Authors: Presentation Secrets
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like. Isn’t it incredible [emotional]? It’s the world’s thinnest note-
book [simple]. It has a gorgeous 13.3-inch wide-screen display and
a phenomenal full-sized keyboard [emotional and concrete]. I’m
stunned our engineering team could pull this off [emotional].
”10
Table 10.3 lists even more examples of specific, concrete, and
emotional phrases from the Jobs repertoire of language. This
is just a small sample. Every Jobs presentation contains similar
language.
Jargon: A Sure Way to Upset Jack Welch
Jack Welch made the observation, “Insecure managers create
complexity.” During his twenty years as GE’s top executive, the
conglomerate grew from $13 billion in revenue to $500 billion.
Welch was on a mission to “declutter” everything about the
company, from its management processes to its communica-
tion. He despised long, convoluted memos, meetings, and
presentations.
In his book Jack: Straight from the Gut, Welch describes
meetings that left him “underwhelmed.” If you wanted to
upset the new CEO, all you had to do was talk over his head.
Welch would say, “Let’s pretend we’re in high school . . . take
me through the basics.” He recounts his first meeting with one
of his insurance leaders. Welch asked some simple questions
about terms he was unfamiliar with. He writes, “So I inter-
rupted him to ask: ‘What’s the difference between facultative
and treaty insurance?’ After fumbling through a long answer
for several minutes, an answer I wasn’t getting, he finally
blurted out in exasperation, ‘How do you expect me to teach
you in five minutes what it has taken me twenty-five years to
learn!’ Needless to say, he didn’t last long.
”11
Speaking in jargon carries penalties in a society that values
speech free from esoteric, incomprehensible bullshit. Speaking
over people’s heads may cost you a job or prevent you from
advancing as far as your capabilities might take you otherwise.
USE “AMAZINGLY ZIPPY” WORDS
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TABLE 10.3
SPECIFIC, CONCRETE, AND EMOTIONAL PHRASES IN
JOBS’S PRESENTATIONS
EVENT
PHRASE
Apple Music Event, 2001
“The coolest thing about iPod is your entire
music library fits in your pocket.
”12
Introduction of the world’s
“I asked you to buckle up. Now I want
first seventeen-inch widescreen
you to put on your shoulder harness.
”13
notebook, Macworld 2003
Referencing the current
“The number one lust object.
”14
Titanium PowerBook,
Macworld 2003
Describing the new
“It’s stunning. It is the most incredible
seventeen-inch PowerBook,
product we have ever made. Look at that
Macworld 2003
screen. It’s amazing. Look at how thin it is.
Isn’t that incredible? When it’s closed, it’s
only one inch think. It’s beautiful, too. This
is clearly the most advanced notebook
computer ever made on the planet. Our
competitors haven’t even caught up with
what we introduced two years ago; I don’t
know what they’re going to do about this.
”15
Jobs’s description of the
“Insanely great.”
original Macintosh
Persuading PepsiCo president
“Do you want to spend the rest of your life
John Sculley to become
selling sugared water or do you want a
Apple’s CEO
chance to change the world?”
Quote in Triumph of the Nerds
“We’re here to put a dent in the universe.
”16
Discussing CEO Gil Amelio’s
“The products suck! There’s no sex in them
reign at Apple
anymore!
”17
Jobs creating a new word
“iPod Touch is the funnest iPod we’ve ever
for the launch of a new iPod,
created.
”18
September 2008
Unveiling the first seventeen-
“A giant leap beyond PC notebooks.
inch notebook computer,
Miraculously engineered.
”19
January 7, 2003
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Some people will look at the language in this table and say
Jobs is a master of hype. Well, hype is hype only if there’s no
“there” there. It would be hard to argue with Jobs that the
Macintosh (the first easy-to-use computer with a graphical inter-
face and mouse) wasn’t “insanely great” or that products like
the MacBook Air aren’t “stunningly” thin.
Jobs isn’t a hype-master as much as he’s the master of the
catchphrase. The folks at Apple think long and hard about the
words used to describe a product. Language is intended to stir up
excitement and create a “must-have” experience for Apple’s cus-
tomers. There’s nothing wrong with that. Keep in mind that the
majority of business language is gobbledygook—dull, abstract,
and meaningless. Steve Jobs is anything but dull. Inject some
zip into your words.
