Steve Jobs was a captivating presenter who spent significant time rehearsing and refining his presentations. He focused on telling a story through simplicity and visuals rather than words. Jobs also created emotionally charged "holy shit" moments to make his ideas memorable. Through decades of practice and refinement, Jobs became a highly skilled presenter, but it was the result of extensive rehearsal and pursuit of excellence, not natural ability.
5. Steve Jobs is the most
captivating communicator
on the world stage.
If you adopt just some of his
techniques, your ideas and
presentations will stand out
in a sea of mediocrity.
6. Act 1: Create the Story
Act 2: Deliver the Experience
Act 3: Refine and Rehearse
9. Jobs has been giving awe-inspiring
presentations for decades.
In 1984, Jobs unveiled the first Macintosh.
The launch remains one of the most
dramatic presentations in corporate history.
11. Steve Jobs secret to success:
Youve got to find what you love.
Going to bed at night saying Ive
done something wonderful.
Thats what mattered.
He was inspired by a purpose beyond
making money. True evangelists are
driven by a messianic zeal to create
new experiences and to change the
world.
15. Truly great presenters like Steve Jobs
visualize, plan and create ideas on
paper (or whiteboards) well before
they open the presentation software.
16. Design experts recommend that presenters spend the
majority of their time thinking, sketching and scripting.
Nancy Duarte recommends that a presenter spend 90
hours creating an hour long presentation with 30 slides.
But only one third of that time is spent building slides.
Another third is rehearsing, but the first third is spent
collecting ideas, organizing ideas, and sketching the story.
17. @Laura: This presentation is awesome!
@Bob: ROTFL
@Carol: I heart this.
@Ben: Did u eat my sandwich?
@Tom: Im stealing this idea!
@Sammy: Whens lunch?
21. Act 1: Create the Story
Act 2: Deliver the Experience
Act 3: Refine and Rehearse
22. Steve Jobs does most of his demos. You dont have to. In
fact, in many cases, it makes more sense to bring in
someone who has particular product knowledge.
24. In every classic story, the hero fights the villain. The same
storytelling principle applies to every Steve Jobs presentation.
25. In 1984 when he introduced the Macintosh, Big
Blue, IBM represented the villain.
30. Thats right no bullet points. Ever. New
research into cognitive functioninghow
the brain retains information--proves that
bullet points are the least effective way to
deliver important information.
32. Researchers have discovered that ideas
are much more likely to be remembered
if they are presented as pictures instead
of words or pictures paired with words.
34. If information is presented orally, people
remember about 10% of the content 72 hours later.
That figure goes up to 65% if you add a picture.
35. According to John Medina, your brain interprets
every letter as a picture so wordy slides literally
choke your brain.
36. Lets take a look at how Steve Jobs simplifies
complex information.
37. Here is an example of how a mediocre presenter
would launch the MacBook Air. They would try to
squeeze every piece of information onto one slide
along with different font styles, colors, etc.
38. Here is Steve Jobss slide. Whats the difference? First, no words.
Why use words when youre simply trying to show that the
computer is so thin, it fits in an office envelope? Challenge yourself
to use fewer words and more visuals. It does take more thought, but
youll never deliver an Apple worthy presentation if dont.
39. Seattle Post Intelligencer ran transcripts through a software
tool intended to measure lexical density, how difficult or
easy it was to understand the language. They ran two
pieces of text through the tool: Steve Jobs Macworld 2007
and Bill Gates CES 2007. Jobss words are simpler, phrases
less abstract, and uses fewer words per sentence. He was
much easier to understand.
40. Numbers dont resonate with people until those numbers
are placed into a context that people can understand. The
best way to help them understand is to make those
numbers relevant to something with which your audience is
already familiar with.
41. For example when Steve Jobs introduced the iPod in 2001,
he said it came with a 5GB of memory. He broke it down
even further by saying you could carry 1,000 songs in your
pocket.
Jobs always breaks down numbers to make them more
interesting and meaningful.
42. Steve Jobs
Heres another example. A reporter for Rolling Stone once
asked Jobs what he thought of Apples market share being
stuck at 5%. Jobs responded, Our market share is greater
than BMW or Mercedes and nobody thinks they are going
away. As a matter of fact, theyre both highly desirable
products and brands.
