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THIS MOMENT COUNTS · ISSUE 06 Is this the smartest pitch ever made?Wednesday, May 23, 2026 · by Dr. Michael Gerharz The pitch for the original Alien movie is widely considered to be one of the smartest pitches ever made. Legend has it that it was only 3 words long. It could have been 3 hours long, explaining in great detail how the story works, detailing the dark mood, forecasting box office sales, introducing the creation team, diving into their track record, … … and many more aspects that an advisor would recommend you mention in a pitch. The creators chose to dismiss all of that. They saw two things that made all of it redundant information:
Hollywood wanted thrillers and it wanted science fiction. What it wanted even more was a thriller science fiction movie. And that was all the Alien creators needed to know. Here’s their pitch: “Jaws in Space” These three words sparked the producers’ imagination: If we can make a film as thrilling as Jaws but located in Space, box office success would be a no-brainer. The future success felt so present for them, that it made them beg the creators to tell them more. Now they wanted all the info. And that’s the perfect moment to give the info. After your audience wants it, not before. Most leaders do the opposite. They walk into the room with a 47 slide deck complete with market analysis, implementation plans, background, history, risks, methodology, definitions, roadmap, and more. They have anticipated every possible question and are determined to answer it before a single one has even been asked. Five minutes in, the audience is already exhausted. This is a bitter pill to swallow for everyone who’s doing extraordinary work. Because, undoubtedly, the information itself is solid. The logic is sound. The deck makes sense. The investors should care. But they don’t because it’s simply too exhausting. I’m not arguing here to delete the detail. The detail was relevant for Jaws. But not until after curiosity kicked in. The exact same detail that feels exhausting before curiosity feels fascinating after it. You see the same costly mistake everywhere:
So many bright minds think the challenge in high-stakes communication is explaining their idea clearly, completely, and in great detail. But clarity and detail only matter to someone who wants it. The bigger challenge, the one almost nobody prepares for, is therefore creating that want in the first place: “Tell me more!” When people want the answer, you can say less and land harder. Keep lighting the path, PS: If you have a pitch coming up and you want the “Tell me more” reaction, that’s exactly what a Clarity Lab is for. One intensive session where we craft your story and make sure the audience desperately wants to hear it. |
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THIS MOMENT COUNTS · ISSUE 12 Out Now: The Best Talk of Your Life Wednesday, July 8, 2026 · by Dr. Michael Gerharz Somewhere right now, someone is giving a talk. They are saying all the right things, their slides are clean, the delivery is confident. And the audience? Fine with it. In the most devastating sense of the word. A few warm handshakes, someone says “great talk,” and there’s even a bit of applause. But of course, applause is just the politest form of dismissal. It means: thank you,...
What the Best Leaders Say Issue 17 You’ve sat through it more times than you can count. A talk that was thoroughly argued and completely boring. The speaker knew their material. The slides were solid. The argument, if you’d bothered to follow it, probably held up. But somewhere around slide 3 you checked out, and you couldn’t have said exactly why. It’s tempting to blame the delivery. Not enough energy, too many bullet points, a monotonous voice. But that’s not it. Plenty of low-energy, badly...
THIS MOMENT COUNTS · ISSUE 11 Why your talk needs a moment of intensity Wednesday, July 1, 2026 · by Dr. Michael Gerharz Did you ever notice the sound of an aha? Seriously, what do you hear while it clicks for you? I bet it’s … silence. At least that’s what it sounds like for me. Almost every aha happens when I have a moment to think, let something sink in, connect the dots. Maybe that’s why so few presentations create one. They simply don’t leave that space. They talk past it and fill every...