• DocumentCode
    29306
  • Title

    Remaking the Pitch: Reuse Strategies in Entrepreneurs’ Pitch Decks

  • Author

    Spinuzzi, Clay ; Nelson, Scott ; Thomson, Keela S. ; Lorenzini, Francesca ; French, Rosemary A. ; Pogue, Gregory ; Burback, Sidney D. ; Momberger, Joel

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Rhetoric & Writing, Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
  • Volume
    58
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Mar-15
  • Firstpage
    45
  • Lastpage
    68
  • Abstract
    Research problem: Examines how Korean entrepreneurs in an entrepreneurship program revised their English-language slide decks for their competitive presentations (“pitches”) by reusing content from professional communication genres, including their own documents and feedback from potential stakeholders in their target markets. Research question: As entrepreneurs learn to pitch ideas to unfamiliar markets, how do they revise their slide decks by reusing content from other professional communication genres? Specifically, what strategies do they follow when reusing content? Literature review: The professional communication literature demonstrates that reuse tends to take place in documentation cycles where documents are set in interaction with each other and that reuse itself involves rhetorical choices. Yet such reuse strategies have not been examined in existing studies of entrepreneurial pitches in marketing and technology commercialization. Methodology: In an exploratory qualitative study, researchers textually analyzed 14 sets of five related document genres in the archives of an entrepreneurship program. These genres represented a full cycle of activity: application to the program, initial pitches, initial feedback from program personnel, detailed feedback from representative stakeholders in the target market, and revised pitches. Interviews and surveys of program personnel further contextualize the data. Results and conclusions: Entrepreneurs reused content from professional communication genres, including those that they had generated as well as those generated by market stakeholders. However, reuse went simply beyond accepting and copying feedback; as they learned to make their pitch arguments, these entrepreneurs had to weigh this feedback and engage with it critically. This reuse can be characterized as Accepting (repeating verbatim or in close paraphrase); Continuing (extending lines of argument); and Resisting (rebutting lines of argument)- These findings suggest that entrepreneurs need all three strategies as they refine their pitches for their target markets.
  • Keywords
    commerce; competitive intelligence; innovation management; marketing; personnel; risk management; English-language slide decks; Korean entrepreneurs; competitive presentations; document genres; documentation cycles; entrepreneur pitch decks; entrepreneurship program; market stakeholders; marketing; professional communication genres; program personnel; reuse strategies; rhetorical choices; technology commercialization; unfamiliar markets; Commercialization; Innovation management; Marketing; Proposals; Writing; Document cycles; pitches; reuse; revision; technology commercialization;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Professional Communication, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0361-1434
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TPC.2015.2415277
  • Filename
    7086346