The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs
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The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs covers everything from the basics of presenting, including structure and concepts on slide design, to scripting and the detailed dress rehearsals that set Jobs’ success apart from others. Steve Jobs was always eager and hungry to learn, advance and excel. His philosophy was to do what you love, view setbacks as opportunities and dedicate yourself to the passionate pursuit of excellence. The author, Carmine Gallo, does an excellent job dividing the book into three sections he calls acts. The first act is about creating the story that you want to deliver in the presentation. The second act is all about the stage; how to not lecture but rather give an extraordinary experience on the stage. The third act is about refining and becoming better. Let’s take a deep look into each act:
ACT 1 – CREATE THE STORY
Develop a messianic sense of purpose. Jobs has been giving astounding and inspiring presentations for decades. A very famous one was during the unveiling of the first Macintosh in 1984. From the stage, before the entire room goes totally dark, he says, “You have seen some pictures of Macintosh, now I want to show you Macintosh in person. All of the images that you’re about to see on the large screen will be generated by what is in that bag.” What happens next is a crowd applauding and cheering every step of the way. Without saying a word, Jobs shows how easy it was to take the Macintosh out of the bag and how the entire presentation fit in a packet through a floppy disk. The audience laughed and applaud. For the first time, the world saw a computer with multiple fonts, the ability to play chess and serve as a calculator. He walked back to the microphone and delivered his final pitch, “Now, we’ve done a lot of talking about Macintosh recently, but today for the first time ever, I’d like to let Macintosh speak for itself.” He walked back to the computer and the big screen displayed the words “Hello, I am Macintosh. It sure is great to get out of that bag…” The computer then cleverly “throws a punch” at IBM by saying “Never trust a computer you can’t lift.” The crowd couldn’t get enough of it, applauding and cheering. Probably one of the most exciting four minutes of any product launch presentations ever made. Yes, Steve and his Macintosh delivered the messianic message that “from this point on, COMPUTERS ARE PERSONAL!”
Even now, that launch remains one of the most dramatic presentations in corporate history.
Below is the link for your enjoyment. It’s worth the watch!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bepzUM1x3w
Do what you love. This has been Steve Jobs’ secret to success. He says, “ You’ve got to find what you love, going to bed at night saying I have done something wonderful, that’s what mattered.” He was inspired by a purpose beyond making money. Jim Collins says some managers are uncomfortable with expressing emotions about their dreams, but it’s passion that will attract and motivate others.
- Plan in Analog: the most important thing you can do to improve your presentation dramatically is to have a story to tell before working on your powerpoint. Genuinely great presenters like Steve Jobs visualize, plan and create ideas on paper or whiteboards well before they open their PowerPoint software. Nancy Duarte recommends that a presenter spend 90 hours on 30 slides. But only one-third of the time is spent building slides. Another third rehearsing, but the first third is spent collecting ideas, organizing ideas and selecting story.
- Create Twitter-like Headlines.
- Stick to the rule of 3: Create the story, deliver an experience, refine and rehearse.
- Introduce the antagonist.
ACT 2 – DELIVER THE EXPERIENCE
- Eliminate clutter: Steve Jobs made it clear by saying simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. He spent more time taking things out of the slides. In his view, an image, a single word or a simple sentence was more than enough to be used as a visual aid.
- Reveal a “holy shit” moment: People will forget what you said, but they will never forget how you made them feel. Create an emotionally charged event ahead of time. Identify the one thing that you want your audience to remember and talk about long after your presentation is over. For Steve Jobs, this became his trademark, “One More Thing…” He used it at the end of every presentation. It was his HOLY SHIT moment that many looked forward to. FaceTime and iTV (AppleTV) were both originally introduced as the “One More Thing.”
Note: If you haven’t yet noticed, every Bite has a section called “One Last Thing.” It was inspired by the desire to create one final “Holy Shit” moment for the reader, leaving him or her pondering the message or argument.
ACT 3-REFINE AND REHEARSE
- Master Stage Presence: Steve Jobs has a commanding presence. His voice, gestures and body language communicate authority, confidence, and energy. He maintains eye contact, open posture and hand gestures with the audience. Body language delivery, all are very important. Cisco researched and found that the body language and vocal tone account for about 63% of communication. You can only improve your body language and vocal delivery when you practice.
- Wear appropriate costume: Steve Jobs is the anti-Cher. When you invent revolutionary computers, music players and smartphones, your audience will give you permission to dress any way you want.
- Have fun: Don’t lose sight of the fact that the audience wants to be informed and entertained. Each of Jobs’ presentations is “infortainment.” He teaches his audience something new, reveals new products and has fun doing it.
Steve Jobs said, “Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. Stay hungry. Stay foolish.”
THE BIG THREE – KEY POINTS
Key point #1: People will forget what you said, but they will never forget how you made them feel. Infortain your audience!
Key point #2: Plan and deliver a “Holy Shit” moment. This is as critical as the presentation itself.
Key point #3: Presentation principles are not limited to the stage, a document or a product. A conversation can benefit from the same principles as long as you want to be unforgettable.
One Last Thing
“People would confront a problem by creating a presentation. I wanted them to engage, to hash things out at the table, rather than show a bunch of slides. People who know what they’re talking about don’t need PowerPoint.” Steve Jobs, Biography by Walter Isaacson
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