The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs

Similar documents
The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience by Carmine Gallo

There s nothing more inspiring than a bold idea delivered by a great speaker, says Gallo, who analyzed more than 500 TED presentations.

ANALYZING THE PERFECT PRESENTATION Research Report

ClickShare. The one click wonder

Episode #039. Speak English Now! Podcast. How to Pronounce Technology Brands like an American

Minds Work by Ear. What Positioning Taught Us. What Is a Picture Worth?

Additional media information United States & United Kingdom

The Black Book Series: The Lost Art of Magical Charisma (The Unreleased Volume: Beyond The 4 Ingredients)

44 SECRET. Where Beauty Meets Results

product placement in movies 2017 annual review analyzing Brands presence and portrayal in entertainment

Dave Lieber s Storytelling Tips

Talk Like Ted: The 9 Public-Speaking Secrets of the World s Top Minds. By: Carmine Gallo

creative deconstruction

Lecture Seven. Semester 2, 2016 Jason Harding (PhD) Department of Tourism, Hotel and Sport Management - Jason Harding (PHD)

Tony, Frank, John Movie Lesson 2 Text

And If You ve Tried CD s And Failed

Summer Reading. Entering 11 th Grade. August Please read the books listed below in preparation for 11 th grade.

MBS5100 Artist Brand Analysis Kenzo K. Mizumoto

Plug into simplicity

Supplied by Penguin Books Ltd NEW RECORDING 1 6M 19S

death by powerpoint right now, someone out there is actually dying from a boring presentation hopefully it s not yours

Plug into simplicity. tap into amazing

WHAT ARE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF SHORT STORIES?

#029: UNDERSTAND PEOPLE WHO SPEAK ENGLISH WITH A STRONG ACCENT

Plug into simplicity

BIG TROUBLE - LITTLE PICTURES

Taproot Theatre announces 2019 Summer Acting Studio Camps

Life experience. d I m hopeless basketball. e I watching fi lms on the big screen

Mobile Television, Radio & Social Media Broadcast Studios.

MicroCap.com (Est: 1998)

a script from by Rene Gutteridge

SMIle: The 5 Qualities of a Super-Sticky Name

BRANDS, CELEBS, YOU. June 2017

What We Can Learn from Jimmy Fallon March 26, 2015

GOZO COLLEGE SECONDARY SCHOOLS HALF YEARLY EXAMINATION Steve Jobs: the world pays tribute

Storytelling with Video on a Budget. Danielle Guerra Video & Multimedia Producer Institutional Communications

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

By Paige Rose Malone. Changing the Tune. How the iphone s itunes changed the Music Industry

Growth Mindset & Descriptive Feedback. M. Wilston

How to Avoid EVENT PLANNERS MAKE

Reading text A You should spend about 20 minutes answering questions 1 to 10. India slowly gets ready for internet shopping

TimeLine: Cross-Document Event Ordering SemEval Task 4. Manual Annotation Guidelines

death by powerpoint Right now, someone out there is actually dying from a boring presentation, hopefully it s not yours.

11 WAYS TO INCREASE YOUR ENERGY

BBC to put programs online

Taproot Theatre announces Summer Acting Studio Camps

Sequential Storyboards introduces the storyboard as visual narrative that captures key ideas as a sequence of frames unfolding over time

Open Day - Product Summary

People ignore over 2,000 marketing messages every single day.

3 Surprising Ways Storytelling Will Completely Revolutionize your Online Training.... so People will Actually Implement It!

pre-watching Look at these pictures. Talk about the pictures. Which words, feelings come to your mind?

If it s not FULL Stack it s not a CPaaS

IDIOMS. Look at the pictures. Can you guess what the topic idiom is about? EXERCISE A: Match the idioms in column A with their meanings in column B.

Are streaming services killing music?

Bernardo Heights Middle School Choirs

Contents 01. Keeping up to date with artists. Intro. Feeling involved with favourite artists. Inspiration for musical choices

Designing Donor Communications: Lessons From Around the World

Omnichannel Is No Longer Optional. Connecting the Contact Center Customer Experience

BBC to put programs online

Ido Eyo Director & Photographer Bayo Olorunto Author & Digital Marketing Consultant.

