At some point in every pitch, you’ll encounter the question. “But why do we need this?” It’s the quiet voice in every client’s head — even if it doesn’t always make its way into the conversation. And it’s a fair question. When you’re offering strategy, creative direction, or any intangible value, clients aren’t just evaluating your concept — they’re calculating the cost of uncertainty.
At ASK, we’ve learnt that no matter how polished the deck or how clever the concept, if the client doesn’t see themselves in the future you’re painting — if they don’t understand, emotionally and commercially, why this matters now — the sale will stall. And rightly so. Because our job isn’t just to impress. It’s to connect dots that they might not yet see. To show them not just what’s possible — but why they can’t afford not to do it.
The strategy dilemma
Strategy is notoriously hard to sell upfront. It’s not tangible. It’s not sexy. It often lives in a slide deck, a roadmap or blueprint — until it doesn’t. Because the moment a client sees the thing come to life — when they witness their brand elevated, or their story finally expressed with clarity and flair — something shifts.
The irony? That “aha!” moment often comes after the pitch. But to win the work, you need to recreate that moment before anything’s been made.
Sell the shift, not the stuff
What we’ve learnt at ASK is that clients aren’t buying strategy. They’re buying the shift that strategy makes possible.
So, the work becomes about anchoring your pitch in their reality:
- Show them the gap between where they are and where they could be.
- Visualise the pain of staying the same — the cost of misalignment, the drag of inefficiency, the missed moments of connection.
- Preview the transformation — with a mockup, a story, a before-and-after, a competitor comparison. Even one well-crafted visual can tip the scales.
- Ground it in logic, but sell it with feeling.
Because ultimately, clients want to believe. In your vision. In your process. In the promise that something better is not only possible, but planned.
That moment you win
When a client says, “Now I get it,” — that’s the win. Not the invoice. Not the contract signed. But the flicker of excitement that means they’ve seen it too.
We live for that moment. And we design for it — in every pitch, every prototype, every conversation.
Because once they believe, the rest takes care of itself.
Words by Lucy Dixon for the ASK Group Blog