitch follows a typical pattern. Start with something that the audience can relate to. What’s happening, what’s not working, what do they find frustrating or challenging? By building rapport early on, you’ll encourage the audience to switch from being passively present to actively listening.

Next, set your thoughts in context by showing the cost of inaction. You’re not looking to scare anyone – you’re just saying enough to hold people’s attention. Then you can move up a gear. Present the crunch part of the message, the kind of thing you’d say to someone who was about to step into an elevator – leaving you only a moment to get to the point.

The elevator part of the pitch is short, sharp, and clean. Let the logic of your proposal speak for itself. Then follow it up with evidence – a single piece of proof is enough to build trust, lending weight to the force of your argument. No need to labour the point.

Common pitching mistakes

Pitching pitfalls usually stem from a failure to understand the two-step process, in particular the first point – the need to persuade people rather than simply offer them a polished presentation. Audiences, especially business audiences, are quickly able to separate substance from spin. Common mistakes include:

  • Starting with yourself, not your audience – leading with who you are and what you do, before showing an understanding of their world.  
  • Too much content, not enough clarity – trying to say everything and ending up saying very little that sticks.
  • Lack of a clear point – a pitch that wanders rather than building towards a simple, obvious takeaway.
  • Over-reliance on slides – letting the deck do the heavy lifting, at the expense of a clear message (and self-belief).
  • Being vague about the problem – skimming past the issue, rather than naming it in a way that feels real.
  • Talking in generalities – ‘we add value’, ‘we drive results’ – phrases that sound empty and mean little.
  • No sense of audience identity – delivering the same pitch regardless of who’s in the room, at the cost of rapport.
  • Rushing – speeding through key points, often due to nerves, and losing impact along the way.
  • Too much polish, not enough substance – a smooth delivery that lacks structure and depth fails to make a concrete case.
  • Weak or missing proof – claims without examples, leaving people unconvinced.
  • Forgetting a call to action – ending without making it clear what should happen next.

What are the five P’s of pitching?

A simple approach to structure is to think about the five P’s of pitching:

1. Purpose – Why you’re there. What you want to happen. If this isn’t clear in your own mind, it won’t be clear in theirs.

2. People – Who you’re speaking to. Their pressures, priorities, preferences. A pitch that doesn’t understand the audience rarely lands, however polished it is.

3. Problem – The issue worth solving.  By naming it clearly, you’ve done half the work. If you miss this, your pitch won’t win support.

4. Proposal – What you’re suggesting. Keep it focused. You don’t need to present everything you have, just a clear, initial objective.

5. Proof – Why they should believe you. A single, relevant example can carry more weight than a page of claims.

At Working Voices, our Pitching Skills Training Course explains that a successful pitch feels less like a performance and more like a well-guided conversation. Participants learn to create a pitch that is persuasive, focusing on the logic of their argument rather than the drama in their performance.

In the end, a pitch isn’t judged on how it sounds in the room, but on what happens afterwards. If it leads to a clear next step, you’ve accomplished what was necessary and achieved your objective.