It’s Like This . . .
Another way to add zip to your language is to create analogies,
comparing an idea or a product to a concept or product familiar to
your audience. When Steve Jobs shakes up a market category with
the introduction of an entirely new product, he goes out of his way
to compare the product to something that is widely understood,
commonly used, and well known. Here are some examples:
”Apple TV is like a DVD player for the twenty-first century”
(Introduction of Apple TV, January 9, 2007)
”iPod Shuffle is smaller and lighter than a pack of gum”
(Introduction of iPod Shuffle, January 2005)
”iPod is the size of a deck of cards” (Introduction of iPod,
October 2001)
When you find an analogy that works, stick with it. The more
you repeat it, the more likely your customers are to remember it.
If you do a Google search for articles about the products just
mentioned, you will find thousands of links with the exact
comparisons that Jobs himself used. Following are the three
USE “AMAZINGLY ZIPPY” WORDS
123
A Cure for Bad Pitches
Don’t sell solutions; create stories instead. The New York Times
columnist David Pogue loves a good pitch. He says the major-
ity of his columns come from pitches. What he doesn’t want
to hear is jargon. Surprisingly, PR professionals are among the
worst offenders (surpassed only by bureaucrats, senior man-
agers, and IBM consultants). Pogue argues that buzzwords
(terminology such as “integrated,” “best of breed,” “B2B,” and
“consumer-centric”) are unnecessary. The ideal pitch is a short
paragraph telling Pogue exactly what the product is and does.
For example, one company wrote Pogue and said it had a new
laptop that could be dropped from six feet, could be dunked
in water, and could survive three-hundred-degree heat and
still work. This clever description was enough to grab Pogue’s
attention.
The Bad Pitch blog is a must-read for PR, marketing, and
sales professionals. The site carries actual pitches from PR pro-
fessionals who should know better than to issue impenetrable
jargon masking as a press release.
Here’s an example: “Hope you’re well. I’d like to introduce
you to , a new, place-based out-of-home digi-
tal network that delivers relevant, localized media within
the rhythm of consumers’ daily rituals, like afternoon coffee
or sandwiches at lunch.” This particular pitch came from a
company that puts video billboards in delis. Why couldn’t they
just say that? It’s too simple, that’s why. People are afraid of
simplicity. This is not an isolated example. The site is updated
daily with pitches from large and small PR agencies as well
as small and large corporations. Apple pitches rarely make
the site, because the company’s press releases tell a story
in the same conversational language that Jobs uses in his
presentations.
As the site’s mantra explains, “A good pitch disappears and
turns into the story; a bad pitch becomes the story.” Follow the
blog posts at
http://badpitch.blogspot.com.
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analogies just reviewed (in the format of a search phrase) and
the number of links to articles using those phrases:
Apple TV + DVD player for twenty-first century: 40,000 links
iPod Shuffle + pack of gum: 46,500 links
iPod + deck of cards: 227,000 links
Your listeners and viewers are attempting to categorize a prod-
uct—they need to place the concept in a mental bucket. Create
the mental bucket for them. If you don’t, you are making their
brains work too hard. According to Emory University psychol-
ogy professor Dr. Gregory Berns, the brain wants to consume the
least amount of energy. That means it doesn’t want to work too
hard to figure out what people are trying to say. “The efficiency
principle has major ramifications,” he states. “It means the brain
takes shortcuts whenever it can.
”20
Analogies are shortcuts.
Nothing will destroy the power of your pitch more thor-
oughly than the use of buzzwords and complexity. You’re not
impressing anyone with your “best-of-breed, leading-edge,
agile solutions.” Instead, you are putting people to sleep, los-
ing their business, and setting back your career. Clear, concise,
and “zippy” language will help transform your prospects into
customers and customers into evangelists. Delight your custom-
ers with the words you choose—stroke their brains’ dopamine
receptors with words that cause them to feel good whenever
they think of you and your product. People cannot follow your
vision or share your enthusiasm if they get lost in the fog.
Word Fun with Titles
Your customers are your most potent evangelists. I recall a
conversation with one of my clients, Cranium founder Richard
Tait, who said he sold one million games with no advertising,
all word of mouth. “Never forget that your customers are your
sales force,” he told me.
His customers—he calls them “Craniacs”—want to have
fun. Since fun was the name of the game, so to speak, Tait