As a DevOpsDays sponsor you’re often given the chance to give a one minute pitch to the entire audience. Back stage at DevOps Rex, this week, I was talking with a first timer. One minute seems like such a small amount of time: how could you say anything consequential in 60 seconds? You’re presenting in front of the full audience, anywhere between 150 to 500 people. They probably also loath vendors, or, at least are bored by them. The stage in Paris is intimidating. It’s a huge room in an old cinema, imagine the most stereotypical movie theater from whatever “the golden age” is: double decked seats, a huge screen. Plus, the organizers are meticulous: there’s a rehearsal for these 1 minute pitches in the morning. Like a full one where you’re given a minute to talk. Normally, these pitches are very informal. Overall, it can be a public speaking challenge…plus you have to get up an hour earlier than normal.
People get rattled by these 1 minute talks and they can also give boring pitches. Here’s what how I think about them and what I do:
The people like socks.
Despite how disorganized and spontaneous I may appear (that’s part of my well planned out and cultivated schtick, a safety valve for when I haven’t prepared, plus it’s a fantastically caustic feedback loop for my self-loathing — yay!) I usually prepare content before each talk.
I write a bunch of points down and reduce it to three points that I want to make. As I wait to get on the stage, I go over these three points my head; I usually write them down and look at them. Ask the local sales people what the make up of the audience is (are the developers, ops people, management, or just a general audience?), and any local events they want to drive people to.
Now, I often forget most, if not all, of that content, but that’s fine, really. Some of it will show-up. And definitely don’t let your three points constrict you, just use them as a fallback and a suggestion.
Being at a DevOps event, you should probably talk about how your company relates to DevOps. I tell people that Pivotal Cloud Foundry removes all the toil of lower-level automation that DevOps is looking to eliminate, the A in CAMS. It makes DevOps real, solves you DevOps problems, et. al., so you can get to the whole reason (the “outcome,” in business speak) for doing DevOps: creating better software and running it reliability in production.
The main thing you want to avoid is being stuffy. If you’re wearing a sports jacket (without being ironic), I’ve found that you’re more likely to give a stuffy talk — someone like Damon Edwards can sports-jacket all day, but he’s the exception that proves the rule.
If you’re just naturally wooden in public speaking situations, try to say something about your involvement in the pitch: how does it make you feel and how do you relate to it? Talking about yourself is easy as you’re the expert on the topic and have hopefully been there the whole time.
A little bit of humor goes a long way in these tiny talks. For example, Pivotal’s main product is well known for being more expensive than free, but it works and changes the fortunes of organizations that use it. That’s a good thing to joke about (“good thing it actually works ’cause it ain’t cheap”), or weird branding names (“for some reason, we call these ‘platform engineers’ rather than ‘SREs’”). I sometimes make a joke about PaaS, the cloud category Pivotal Cloud Foundry is in: “remember PaaS from five or so years back? It was terrible! Well, we’re a PaaS, but we doesn’t suck so much this time, it actually works!”
The stakes of this pitch are extremely low. Look at it as more of a learning experience for yourself, practice for next time. If you biff, nothing bad will happen unless you work for shitty management that punishes you for 60 seconds of time (start looking for a new job — Pivotal is hiring!).
Some people like to memorize pitches, which is fine if that helps you. Most of all, the way to succeed at these pitches it to have fun, be playful.
You’ll be fine. Good luck!