43. On June 9, 2008, IBM issued a press release touting its
superfast supercomputer called Roadrunner. It operates at
one petaflop per second.
44. Whats a petaflop? One thousand trillion calculations per
second. IBM knew the number would be meaningless. Its
simply too big. So IBM added the following description to
its press release
48. MacBook Air
We are really excited to:
Introduce a really thin, light notebook computer
It has a 13.3 inch wide screen display
Backlit keyboard
Intel Processor
Lets return to MacBook Air. In January, 2008, Steve Jobs
could have described it as most people would: Were really
excited to introduce a really thin, light notebook computer.
It has a 13.3 inc wide screen display, backlit keyboard and
Intel processorblah blah blah.
49. Instead, he created an experience. The one moment in the
presentation that he knew people would be talking about.
He introduced the Worlds Thinnest Notebook
50. By the way, the Holy Shit moment was completely planned
press releases had been written, web site landing pages
created and advertisements ready to run. Jobs raises a
product launch to art form
51. His flair for drama can be traced back twenty five years
earlier to the launch of the first Macintosh in 1984. When
he unveiled the Macintosh, he removed it from inside a
draped box, and let it speak for itself.
52. According to John Medina, The brain doesnt pay attention
to boring things. When the brain detects an emotionally
charged event, the amygdala releases dopamine into the
system dopamine greatly aids memory and information
processing. Its like a mental post-it note that tells your
brain, remember this.
53. Create an emotionally charged event ahead of time. Identify
the one thing you want your audience to remember and to talk
about long after your presentation is over.
57. Steve Jobs has a commanding presence. His voice, gestures and
body language communicate authority, confidence and energy.
59. Body language, delivery, all very important. Cisco did some
studies and found that body language and vocal tone account
for about 63% of communication. That confirms other studies
that found the majority of the impression we make has little to
do with the actual words. Of course, you cant improve your
body language and vocal delivery unless you..
61. Steve Jobs rehearses for many hours over many days. A
BusinessWeek reporter who profiled Jobs wrote, His sense of
informality comes after grueling hours of practice.
When is the last time you devoted hours of grueling practice to
a presentation?
BusinessWeek
62. For two full days before a presentation, Jobs will practice the
entire presentation, asking for feedback from product
managers in the room. For 48 hours, all of his energy is
directed at making the presentation the perfect embodiment
of Apples messages.
63. Quality and Excellence
But the actual process begins weeks in advance and he is very
demanding. One employee noted Steve Jobs has little or no
patience for anything but excellence. He is single minded,
almost manic, in his pursuit of quality and excellence.
64. 10,000 HOURS
Steve Jobs is not a natural. He works at it. Malcolm Gladwell
writes in Outliers that people at the very top dont work harder
than everyone else. They work much, much harder. In fact,
Gladwell quotes neuroscientists who believe that 10,000 hours
of practice is required to become world class at a particular
skill--whether its surgery, shooting baskets, or public speaking.
65. Lets do the math and Ill show you
why I dont think Steve Jobs is a
born speaker.
66. 1974 1984 1997 2007
I believe he improved substantially as a speaker every ten years. In 1974, Steve Jobs and
his friend, Steve Wozniak would attend meetings of the Homebrew club, a computer
hobbyist club in Silicon Valley. Together they started sharing their ideas and Apple was
soon formed.
67. 1974 1984 1997 2007
Ten years later, 1984, Jobs gave a magnificent presentation when he launched the first
Mactintosh. But his style was stiff compared to the Steve Jobs of today he stood behind
a lectern and read from a script.
68. 1974 1984 1997 2007
A decade later, in 1997, Jobs returned to Apple after an 11-year absence. He was more
polished and more natural than in previous years. He began to create more visually
engaging slides.
69. 1974 1984 1997 2007
Ten years later, 2007, Jobs took the stage at Macworld to introduce the iPhone. It was
without question his greatest presentation to date from start to finish. He hit a home
run. But he was a vastly more comfortable presenter than he was twenty years earlier.
