Chosen by customers in over 35 countries worldwide.

Handcrafted in the United States

Each Pitchman pen is individually crafted using carefully chosen materials and finished by hand. Nothing is mass produced. Every pen reflects a deliberate standard of care.

Trusted by Clients Worldwide

Pitchman Pens have been selected by customers across North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia to mark moments that matter.

Secure International Ordering

Encrypted checkout, protected payments, and careful packaging ensure your pen arrives safely—wherever you are in the world.

White-Glove Presentation

Every Pitchman pen arrives in our signature gift box, thoughtfully prepared for presentation, protection, and long-term ownership.

Handcrafted for Long-Term Ownership

Each pen is crafted for enduring use and backed against defects in workmanship.

Ongoing Care & Support

Questions, care, or service—our team remains available long after your pen is in use.

A Curated Collection

All Our Pens

This selection showcases a few of our designs. Browse the full Closer, Rainmaker, and Tycoon collections to see every variation.

Explore Them All
Pitchman Closer™ Emerald Rollerball Pen - Luxury Pen
Signature Pen | Pitchman Tycoon | Mens Pens
Pitchman Closer White Mother of Pearl Fountain Pen -

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s an appropriate way to commemorate a first board seat?

An appropriate way to commemorate a first board seat is to give them something they’ll actually bring into the work—something that belongs in board meetings and becomes part of how they show up in the role. A pen fits this moment because a first board seat is full of reading, note-taking, and decisions. They’ll be reviewing board packets, writing questions in the margins, taking meeting notes, and preparing talking points before they ever walk into the room. A well-made pen becomes the object they use when they’re thinking through issues that matter—and that’s exactly what a first board seat represents.

What should be avoided when commemorating a board or officer appointment?

Avoid anything that makes the moment feel lighter than it is. A board or officer appointment is about trust, judgment, and accountability—so the wrong commemoration is anything that feels like a joke, a trend, or a last-minute grab.

Specifically, avoid:

Novelty or gag gifts (funny mugs, joke trophies, silly desk signs)

Slogan items (“Boss Mode,” “Big Deal Energy,” “Hustle,” “Best Boss Ever”)

Swag-style bundles (generic gift baskets, cheap “executive kits,” mass-produced desk accessories)

Cheap pen sets that look good in the box but don’t hold up in real use

Overly long inscriptions or inside jokes that feel awkward in a professional setting

If it wouldn’t feel appropriate to place on the table at their first board meeting, it’s probably not the right fit for commemorating this moment.

How do you commemorate a nonprofit board appointment without it feeling like “corporate swag”?

Keep it focused on service and trust, not branding. “Corporate swag” happens when a gift feels mass-produced, logo-forward, or like something handed out at a conference. A nonprofit board appointment deserves something that feels chosen for the person and the responsibility they just accepted.

A strong approach is to give one high-quality, useful object that belongs in the work of a board member—something they’ll actually bring to meetings and use while reviewing materials, taking notes, and making decisions tied to the mission.

To make it feel meaningful without feeling promotional:

Present it privately or in a small setting, not like a giveaway.

Pair it with a short note that names why they were asked to serve (judgment, credibility, steadiness, values).

Avoid big branding, slogans, novelty items, and “thank you for volunteering” gimmicks.

The goal is simple: commemorate stewardship in a way that feels respectful, personal, and appropriate for the mission.

Explore other moments worth commemorating.

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