Ogilvy: The World’s Greatest Salesperson

News just out. Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide is looking for “The World’s Greatest Salesperson”.

Ogilvy’s founder, David Ogilvy, went door to door selling stoves before he got into advertising. He was so good at it that the company asked him to write a manual for other salesmen. Now, after decades as one of the best-known agencies in the world, Ogilvy is creating a contest to celebrate the art of selling.

The contest is designed to live where modern pitching lives: on YouTube. Entrants are asked to prove they can sell, not just claim they can sell, by submitting a short video pitch.

A recruiting idea disguised as a sales lesson

The mechanism is simple. Use a public challenge to attract people who can communicate clearly under constraints, then let the internet do the first round of filtering through visibility and voting signals.

In global agency recruiting and employer branding, open challenges like this turn hiring into content and let capability show up in public rather than on a CV.

Why it lands

It makes “sales ability” observable. The work samples are the application. You can see clarity, empathy, structure, and persuasion in minutes.

It borrows the founder’s origin story without turning it into nostalgia. The David Ogilvy reference sets a standard. Selling is treated as craft, not hype.

It rewards ambition with a real stage. The promised prize, including a Cannes Lions trip and a seminar slot, gives the contest a credible career upside rather than a token reward.

Extractable takeaway. The best recruiting campaigns behave like a job preview. They ask candidates to demonstrate the exact skill you care about in a constrained, comparable format, then use curation to turn submissions into a public proof of standards.

Borrowable moves

  • Ask for a work sample, not a statement. Make the entry itself the evidence.
  • Use one consistent prompt. A shared constraint makes submissions comparable and curation easier.
  • Build a reward that signals seriousness. A meaningful stage and exposure attracts serious entrants.

The three winners of this contest will win a trip to the 57th annual Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival. They will also get to make a presentation at the festival seminar on June 21.

Are you the one?
To participate visit www.youtube.com/ogilvy.


A few fast answers before you act

What is Ogilvy actually trying to find with this contest?

Someone who can sell convincingly, on camera, with a clear structure and customer understanding, not just someone with a polished resume.

Why run it on YouTube?

Because sales is performance plus clarity. Video makes both visible, and it scales submissions globally without heavyweight logistics.

What makes this more than a PR stunt?

The entry format is a real work sample, and the prize includes a meaningful industry stage. That combination turns attention into a talent pipeline.

What does David Ogilvy’s backstory add to the idea?

It anchors the contest in a specific belief: selling is foundational craft. The founder story is used to justify why sales ability is being celebrated publicly.

What is the most transferable lesson for leaders hiring for commercial roles?

Design selection as demonstration. Give candidates a single prompt that mirrors the real job, then judge the work, not the claims.