Authors: Presentation Secrets
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This slide format gives me the willies. It should scare the heck
out of you, too. Designer Garr Reynolds calls these creations
“slideuments,” an attempt to merge documents with slides.
“People think they are being efficient and simplifying things,”
according to Reynolds. “A kind of kill-two-birds-with-one-stone
approach. Unfortunately, the only thing ‘killed’ is effective
communication.
”5
Reynolds argues that PowerPoint, used effectively, can complement and enhance a presentation. He is not in
favor of ditching PowerPoint. He is, however, in favor of ditch-
ing the use of “ubiquitous” bulleted-list templates found in both
PowerPoint and Keynote. “And it’s long past time that we real-
ized that putting the same information on a slide in text form
that is coming out of our mouths usually does not help—in fact,
it hurts our message.
”6
Creating Steve Jobs–like slides will make you stand out in
a big way, if only because so few people create slides the way
he does. Your audience will be shocked and pleased, quite
simply because nobody else does it. Before we look at
how
he
does it, though, let’s explore
why
he does it. Steve practices Zen Buddhism. According to biographers Jeffrey Young and William
Simon, Jobs began studying Zen in 1976.
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A Zen Buddhist monk even officiated at his wedding to Lauren Powell in 1991.
A central principle of Zen is a concept called
kanso
, or simplicity. According to Reynolds, “The Japanese Zen arts teach us that
it is possible to express great beauty and convey powerful mes-
sages through simplification.
”8
Simplicity and the elimination
No More Pencils
We’ve been trained since youth to replace paying attention
with taking notes. That’s a shame. Your actions should demand
attention. (Hint: bullets demand note taking. The minute you
put bullets on the screen you are announcing, “Write this down,
but don’t really pay attention to it now.”) People don’t take notes
when they go to the oper
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SETH GODIN, SETH’S BLOG
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of clutter is a design component that Jobs incorporates into his
products and slides. In fact, most everything about his approach
to life is all-out Zen.
In 1982, photographer Diana Walker took a portrait of Jobs
in the living room of his house. The room was huge, with a fire-
place and ceiling-to-floor windows. Jobs sat on a small rug on
a wooden floor. A lamp stood next to Jobs. Behind him were a
record player and several albums, some of which were strewn on
the floor. Now, Jobs could surely have afforded some furniture.
He was, after all, worth more than $100 million when the pho-
tograph was taken. Jobs brings the same minimalist aesthetic to
Apple’s products. “One of the most important parts of Apple’s
design process is simplification,” writes Leander Kahney in
Inside
Steve’s Brain
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“Jobs,” says Kahney, “is never interested in technology for
technology’s sake. He never loads up on bells and whistles,
cramming features into a product because they’re easy to add.
Just the opposite. Jobs pares back the complexity of his products
until they are as simple and as easy to use as possible.
”11
When Apple first started in the 1970s, the company’s ads had
to stimulate demand for computers among ordinary consumers
who, frankly, didn’t quite see the need for these new devices.
According to Kahney, “The ads were written in simple, easy-
to-understand language with none of the technical jargon that
dominates competitors’ ads, who, after all, were trying to appeal
to a completely different market—hobbyists.
”12
Jobs has kept his messages simple ever since.
The influential German painter Hans Hofmann once said,
“The ability to simplify means to eliminate the unnecessary
so that the necessary may speak.” By removing clutter—extra-
neous information—from his products and presentations, Jobs
achieves the ultimate goal: ease of use and clarity.
Macworld 2008: The Art of Simplicity
To gain a fuller appreciation of Jobs’s simple slide creations, I have constructed a table of excerpts from his Macworld 2008
keynote presentation. The column on the left in Table 8.1
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contains his actual words, and the column on the right contains
the text on the accompanying slid
es.13
In four slides, Jobs’s presentation contained fewer words by
far than what most other presenters cram onto one slide alone.
Cognitive researchers like John Medina at the University of
Washington have discovered that the average PowerPoint slide
contains forty words. Jobs’s first four slides have a grand total
of seven words, three numbers, one date, and no bullet points.
Let’s Rock
On September 9, 2008, Jobs revealed new features for the iTunes
music store and released new iPod models for the holiday season.
