A man tries to pitch Reckon One in under 30 seconds. As he speaks, stagehands rapidly change his outfits and the set around him. He transforms from a bartender to a chef, then a construction worker, a barber, and finally a magician.
He explains that most businesses only use a small part of their accounting software. Reckon One lets you remove what you don’t need and only pay for what you use.
After jumping out of a giant cake, he admits the 30-second pitch was too ambitious. The screen cuts to static.
The Formula (That Works at Any Budget)
Painful truth = Feature bloat
Most businesses pay for software features they never use.
→ Lesson: Highlight the waste in your category and show how your product removes it.
Metaphor = Live wardrobe and set changes
The fast outfit and scene changes show how the product adapts to different businesses.
→ Lesson: Use physical transitions to show flexibility in a simple way.
Single punchline = “Only pay for what you need”
The message is clear and repeated through the chaos.
→ Lesson: If your edge is pricing or modularity, make it the main message.
Humor Breakdown
The humor is fast and self-aware. The chaos happens in full view. You see the stagehands, the costume swaps, and the pressure of the 30-second timer. This makes the ad feel human and less polished in a good way.
→ Lesson: Show the mess behind the scenes to make your brand feel real and relatable.
Final Verdict
Reckon One turns a boring category into something energetic and engaging. The fast pace keeps attention. The message stays clear from start to finish. “Only pay for what you need” lands because everything in the ad supports it.
BRAVE-o-meter Score
B-7 | R-9 | A-8 | V-7 | E-8
BRAVE – 7.8/10
Watch the full ad & learn more
Website: https://www.reckon.com/au/software/reckon-one/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/reckon/





