A pitch is a structured presentation in which a designer communicates and justifies their resolved design concept to a client, teacher, or audience. In the VCD design process, the pitch occurs in the Deliver phase — after refining concepts but before making the final production-ready refinements. It is a critical communication event that connects the designer’s decision-making to the stakeholder’s needs.
KEY TAKEAWAY: A pitch is not simply showing your design — it is a persuasive, evidence-based argument for why your design solution is the right answer to the brief. It requires you to communicate your thinking and decision-making, not just the visual outcomes.
The pitch serves multiple functions:
1. Communication: Conveys the designer’s concept and the thinking behind it
2. Justification: Explains why specific design decisions were made and how they address the brief
3. Feedback gathering: Invites client responses that can be incorporated into final refinements
4. Alignment: Ensures the designer and client share a common understanding of the proposed direction before final production investment
A complete pitch for a VCD project typically covers:
For each key design decision, explain:
- What: The specific design choice (e.g., “I have used a monochromatic palette of deep charcoal and white”)
- Why: The reasoning linked to the brief (e.g., “This reflects the brief’s requirement for a professional, authoritative tone that resonates with the corporate audience”)
- How it works: The communicative effect (e.g., “The high tonal contrast ensures legibility while the restrained palette avoids distraction from the content hierarchy”)
Walk through the key brief criteria and demonstrate how the concept satisfies each:
- Audience appropriateness
- Communication of the intended message
- Format and context requirements
- Constraints (budget, materials, sustainability)
Outline any areas still to be refined and invite feedback that will guide final adjustments.
A simple pitch structure:
EXAM TIP: In exam questions about pitch techniques, don’t just list what goes in a pitch. Explain why each element is important: “Justifying design decisions against brief criteria demonstrates to the client that the concept is a purposeful response to their needs, not simply the designer’s personal preference.”
COMMON MISTAKE: Pitching with a focus entirely on “here’s what it looks like” without sufficient explanation of the thinking and decision-making. A pitch that only describes the design without justifying it will not receive useful feedback, and will not demonstrate the designer’s professional capability.
APPLICATION: Practise your pitch by presenting your concepts to a peer or family member who knows nothing about your brief. Can they understand what problem the design is solving and why your decisions are appropriate? If they can’t, your pitch needs more justification and context.