Prior to the event—dubbed “Let’s Rock”—observers speculated
TABLE 8.1
EXCERPTS FROM JOBS’S MACWORLD 2008 KEYNOTE
STEVE’S WORDS
STEVE’S SLIDES
”I just want to take a moment and look back to
2007
2007. Two thousand seven was an extraordinary
year for Apple. Some incredible new products: the
amazing new iMac, the awesome new iPods, and
of course the revolutionary iPhone. On top of that,
Leopard and all of the other great software we
shipped in 2007.”
“It was an extraordinary year for Apple, and I want
Thank you.
to just take a moment to say thank you. We have
had tremendous support by all of our customers,
and we really, really appreciate it. So, thank you
for an extraordinary 2007.”
“I’ve got four things I’d like to talk to you about
1
today, so let’s get started. The first one is
Leopard.”
“I’m thrilled to report that we have delivered over
5,000,000 copies
five million copies of Leopard in the first ninety
delivered in first 3
days. Unbelievable. It’s the most successful release
months
of Mac OS X ever.”
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that Jobs might be in ill health, given his gaunt appearance.
(In January 2009, Apple revealed that Jobs was losing weight
due to a hormone imbalance and would take a leave of absence
for treatment.) Jobs addressed the rumor as soon as he stepped
onstage. He did so without saying a word about it. He let a slide
do the talking (see Table 8.2)
.14 I
t was simple and unexpected.
It generated cheers and deflected the tension. The rest of the
introduction was equally as compelling for its simplicity.
Make note of the words and figures on the slides in the table.
The words on the slide match the exact words that Jobs uses to
deliver his message. When Jobs says, “We’re going to talk about
music,” the only word the audience sees is “Music.” The words
act as a complement.
If you deliver a point and your slide has too many words—
and words that do not match what you say—your audience will
have a hard time focusing on both you and the slide. In short,
wordy slides detract from the experience. Simple slides keep the
focus where it belongs—on you, the speaker.
Empirical Evidence
Empirical studies based on hard data, not opinions, prove that
keeping your slides simple and free of extraneous information is
the best way to engage your audience. Dr. Richard Mayer teaches
educational psychology at the University of California, Santa
Barbara, and has been studying multimedia learning since 1991.
His theories are based on solid, empirical studies published in
peer-reviewed journals. In a study titled “A Cognitive Theory of
Multimedia Learning,” Mayer outlined fundamental principles
of multimedia design based on what scientists know about cog-
nitive functioning. Steve Jobs’s slides adhere to each of Mayer’s
principles:
MULTIMEDIA REPRESENTATION PRINCIPLE
“It is better to present an explanation in words and pictures than
solely in words,” writes Mayer
.15 Ac
cording to Mayer, learners can CHANNEL THEIR INNER ZEN
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TABLE 8.2
EXCERPTS FROM JOBS’S 2008
“LET’S ROCK” PRESENTATION
STEVE’S WORDS
STEVE’S SLIDES
”Good morning. Thank you for coming this
The reports of my death
morning. We have some really exciting stuff
are greatly exaggerated.
to share with you. Before we do, I just wanted
to mention this [gestures toward screen].”
“Enough said. So, let’s get on with the real
Music
topic of this morning, which is music. We’re
going to talk about music today, and we’ve
got a lot of fun, new offerings.”
“So, let’s start with iTunes.”
iTunes
“iTunes, of course, is the ubiquitous music and
Image of iTunes
video player married with the largest online
home page
content store in the world.”
“iTunes now offers over eight and a half
8,500,000 songs
million songs. It’s amazing. We started with
two hundred thousand. We now have over
eight and a half million songs.”
“Over one hundred and twenty-five thousand
125,000 podcasts
podcasts.”
“Over thirty thousand episodes of TV shows.”
30,000 episodes of 1,000
TV shows
“Twenty-six hundred Hollywood movies.”
2,600 Hollywood movies
“And, as of very recently, we now offer over
3,000 applications for
three thousand applications for iPhone and
iPhone & iPod Touch
iPod Touch.”
“And over the years, we’ve built up a great
65,000,000 accounts
customer base. We’re very pleased to
with credit cards
announce that we’ve got over sixty-five
million accounts in iTunes now. It’s fantastic:
sixty-five million customers.”
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Two-Minute Warning
The task of leaders is to simplify. You should be able to explain
where you have to go in two minutes
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JEROEN VAN DER VEER, CEO, ROYAL DUTCH SHELL
more easily understand material when it is presented in both