MARKET OUTPERFORMERS CELERITAS INVESTMENTS

Running head: TITLE OF THE PAPER 1. Title of the Paper. Your Name. Keiser University

Media Approaches to Shakespeare s Language. A Midsummer Night s Dream Romeo & Juliet

Collaborative Setting Created by Curt April 21, 2014

Rudiger Wischenbart Ebook 2018: Phase 02. For podcast release Monday, December 17, 2018

Presentation: Mythbusting the Future of Free to Air Television RadComms 2018 Tuesday 30 November, 11.15am Bridget Fair Chief Executive Officer

Rock the World VBS Main Stage Producer Guide

Primary KS1 1 VotesForSchools2018

Music Enrichment for Senior Citizens

When Good PowerPoint Presentations Go Bad

A practical guide to creating learning videos

Sponsorship Opportunities. November 12, Talking Stick Resort 9800 East Talking Stick Way Scottsdale, Arizona 85256

1a. Circle the best answer for numbers 1a/1b - 4a/4b. If you don t know, guess. 1a. The Galaxy smartphone is made by (Apple / Samsung / Sony).

boring sad uncertain lonesome

PORFOLIO SAMPLES THE NEW YORK RED BULLS: 2016 MEDIA GUIDE, PRINT AND DIGITAL

ROCK STAR PATRICIA FRIPP COMMUNICATIONS. How to Inspire Action and Commitment

Apples. Edition 1 November 2016 By: Anthony He

Promotional Package of My Favourite Genre. By Angie Reda-Kahila

Fourth Grade Supply List

Egzamin z języka angielskiego. dla pracowników administracji PWSZ

Book Report Alternatives that SIZZLE. Christine Field, Author

Making Your Case How to Sell Your Vision to Donors

ANDREW TARVIN. Humor Engineer. Better Results. More Fun. INFORMATION PACKET

ENGLISH FILE Intermediate

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

HOW TO WRITE HIGH QUALITY ARGUMENTS

Notes for teachers E1 / 31

Summary: The 4-Hour Workweek...in 30 Minutes - A Concise Summary of Timothy Ferriss's Bestselling Book

They Might Be Giants

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

The Latest Thing. September Earlier today, Apple held its latest event in San Francisco.

Youth Film Challenge activities

The FUNdamentals of Humor: How to Add a Bolt of Lighten ing to Your Life and Work

Plug into simplicity

Ep #129: Draw to Win with Dan Roam. Full Episode Transcript

Romeo and Juliet. a Play and Film Study Guide. Teacher s Book

SURVEYS FOR REFLECTIVE PRACTICE

Published in the United States of America by Cherry Lake Publishing, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Although he wore the uniform, there were many reasons he was against the war.

Google, Inc. 2007_10_12_BlackFilmmakerSummit_EricSchmidt

Transcription:

The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs Carmine Gallo Columnist, BusinessWeek.com

Table of Contents 10 Ways to Sell Your Ideas the Steve Jobs Way!...1 Plan in Analog... 2 Create a Twitter-Friendly Description...3 Introduce the Antagonist...4...5 Stick to the Rule of Three... 6 Sell Dreams, Not Products... 7 Create Visual Slides...7 Make Numbers Meaningful...8 Use Zippy Words... 8 Reveal a Holy Smokes Moment... 9 One More Thing: Practice, a Lot... 10 About Carmine Gallo... 11 B

10 Ways to Sell Your Ideas the Steve Jobs Way! In The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience, communications coach and BusinessWeek.com columnist Carmine Gallo reveals the techniques that have turned the Apple CEO into one of the world s most extraordinary corporate storytellers. For more than three decades, Jobs has transformed product launches into an art form. Whether you re a CEO, manager, entrepreneur, small business owner, or sales or marketing professional, Steve Jobs has something to teach you. Above all, a Steve Jobs presentation is intended to do three things: inform, educate and entertain. Here are ten steps to accomplishing them. 1

Plan in Analog Steve Jobs made his mark in the digital world of bits and bytes, but he plans presentations in the old world of pen and paper. A Steve Jobs presentation has all the elements of a great movie heroes and villains, stunning visuals and a supporting cast. And, like a movie director, Steve Jobs storyboards the plot. Before you go digital and open PowerPoint, spend time brainstorming, sketching or whiteboarding in the early stages. Remember, you re delivering a story, the narrative. Slides complement the story. Neuroscientists have found the brain gets bored easily. Steve Jobs doesn t give his audience time to get distracted. His presentations include demonstrations, video clips, and other speakers. All of the elements are planned and collected well before the slides are created. 2