The more he presents, the better he gets.
71. Steve Jobs is the anti-Cher. Where Cher will change costumes 140 times in one show, Jobs
has one costume that he wears for every presentation a black mock, blue jeans and
running shoes.
Now, why can he get away with it? Because hes Steve Jobs. Seriously, when you invent
revolutionary computers, music players and Smart Phones, your audience will give you
permission to dress anyway you want.
73. HAVE FUN!
Most presenters lose sight of the fact that audiences want to be informed and
entertained. A Jobs presentation is infotainment he teaches his audience something
new, reveals new products and has fun doing it.
74. During a technical glitch at Macworld 2007,
Jobs paused and told a funny story about a
prank he and Steve Wozniak played on Wozs
college buddies. The glitch was fixed and Jobs
moved on. Thats cool confidence.
76. Steve Jobs
Id like to end with a piece of advice that Steve
Jobs offered Stanford graduates during a
commencement speech in 2005. He was
talking about the lessons he learned after
doctors discovered that he had pancreatic
cancer. Youre time is limited so dont waste it
living someone elses life. Dont be trapped by
dogmawhich is living with the result of other
peoples thinking. Dont let the noise of others
opinions drown out your own inner voice. Stay
hungry, stay foolish.
#11: Steve Jobs and John SculleyDo you want to spend the rest of your life selling sugared water or do you want a chance to change the world?
#16: Truly great presenters like Steve Jobs visualize, plan and create ideas on paper (or whiteboards) well before they open the presentation software.
#17: Design experts recommend that presenters spend the majority of their time thinking, sketching and scripting. Nancy Duarte recommends that a presenter spend 90 hours creating an hour long presentation with 30 slides. But only one third of that time is spent building slides. Another third is rehearsing, but the first third is spent collecting ideas, organizing ideas, and sketching the story.
#22: One of Steve Jobss favorite presentation metaphors is a three-act play. So in true Steve Jobs fashion, Id like to introduce these concepts in three parts:Act 1: Create the StoryAct 2: Deliver the ExperienceAct 3: Refine and Rehearse
#23: Now, Steve Jobs does most of his demos. You dont have to. In fact, in many cases, it makes more sense to bring in someone who has particular product knowledge.
#25: In every classic story, the hero fights the villain. The same storytelling principle applies to every Steve Jobs presentation.
#26: In 1984 when he introduced the Macintosh, Big Blue, IBM represented the villain.
#27: Introducing an antagonist (the problem) rallies the audience around the hero.
#29: SimplicityA Steve Jobs presentation is strikingly simple, highly visual and completely devoid of bullet points.
#31: Thats right no bullet points. Ever. New research into cognitive functioninghow the brain retains information--proves that bullet points are the least effective way to deliver important information.
#36: According to John Medina, your brain interprets every letter as a picture so wordy slides literally choke your brain.
#37: Lets take a look at how Steve Jobs simplifies complex information.
#40: Lexical densitySeattle Post Intelligencer ran transcripts through a software tool intended to measure lexical density, how difficult or easy it was to understand the language. The tool measured things like average number of words per sentence, number of hard words, how many years of education are required to understand the language. They ran two pieces of text through the tool: Steve Jobs Macworld 2007 and Bill Gates CES 2007. Jobss words are simpler, phrases less abstract, and uses fewer words per sentence. He was much easier to understand.Strive for simplicity in slides and message.
#42: For example when Steve Jobs introduced the iPod in 2001, he said it came with a 5GB of memory. He made the number more meaningful by saying 5GB provided enough storage for 1,000 songs. He broke it down even further by saying you could carry 1,000 songs in your pocket.Jobs always breaks down numbers to make them more interesting and meaningful.
#43: Heres another example. A reporter for Rolling Stone once asked Jobs what he thought of Apples market share being stuck at 5%. Jobs responded, Our market share is greater than BMW or Mercedes and nobody thinks they are going away. As a matter of fact, theyre both highly desirable products and brands.
#45: Whats a petaflop? One thousand trillion calculations per second. IBM knew the number would be meaningless. Its simply too big. So IBM added the following description to its press release: