Authors: Presentation Secrets
In
The Second Coming of Steve Jobs
, Alan Deutschman, who,
as mentioned earlier, was pulled into Jobs’s reality distortion
field, describes a meeting between Jobs and
Newsweek
’s Katie
Hafner, the first outsider to see the new “Think Different” ads.
According to Deutschman, Hafner arrived at Apple’s headquar-
ters on a Friday morning and waited a long time for Jobs to show
up. “Finally he emerged. His chin was covered by stubble. He
was exhausted from having stayed up all night editing footage
for the ‘Think Different’ television spot. The creative directors
at Chiat/Day would send him video clips over a satellite connec-
tion, and he would say yes or no. Now the montage was finally
complete. Steve sat with Katie and they watched the commercial.
Steve was crying. ‘That’s what I love about him,’ Katie recalls. ‘It
wasn’t trumped up. Steve was genuinely moved by that stupid
ad.’ ”
23
Those ads touched Jobs deeply because they reflected every-
thing that pushed Jobs to innovate, excel, and succeed. He saw
himself in the faces of those famous people who advanced the
human race and changed the world.
As a journalist, I learned that everyone has a story to tell. I
realize we are not all creating computers that will change the
way people live, work, play, and learn. Notwithstanding, the
fact is that most of us are selling a product or working on a proj-
ect that has some benefit to the lives of our customers. Whether
you work in agriculture, automobiles, technology, finance, or
any number of other industries, you have a magnificent story
to tell. Dig deep to identify that which you are most passionate
about. ‘Once you do, share that enthusiasm with your listeners.
People want to be moved and inspired, and they want to believe
in something. Make them believe in you.
“There’s an old Wayne Gretzky quote that I love,” Steve Jobs
once said: “ ‘I skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it
38
CREATE THE STORY
has been.’ We’ve always tried to do that at Apple. Since the very,
very beginning. And we always will.
”24
D IR EC TO R ’ S N OT E S
Dig deep to identify your true passion. Ask yourself,
“What am I really selling?” Here’s a hint: it’s not the
widget, but what the widget can do to improve the lives
of your customers. What you’re selling is the dream of a
better life. Once you identify your true passion, share it
with gusto.
Develop a personal “passion statement.” In one sen-
tence, tell your prospects why you are genuinely excited
about working with them. Your passion statement will
be remembered long after your company’s mission
statement is forgotten.
If you want to be an inspiring speaker but you are not
doing what you love, consider a change. After interview-
ing thousands of successful leaders, I can tell you that,
while it’s possible to be financially successful in a job
you hate, you will never be considered an inspiring com-
municator. Passion—a messianic zeal to make the world
a better place—makes all the difference.
SCE
SCENNEE 4
4
Create Twitter-Like
Headlines
Today Apple reinvents the phone!
STEVE JOBS, MACWORLD 2007
“Welcome to Macworld 2008. There is something
clearly in the air today.
”1
With that opening line, Steve Jobs set the theme for what would
ultimately be the big announcement of his
keynote presentation—the introduction of an ultrathin note-
book computer. No other portable computer could compare to
this three-pound, 0.16-inch-thin “dreambook,” as some observ-
ers called it. Steve Jobs knew that everyone would be searching
for just the right words to describe it, so he did it for them:
“MacBook Air. The world’s thinnest notebook.”
The MacBook Air is Apple’s ultrathin notebook computer.
The best way to describe it is as, well, the world’s thinnest note-
book. Search for “world’s thinnest notebook” on Google, and the
search engine will return about thirty thousand citations, most
of which were written after the announcement. Jobs takes the
guesswork out of a new product by creating a one-line descrip-
tion or headline that best reflects the product. The headlines
work so well that the media will often run with them word for
word. You see, reporters (and your audience) are looking for a
category in which to place your product and a way of describing
the product in one sentence. Take the work out of it and write
the headline yourself.
