Business Presentation Skills for Consultants 5: Crafting your Main Message

This lesson is about crafting the main message that you want to communicate to your audience. You will learn the most important approach for clear communication used in consulting.

Introduction

In your experience, who decides the main message of the presentation? Talk to your teacher about the process at your firm and the approach you use.

Warm Up

What was the main message of the last presentation you gave?

Language

Message maps are one way to create your main message. Linking your main message to a need, problem or motivation makes it persuasive.

Image
A flow chart of a message map showing needs, problems and motivation flowing into a core message and its supporting points

Main message

Starting with the solution and connecting it to the problem or motivation makes it easy to sell the message. This is the message that you want them to remember, even if they forget everything else.

Question 1: What other names do you know for the "main message"?

Use first or zero conditionals to make your case:

Grammar name Meaning Pattern
Zero conditional Rule If + present simple will + verb
First conditional Result If + present simple present simple

Question 2: What is the difference between a Zero Conditional and a First Conditional?

Quiz

Your teacher will say four sentences. Decide if each sentece is a zero (rule) or first (result) conditional.

Examples

Make your own sentences using first and zero conditionals and these questions:

  1. Why should a client choose your firm over another?
  2. How can a client reduce costs?
  3. Where should your firm move their office to?
  4. How can The English Farm increase sales?

Supporting points

Your core message will be supported by "buckets" of supporting facts. 

Image
A flow chart showing a core message supported by buckets of facts and reasons

You can use infinitives or gerunds to give supporting facts:

  • To achieve better results, reduce costs and increase market share, choose our firm.
  • Choosing our firm will improve your business by achieving better results, reducing costs and increasing market share.

Work with your teacher to put the following information into one sentence:

  1. cut costs
    1. reduce business travel
    2. move to a smaller office
    3. lower headcount
  2. increase sales
    1. hire more sales staff
    2. launch new product
    3. enter new markets

Paraphrasing your message

It's useful to repeat your message. Here are some different ways to express the same message.

Start with why

Put the problem or motivation first. Everyone should agree on that. Your main message will be more persuasive.

Motivation Suggestion
1. Because...
  • Problem
  • Motivation
  • Need
...must...
  • Solution
  • Message
2. Since... ...should...
3. Given that... it's best/advisable to...

Make 3 sentences using the above patterns explaining that to increase sales The English Farm should invest in marketing.

  1. Because...
  2. Since...
  3. Given that...

Focus on the solution

This approach puts the solution first. It sounds like a plan more than a sugggestion.

Plan Connector Outcome
VERB + ing   Bare infinitive
Spending more on advertising is the best way to bring in more students.
is the only (viable) way to
Investing more in marketing will increase sales.
is going to
Practice

Audience: VP of Strategy, senior managers, and analysts
Goal: Convince the client to move forward with a digital expansion recommendation
Assumption: The audience already knows the data—this is about synthesis, persuasion, and confidence.
The notes you've gathered:

  • Competitors: Two of our main competitors started similar digital projects last quarter.

  • Where to start: We suggest starting in two regions where customers use digital tools a lot and where setup costs are lower.

  • What you gain: We expect to make about $22 million more in sales over the next 18 months by using personal campaigns and selling on more than one channel.

  • How to do it: We already know what technology is needed and how long it will take. We have partners ready to help, and Phase 1 can start now.

Use the three-step outline approach below to prepare your message:

1. Main message (core takeaway)

Write or say one clear, persuasive main message using either the first or zero conditional.

2. Supporting points (3–4 max)

Outline your key supporting points. Choose from the following categories:

  • Why now (urgency or risk)

  • Where to start (entry point or pilot)

  • What you gain (impact, advantages, value)

  • How you’ll do it (implementation readiness)

3. Reinforce the main message

Choose one of your supporting points and create a sentence that links it back to your main message using a phrase like:

  • “This shows that…”

Reflect & Review

Having a clear and concise main message is essential for a presentation or a good story. Tell your teacher what you have learned today. Was there anything missing from this lesson?

 

Next Steps

The next lesson is going to zero in on the power of a good headline. You will learn to engage your audience with powerful headlines and titles. 

You can learn more about this by paying attention to headlines in English-language news websites like the BBC, the Guardian or the Financial Times.