@Carol: I heart this. @Laura: This presentation is awesome! @Tom: I m stealing this idea! @Bob: ROTFL @Sammy: When s lunch? @Bob: Did u eat my sandwich? Create a Twitter-Friendly Description Steve Jobs creates a single sentence description for every product. These headlines help the audience categorize the new product and are always concise enough to fit in a 140-character Twitter post. For example, when Jobs introduced the MacBook Air in January, 2008, he said that is it simply, The world s thinnest notebook. That one sentence speaks volumes. Jobs will fill in the details during his presentation and on the Apple Web site, but he finds one sentence to position every product. Your listeners need to see the big picture before the details. If you can t describe your product or ideas in 140 characters or less, go back to the drawing board. 3

Introduce the Antagonist In every classic story, the hero fights the villain. The same holds true for a Steve Jobs presentation. In 1984, the villain was IBM, known as Big Blue at the time. Before Jobs introduced the famous 1984 television ad to a group of Apple salespeople, he created a dramatic story around it. IBM wants it all, he said. Apple would be the only company to stand in its way. It was very dramatic and the crowd went crazy. Branding expert Martin Lindstrom says that great brands and religions have something in common: the idea of vanquishing a shared enemy. Create a villain that allows the audience to rally around the hero you and your product. A villain doesn t necessarily have to be a direct competitor. It can be a problem in need of a solution. When Steve Jobs introduced the iphone in January, 2007, his presentation at Macworld focused on the problems mobile phone users were experiencing with the current technology. The iphone, he said, would resolve those issues. Setting up the problem opens the door for the hero to save the day. 4

Why should I care? Focus on Benefits Your listeners are asking themselves one question: Why should I care? Steve Jobs sells the benefit behind every new product or feature and he s very clear about it. Why buy an iphone 3G? Because it s twice as fast at half the price. What s so great about Time Capsule? All your irreplaceable photos, videos and documents are automatically protected and easy to retrieve if they re ever lost. Even the Apple Web site focuses on benefits with top ten lists like, 10 Reasons Why You ll Love a Mac. Nobody cares about your product. They only care about how your product or service will improve their lives. Make the connection for your customers. Don t leave them guessing. 5

Three stories from my life. Stick to the Rule of Three Nearly every Steve Jobs presentation is divided into three parts. When Jobs returned from a health-related absence on September 9, 2009, he told the audience he would be talking about three products: iphones, itunes and ipods. Along the way he provides verbal guideposts such as iphones. The first thing I wanted to talk about today. Now, let s move on to the second, itunes. The number three is a powerful concept in writing. Playwrights know that three is more dramatic than two; comedians know that three is funnier than four, and Steve Jobs knows that three is more memorable than six or eight. You might have twenty points to make about your product, but your audience is only capable of holding three or four points in short term memory. Give them too many points and they ll forget everything. If three is such an important number, why does this e-book have ten points? Because it s a written reference tool that is not intended to be delivered verbally. If this information were delivered verbally, we would only stick to three key takeaways. Remember, Steve Jobs will send his audience to the Apple Web site for more information, but he only delivers three points in a conversation. 6