39
40
CREATE THE STORY
140 Characters or Less
Jobs creates headlines that are specific, are memorable, and, best
of all, can fit in a Twitter post. Twitter is a fast-growing social
networking site that could best be described as your life between
e-mail and blogs. Millions of users “tweet” about the daily hap-
penings in their lives and can choose to follow the happenings
of others. Twitter is changing the nature of business communi-
cation in a fundamental way—it forces people to write concisely.
The maximum post—or tweet—is 140 characters. Characters
include letters, spaces, and punctuation. For example, Jobs’s
description of the MacBook Air takes thirty characters, includ-
ing the period: “The world’s thinnest notebook.”
Jobs has a one-line description for nearly every product, and
it is carefully created in the planning stage well before the pre-
sentation, press releases, and marketing material are finished.
Most important, the headline is consistent. On January 15,
2008, the day of the MacBook Air announcement, the headline
was repeated in every channel of communication: presentations,
website, interviews, advertisements, billboards, and posters.
In Table 4.1, you see how Apple and Jobs consistently deliv-
ered the vision behind MacBook Air.
Most presenters cannot describe their company, product,
or service in one sentence. Understandably, it becomes nearly
Setting the Stage for the Marketing Blitz
The minute Jobs delivers a headline onstage, the Apple
publicity and marketing teams kick into full gear. Posters are
dropped down inside the Macworld Expo, billboards go up,
the front page of the Apple website reveals the product and
headline, and ads reflect the headline in newspapers and mag-
azines, as well as on television and radio. Whether it’s “1,000
songs in your pocket” or “The world’s thinnest notebook,” the
headline is repeated consistently in all of Apple’s marketing
channels.
CREATE TWIT TERLIKE HEADLINES
41
TABLE 4.1
JOBS’S CONSISTENT HEADLINES FOR MACBOOK AIR
HEADLINE
SOURCE
”What is MacBook Air? In a
Keynote presentation
sentence, it’s the world’s thinnest
notebook.
”2
“The world’s thinnest notebook.
”3
Words on Jobs’s slide
“This is the MacBook Air. It’s the
Promoting the new notebook in a
thinnest notebook in the world.
”4
CNBC interview immediately after
his keynote presentation
“We decided to build the world’s
A second reference to MacBook Air
thinnest notebook.
”5
in the same CNBC interview
“MacBook Air. The world’s thinnest
Tagline that accompanied the
notebook.”
full-screen photograph of the new
product on Apple’s home page
“Apple Introduces MacBook Air—
Apple press release
The World’s Thinnest Notebook.
”6
“We’ve built the world’s thinnest
Steve Jobs quote in the Apple press
notebook.
”7
release
impossible to create consistent messaging without a prepared
headline developed early in the planning stage. The rest of the
presentation should be built around it.
Today Apple Reinvents the Phone
On January 9, 2007,
PC World
ran an article that announced
Apple would “Reinvent the Phone” with a new device that com-
bined three products: a mobile phone, an iPod, and an Internet
communicator. That product, of course, was the iPhone. The
iPhone did, indeed, revolutionize the industry and was rec-
ognized by
Time
magazine as the invention of the year. (Just
two years after its release, by the end of 2008, the iPhone had
grabbed 13 percent of the smartphone market.) The editors at
PC
42
CREATE THE STORY
World
did not create the headline themselves. Apple provided it in its press release, and Steve Jobs reinforced it in his keynote
presentation at Macworld. Apple’s headline was specific, memo-
rable, and consistent: “Apple Reinvents the Phone.”
During the keynote presentation in which Jobs unveiled the
iPhone, he used the phrase “reinvent the phone” five times.
After walking the audience through the phone’s features,
he hammered it home once again: “I think when you have a
chance to get your hands on it, you’ll agree, we have reinvented
the phone.
”8
Jobs does not wait for the media to create a headline. He
writes it himself and repeats it several times in his presenta-
tion. Jobs delivers the headline before explaining the details
of the product. He then describes the product, typically with a