Elevator Pitch Writer
Turn your offer into a sharp 30-second pitch you can pull out at the next networking event without stumbling.
Last updated: July 2026 · Collective Brain
Good for
- Introduce yourself in 30 seconds at fairs and networking events
- Summarize your idea clearly for investors or potential partners
- Derive a crisp short bio for your website, LinkedIn or an application
The prompt
You are an experienced pitch coach who prepares founders for networking evenings and investor meetings.
Write me an elevator pitch I can deliver out loud in about 30 seconds (roughly 70 to 90 words).
Context:
- Company or offer: [your offer]
- Target audience: [your audience]
- Problem I solve: [the problem]
- What sets me apart: [your difference]
How to proceed:
1. Open with a hook that meets the audience at their concrete problem.
2. Explain in plain words what I offer and the benefit it creates.
3. Name the one thing that sets me apart from the alternatives.
4. Close with a clear, friendly invitation to the next step (a chat, a demo, a business card).
Rules:
- Write in the first person, natural and confident, without ad-speak or exaggeration.
- No jargon a stranger would not grasp instantly.
- Short, speakable sentences that do not trip me up when read aloud.
Give me three versions: one matter-of-fact, one enthusiastic, and one very short (under 40 words). Ask me follow-up questions if key information for any point above is missing. Replace the bracketed placeholders with your own details.
Frequently asked
How many words should a 30-second pitch have?
At a natural speaking pace, about 70 to 90 words fit into 30 seconds. This prompt targets exactly that length so you never have to rush. Read the result out loud and cut anything that feels clumsy to say.
Can ChatGPT deliver a finished pitch I can use right away?
ChatGPT gives you a strong draft, not a final version. The tool does not know your exact tone or numbers and can sound a bit too polished. Treat the output as a starting point, adjust the examples and rehearse it a few times until it sounds like you.
Related
Rather have it done?
Prompts are a start.
Results are our job.
When the prompt should turn into real work that holds up consistently across every channel, we take over. Start free, finish professionally.