
Have you ever walked away from a sales pitch knowing that you bombed?
Maybe you have horror stories from when you first started in sales. Maybe you were having an off day. Or perhaps you were the recipient of a terrible sales pitch.
While these make for great stories, every hilarious sales pitch failure can provide valuable lessons in what not to do.
Whether you’re writing a cold email, hitting the phones for some cold calling, or giving a short sales pitch at a networking event, learning from your own mistakes and the mistakes of others can improve your pitching skills in the long run.
Ready to see some funny sales pitches (and learn from what they did wrong)?
12 Hilarious Sales Pitches That are so Bad, They Make You Cringe
Get ready for a good laugh—these sales pitches are some of the worst.
1. The Shouting Match
If you’re looking for a funny sales pitch, look no further than this classic scene from The Office:
While Jim was playing the part of a difficult prospect, Dwight sure wasn’t ready to handle his objections effectively.
How to avoid this: Be adaptable. It’s hard to know precisely who might answer the phone, so a good sales rep is ready for anything and doesn’t let things get under his skin so quickly.
2. The Dart-Thrower
How often have you heard a salesperson throwing darts in the dark?
This is one of the worst mistakes that new sales reps can make, and it normally goes something like this:
How to avoid this: Stop throwing darts—instead, ask open-ended questions that allow you to understand the prospect’s needs before you pitch specific benefits of your product.
Using the right questions is a creative sales pitch technique that will help you build rapport while you shape your pitch based on the actual needs of the prospect.
3. The Car on Fire
This hilarious sales pitch scene from Tommy Boy is full of what-not-to-do’s for salespeople. (For example, don’t light parts of your prospect’s office on fire.)
But the real problem with this pitch is that Tommy spends far too long bad-mouthing his competitors instead of focusing on the benefits of his product.
How to avoid this: Instead of harping on how terrible your competitors are, focus on the value of your product. Create sales battle cards with quick soundbites to respond to common objections. Focus on the customer's success, and you’ll be heading in the right direction.
4. The Lazy Researcher
Researching the prospect takes time and energy, but it pays off in the long run.
On the other hand, salespeople who skip the research phase end up sending cold emails like this one shared by JD Miller:

As JD explains, this email assumes his company is using Salesforce (it’s not) and has a need for this product (it doesn’t). The sender also lists three companies as ‘peers,’ but none of them are related to JD’s business.
JD responded to this email, suggesting that the rep do more research about him and come back if he thought he could add value.
Less than 30 minutes later, this response came in:

A bad sales pitch just got worse.
In JD’s own words:
Although there’s plenty of information about me and my company on LinkedIn, our website, Glassdoor, and news articles, he was still looking for me to invest the time in teaching him about my business – teaching him how to sell to me – so that he could make another pitch for a product I’ve already decided I don’t think I need.
How to avoid this: Do your research. Not only will you save time by pitching to prospects you know are a good fit for your product, but you’ll also gain credibility with your audience.
5. The Drunken Life Cereal Pitch
Don might’ve gotten the sale, but that’s not an excuse to give your next sales pitch drunk.
Aside from having too much to drink before pitching, smooth Don Draper made one huge mistake: instead of focusing on what the client actually wanted, Don started spewing different slogans, hoping one of them would stick.
How to avoid this: If a prospect isn’t happy with something during the sales process, discuss the problem before offering a solution. Ask questions to understand what the prospect is looking for, and then you’ll be able to give a solution that makes sense for them.
6. The Missing CTA
This hilarious sales pitch shared by Monika Jansen needs some work:

There are several things wrong with this sales pitch, such as:
- It’s not grammatically correct
- It’s 100% focused on the seller, not the buyer
- It’s a giant, run-on sentence that is difficult to read
But let’s focus on the main problem: no call to action.
That means once the reader figures out what this salesperson is trying to sell, they have no direction on how to proceed.
How to avoid this: Before starting to make a sales pitch, you need to know the goal. What action do you expect the prospect to take after reading or listening to your pitch? Once you have that clearly in mind, you can shape your sales pitch so that each sentence leads into the next to an irresistible CTA.
7. The Plea for Attention
This bad sales pitch, shared by Thomas Sobczak, takes persistence to a whole new level: