Authors: Presentation Secrets
DEVELOP A MESSIANIC SENSE OF PURPOSE
33
Oprah Shares Jobs’s Secret to Success
Follow your passion. Do what you love, and the money will follow.
Most people don’t believe it, but it’
s true.12
OPRAH WINFREY
Gallup organization. After interviewing thousands of peak per-
formers, he arrived at what he considers the single best definition
of leadership: “Great leaders rally people to a better future,” he
writes in
The One Thing You Need to Know
.13
According to Buckingham, a leader carries a vivid image
in his or her head of what a future could be. “Leaders are fas-
cinated by the future. You are a leader if, and only if, you are
restless for change, impatient for progress, and deeply dissat-
isfied with the status quo.” He explains, “As a leader, you are
never satisfied with the present, because in your head you can
see a better future, and the friction between ‘what is’ and ‘what
could be’ burns you, stirs you up, propels you forward. This is
leadership.
”14
Jobs’s vision must have certainly burned him, stirred him, and propelled him forward. Jobs once told John
Sculley he dreamed that every person in the world would own
an Apple computer. But Jobs did not stop there. He shared that
dream with all who would listen.
True evangelists are driven by a messianic zeal to create new
experiences. “It was characteristic of Steve to speak in both vivid
and sweeping language,” writes Sculley. “ ‘What we want to do,’
he [Steve Jobs] explained, ‘is to change the way people use com-
puters in the world. We’ve got some incredible ideas that will
revolutionize the way people use computers. Apple is going to
be the most important computer company in the world, far
more important than IBM.’
”15 J
obs was never motivated to build computers. Instead, he had a burning desire to create tools to
unleash human potential. Once you understand the difference,
you’ll understand what sparked his famous reality distortion
field.
34
CREATE THE STORY
An Incredible Journey
Apple was this incredible journey. I mean, we did some amazing
things there. The thing that bound us together at Apple was the
ability to make things that were going to change the world. That
was very important. We were all pretty young. The average age
in the company was mid to late twenties. Hardly anybody had
families at the beginning, and we all worked like maniacs, and the
greatest joy was that we felt we were fashioning collective works
of art much like twentieth-century physics. Something important
that would last, that people contributed to and then could give to
more people; the amplification factor was very lar
ge.16
STEVE JOBS
What Computers and Coffee
Have in Common
Lee Clow, chairman of TBWA/Chiat/Day, the agency behind
some of Apple’s most notable ad campaigns, once said of Jobs,
“From the time he was a kid, Steve thought his products could
change the world.
”17
That’s the key to understanding Jobs. His charisma is a result of a grand but strikingly simple vision—to
make the world a better place.
Jobs convinced his programmers that they were changing
the world together, making a moral choice against Microsoft
and making people’s lives better. For example, Jobs gave an
interview to
Rolling Stone
in 2003 in which he talked about the iPod. The MP3 player was not simply a music gadget, but much
more. According to Jobs, “Music is really being reinvented in
this digital age, and that is bringing it back into people’s lives.
It’s a wonderful thing. And in our own small way, that’s how
we’re going to make the world a better place.
”18
Where some people see an iPod as a music player, Jobs sees a world in which
people can easily access their favorite songs and carry the music
along with them wherever they go, enriching their lives.
DEVELOP A MESSIANIC SENSE OF PURPOSE
35
Jobs reminds me of another business leader whom I had the
pleasure of meeting, Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz. Prior to our
interview, I read his book,
Pour Your Heart into It
. Schultz is passionate about what he does; in fact, the word
passion
appears on nearly every page. But it soon became clear that he is not as passionate about coffee as he is about the people, the baristas who
make the Starbucks experience what it is. You see, Schultz’s core
vision was not to make a great cup of coffee. It was much big-
ger. Schultz would create an experience; a third place between
work and home where people would feel comfortable gather-
ing. He would build a company that treats people with dignity
and respect. Those happy employees would, in turn, provide a
level of customer service that would be seen as a gold standard
in the industry. When I reviewed the transcripts from my time
with Schultz, I was struck by the fact that the word
coffee
rarely appeared. Schultz’s vision had little to do with coffee and everything to do with the experience Starbucks offers.
“Some managers are uncomfortable with expressing emo-
tion about their dreams, but it’s the passion and emotion that
will attract and motivate others,” write Collins and Porras
.19
Communicators such as Steve Jobs and Howard Schultz are
passionate about how their products improve the lives of their
customers. They’re not afraid to express it. Coffee, computers,
iPods—it doesn’t matter. What matters is that they are moti-
vated by a vision to change the world, to “leave a dent in the universe.”
This book is filled with techniques to help you sell your ideas
more successfully, but no technique can make up for a lack of
passion for your service, product, company, or cause. The secret
is to identify what it is you’re truly passionate about. More often
than not, it’s not “the widget,” but how the widget will improve
the lives of your customers. Here is an excerpt from an interview
Jobs gave
Wired
magazine in 1996: “Design is a funny word.
Some people think design means how it looks. But of course, if
you dig deeper, it’s really how it works. The design of the Mac
wasn’t what it looked like, although that was part of it. Primarily,
it was how it worked. To design something really well, you have
to get it. You have to really grok what it’s all about. It takes a
36
CREATE THE STORY
The Charismatic Leader
When I wasn’t sure what the word charisma meant, I met Steve
Jobs and then I knew.
20
FORMER APPLE CHIEF SCIENTIST LARRY TESLER
passionate commitment to really thoroughly understand some-
thing, chew it up, not just quickly swallow it. Most people don’t
take the time to do that.
”21
Yes,
grok
is the word Jobs used. Just as Howard Schultz isn’t passionate about the product itself, coffee,
Jobs isn’t passionate about hardware. He’s passionate about how
design enables something to work more beautifully.
Think Different
Los Angeles ad agency TBWA/Chiat/Day created an Apple televi-
sion and print advertising campaign that turned into one of the
most famous campaigns in corporate history. “Think Different”
debuted on September 28, 1997, and became an instant clas-
sic. As black-and-white images of famous iconoclasts filled the screen (Albert Einstein, Martin Luther King, Richard Branson,
John Lennon, Amelia Earhart, Muhammad Ali, Lucille Ball, Bob
Dylan, and others), actor Richard Dreyfuss voiced the narration:
Here’s to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The trouble-
makers. The round pegs in the square hole. The ones who see
things differently. They’re not fond of rules. And they have
no respect for the status quo. You can quote them, disagree
with them, glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you
can’t do is ignore them. Because they change things. They
push the human race forward. And while some may see
them as the crazy ones, we see genius. Because the people
who are crazy enough to think they can change the world
are the ones who do
.22
DEVELOP A MESSIANIC SENSE OF PURPOSE
37
The campaign won a ton of awards, became a cult favorite,
and lasted five years, which is an eternity in the life cycle of ad
campaigns. The campaign reinvigorated the public’s appetite for
all things Apple, including an interest in one of the most influ-
ential iconoclasts in the computer world, Steve Jobs himself.