Rhetoric in Practice · Part 2 of 9

Rhetoric in Business

Every boardroom decision, every investor pitch, every negotiation, and every performance review is an exercise in rhetoric; whether the participants know it or not.

Series Rhetoric in Practice Read 8 min

Business people are reluctant rhetoricians. They describe their persuasive activities in other terms; "making the case," "selling the vision," "driving alignment," "building the narrative"; while deploying techniques that Aristotle would have recognized immediately. The reluctance is worth overcoming: the deliberate application of rhetorical principles to business communication produces measurably better outcomes in pitching, negotiating, leading, and writing than the intuitive approaches most professionals rely on.

Business Rhetoric

The application of rhetorical principles; the systematic analysis and construction of effective communication; to the communicative demands of organizational life: pitching, presenting, negotiating, leading, writing, and managing relationships across stakeholders with competing interests.

The Investor Pitch as Classical Oration

A startup pitch is a deliberative oration: it argues that a future course of action (investing) is beneficial, addresses an audience (investors) with specific interests and concerns, and must be compelling within a narrow time window. The classical five-part structure maps almost perfectly onto the effective pitch:

The Pitch Mapped to Classical Structure
Exordium
The hook; a story, a statistic, a problem made viscerally real. Establishes what's at stake and makes the audience want to hear more. The "pain point" is classical pathos.
Narratio
The market context; the state of the world as it is, including the problem your company solves. The most credible pitches present this with forensic precision: specific data, clearly sourced.
Partitio
The thesis: what your company does, for whom, and why it wins. One sentence. If you can't state it in one sentence, your thinking is not yet clear enough to pitch.
Confirmatio
Traction, team, technology, market size, competitive moat. Each claim should be supported by evidence; the logos of the pitch. Every unsupported claim costs you credibility.
Peroratio
The ask; specific, justified, and tied back to the opening narrative. End where you began, with the problem made real, and show exactly how the investment solves it.

Ethos Is Your Most Important Business Asset

Aristotle identified three components of ethos: phronesis (practical wisdom; you know what you're talking about), arete (virtue; you can be trusted), and eunoia (goodwill; you have the audience's interests at heart, not just your own). In business contexts, these translate directly:

Negotiation as Rhetorical Situation

Every negotiation is a rhetorical situation: two or more parties with partially competing interests must reach a communicative resolution. The classical tools apply with force:

Stasis in Negotiation

Negotiation breakdowns often occur because parties are arguing at different stases without realizing it. One party contests fact ("our costs are X"); the other contests definition ("those costs shouldn't be categorized as variable"). Identifying the actual stasis; where the real disagreement lives; is the first step toward resolution. Stasis theory in negotiation means asking: are we disputing facts, definitions, values, or procedures? That clarification often reveals that the parties are not as far apart as they appear.

Finding the Universal Audience

Perelman's concept of the universal audience; the idealized reasonable person whose assent would validate an argument; is useful in negotiations because it provides a standard outside of either party's self-interest. Instead of arguing "my position is right," the sophisticated negotiator asks: "what would a reasonable, well-informed, disinterested third party conclude about this dispute?" This reframe often breaks impasses that positional bargaining cannot.

Leadership Communication and Identification

Kenneth Burke's concept of identification; the rhetorical process by which separate individuals come to see themselves as sharing substance; is the theoretical foundation of what practitioners call "culture-building." A leader who successfully creates identification between their vision and their team's sense of purpose has accomplished something more durable than any incentive structure: they have made the organization's goals feel like the team's own.

The rhetoric of leadership is primarily epideictic; it praises the values the organization should embody, honors the people who exemplify them, and defines the community through the celebration of its highest aspirations. The great organizational speeches; Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream," Steve Jobs's Stanford commencement address, Churchill's wartime addresses; are epideictic orations that function as acts of world-making: they bring into existence the communities they describe.

Identification in Practice

"We're not building a product. We're changing how humanity communicates." This is identification; the speaker invites the audience to see their daily work as participation in something larger than themselves. Whether authentic or manipulative depends entirely on whether the claim is acted upon.

The Rhetorical Analysis of Business Writing

Business writing fails for rhetorical reasons more often than for grammatical ones. The most common failures:

Dealing with Hostile Audiences

Business communicators regularly face audiences that are skeptical, opposed, or actively hostile; the investor who has seen too many failed pitches in this sector, the board member who opposed the initiative before it started, the client whose previous vendor experience has made them suspicious of all vendors. Classical rhetoric has systematic advice for this situation:

Addressing Opposition

Begin by demonstrating that you understand and respect the audience's position. State their strongest objection before they do; more accurately and charitably than they would state it themselves. Then show why, on reflection, the evidence favors a different conclusion. An audience that feels heard is significantly more open to persuasion than one that feels dismissed.

The Rhetoric of Data Visualization

Business presentations are now predominantly visual; and the decisions made about how to present data are rhetorical decisions. A bar chart that starts at zero and one that starts at 60 tell visually different stories from the same numbers. A dashboard that highlights growth metrics and buries churn rates makes a rhetorical argument about what matters. The effective business communicator understands that every visualization is an argument, and designs visualizations that make the right argument clearly and honestly.

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