The Elevator Pitch Recipe: Crafting Marketing Messaging That Stops the Scroll
The Elevator Pitch Recipe: Crafting Marketing Messaging That Stops the Scroll
Guest: Katie Lantukh, Founder of Murphy Marketing
Host: Julie Riga
Overview
In this transformative episode, Julie Riga sits down with Katie Lantukh, founder of Murphy Marketing, to decode the art of the perfect elevator pitch. Katie reveals her proven recipe for creating marketing messaging that captures attention and inspires action. Together, they explore the critical ingredients every business leader needs to craft an elevator pitch that opens doors, builds connections, and creates opportunities. This episode is essential listening for entrepreneurs, executives, and anyone seeking clarity in their professional messaging and leadership presence.
The Elevator Pitch Recipe: Crafting Marketing Messaging That Stops the Scroll
About Katie Lantukh
Katie Lantukh is the founder of Murphy Marketing, where she and her team of messaging specialists help businesses create marketing messaging that stops the scroll and starts conversations. Katie specializes in helping entrepreneurs and business leaders gain clarity on what to say and where to say it—from foundational brand messaging to strategic placement across websites, landing pages, email, blogs, and LinkedIn.
Fun Fact: Katie's favorite food is Mexican food, especially tacos—her household celebrates Taco Tuesday and Margarita Monday!
The Fire Brigade Framework
Katie introduces her powerful metaphor: your elevator pitch should be like a bucket of water being passed down a fire brigade line—easy for people to hold onto and pass along to others. Your message must be simple enough to remember, clear enough to repeat, and compelling enough to share.
The 7 Essential Ingredients
- What You Do - Start with clarity, not your job title
- The Outcome - Focus on the transformation people experience
- Who You Serve - Define your ideal client clearly; set boundaries
- The Problem - Lead with the challenge your audience faces
- Timing & Flexibility - Develop 10-second, 30-second, 2-minute, and 5-minute versions
- Why You & Why Now - Showcase expertise and create urgency
- Simplicity - Less is always more; make your audience feel smart, not lost
Key Insights
The Two Signs Your Pitch Works:
- They ask a follow-up question: "How does that work?"
- They immediately make connections: "Oh, do you know...?"
Avoid the Laundry List Trap: Don't try to explain everything you do. Focus on one clear problem and solution. Save comprehensive details for the actual sales conversation.
The Power of Parameters: Setting clear boundaries on who you serve doesn't exclude people—it attracts the right ones.
Julie's "Take the Mic" Story
Julie shares attending a Patrick Bet-David event with 10,000 attendees. She intentionally stepped up to a camera crew and "took the mic"—resulting in her appearing on the event's signup page alongside The Rock and Robert Kiyosaki as the only woman featured. The lesson: Success comes to those willing to step up when opportunity strikes.
Memorable Quotes
"If you've done this elevator pitch well, you will have a follow-up question."
"You really get like one minute to make an impression."
"If you wanna be a business owner and you are wanting to be successful, you have to be ready to take the mic."
Key Takeaways
- Lead with the problem your ideal client faces, not your credentials
- Create space for conversation—your goal is to inspire a follow-up question
- Have multiple versions of your pitch ready for different contexts
- Test and refine continuously based on body language and responses
- Don't whisper your value—own your message and your moment
Connect with Katie Lantukh
- LinkedIn: Where Katie spends most of her time
- Website: murphy.marketing
Connect with Julie Riga
- Podcast: Stay On Course Podcast
- Programs: Before I Lead
- Website: julieriga.com/lead
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#Leadership #ProfessionalGrowth #Messaging #BusinessSuccess #Confidence