
Monroe pitch builder
Monroe’s Motivated Sequence is one of the most enduring frameworks in persuasive communication. Developed by Alan H. Monroe in the mid-20th century, it reflects a simple but powerful insight: people are far more likely to be persuaded when ideas are presented in the same psychological order that humans naturally process motivation.
Rather than starting with solutions, Monroe proposed a five-step flow: capture attention, surface a real need, offer a satisfying response, help the audience vividly imagine the consequences, and finally invite action. The structure has since been taught in rhetoric, advertising, leadership communication, fundraising, and political speechwriting — not because it is clever, but because it aligns with how people actually make choices.
The tool below uses AI to generate a draft pitch outline based on this sequence. Think of it as a thinking aid: a fast way to explore how an idea might be framed, what tensions could be highlighted, and where resistance or momentum may arise. It is intentionally concrete enough to be useful, but intentionally incomplete enough to invite judgment, taste, and revision.
Important disclaimer: this output is a generative shell, not a finished presentation. It is almost never a good idea to take Monroe’s sequence literally and use it unchanged. Effective persuasion requires adaptation to context, audience, ethics, and intent — which often means bending, rearranging, or outright replacing parts of this structure. Use this as a starting point for thinking, not a formula to follow.