Sell Dreams, Not Products Charismatic speakers like Steve Jobs are driven by a nearly messianic zeal to create new experiences. Steve Jobs doesn t sell computers. He sells the promise of a better world. When Jobs introduced the ipod in 2001, he said, In our own small way we re going to make the world a better place. Where most people see the ipod as a music player, Jobs sees it as tool to enrich people s lives. Of course, it s important to have great products. But passion, enthusiasm and a sense of purpose beyond the actual product will set you and your company apart. Jobs is also passionate about his customers and he s not afraid to wear that passion on his sleeve. During a presentation in 1997 he concluded by saying, Some people say you have to be a little crazy to buy a Mac. Well, in that craziness we see genius and that s who we make tools for. Cultivate a sense of mission. Passion, emotion and enthusiasm are grossly underestimated ingredients in professional business communications and yet they are powerful ways to motivate others. Steve Jobs once said that his goal was not to die the richest man in the cemetery. It was to go to bed at night thinking that he and his team had done something wonderful. Do something wonderful. Make your brand stand for something meaningful. Create Visual Slides Apple products are easy to use because they eliminate clutter. This design philosophy applies to every Steve Jobs presentation. There are no bullet points in his presentations. Instead Jobs relies on photographs and images. Where the average PowerPoint slide has forty words, it s difficult to find seven words on ten of Jobs s slides. The technique is called Picture Superiority: information is more effectively recalled when text and images are combined. For example, when Steve Jobs unveiled the Macbook Air, Apple s ultra-thin notebook computer, he showed a slide of the computer fitting inside a manila inter-office envelope. That image was worth a thousand words. Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication, Jobs once said. Be sophisticated. Keep it simple. 7

Make Numbers Meaningful In every Apple presentation, big numbers are put into context. On September 9, 2009, Apple VP Phil Schiller said that 220 million ipods had been sold to date. He placed that number into context by saying it represented 73% of the market. He broke it down even further and took a jab at the competition by saying Microsoft was pulling up the rear with its 1% market share. Schiller learned his technique from Jobs who always puts large numbers into a context that s relevant to his audience. The bigger the number, the more important it is to find analogies or comparisons that make the data relevant to your audience. For example, when the United States government bailed out the U.S. economy to the tune of $700 billion, it was too huge a number for most people to comprehend. Journalists tried to put it into context. The one example that seemed to capture the attention of the press $700 billion is like spending one million dollars a day since the day Christ was born. Now that s a big number! Use Zippy Words Steve Jobs speaks in plain English. In fact, he has fun with words. He described the speed of the new iphone 3G as amazingly zippy. Where most business presenters use words that are obtuse, vague or confusing, Jobs s language is remarkably simple. He rarely, if ever, will use the jargon that clouds most presentations terms like best of breed or synergy. His language is simple, clear and direct. Legendary GE CEO Jack Welch once said, Insecure managers create complexity. Exude confidence and security; speak simply. 8

Reveal Holy Smokes Moment Every Steve Jobs presentation has one moment that neuroscientists call an Emotionally Charged Event. The emotionally charged event is the equivalent of a mental sticky note that tells the brain, Remember this! For example, at Macworld 2007, Jobs could have opened the presentation by telling the audience that Apple was unveiling a new mobile phone that also played music, games, and video. Instead he built up the drama. Today, we are introducing three revolutionary products. The first one is a widescreen ipod with touch controls. The second is a revolutionary mobile phone. And the third is a breakthrough Internet communications device an ipod, a phone, an Internet communicator an ipod, a phone, are you getting it? These are not three devices. This is one device! The audience erupted in cheers because it was so unexpected and very entertaining. 9

One More Thing: Practice, a Lot Steve Jobs spends hours rehearsing every facet of his presentation. Every slide is written like a piece of poetry, every presentation staged like a theatrical experience. Yes, Steve Jobs makes a presentation look effortless but that polish comes after hours and hours of grueling practice. Steve Jobs has improved his style over time. If you watch video clips of Steve Jobs s presentations going back twenty years (available on YouTube) you will see that he improves significantly with every decade. The Steve Jobs of 1984 had a lot of charisma but the Steve Jobs of 1997 was a far more polished speaker. The Steve Jobs who introduced the iphone in 2007 was even better. Nobody is born knowing how to deliver a great PowerPoint presentation. Expert speakers hone that skill with practice. 10

About Carmine Gallo Carmine Gallo is the communication skills coach for the world s most admired brands. He is a sought-after keynote speaker, seminar leader, media training specialist, crisis communication specialist, presentation expert and communications coach. His clients appear in the news every day and many would not think of launching a new product without his insight. Gallo is a former CNN business journalist and a current columnist for BusinessWeek.com. He is the author of several books including his latest, The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience and Fire Them Up! 7 Simple Secrets of Inspiring Leaders. Contact Information Email Carmine directly at carmine@gallocommunications.com Email Carmine s assistant at vanessa@gallocommunications.com (phone: 925-963-7958) Web site: http://www.carminegallo.com Webzine: http://www.talkingleadership.com 11