SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 14
The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs

                 How to be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience



Acknowledgements

Prologue: How Steve Jobs Creates and Delivers “Insanely Great” Presentations…and

How You Can, too!

ACT I: Create the Story

   Scene 1: Plan in Analog

   Scene 2: Answer the One Question That Matters Most

   Scene 3: Develop a Messianic Sense of Purpose

   Scene 4: Create Twitter-Like Headlines

   Scene 5: Draw a Road Map

   Scene 6: Introduce the Antagonist

   Scene 7: Reveal the Conquering Hero

Intermission I: Obey the 10-minute Rule

ACT II: Deliver the Experience

   Scene 8: Channel Their Inner Zen

   Scene 9: Dress up Your Numbers

   Scene 10: Use “Amazingly Zippy” Words

   Scene 11: Share the Stage

   Scene 12: Stage your Presentation with Props

   Scene 13: Reveal a “Holy Shit” Moment

Intermission II: Schiller Learns from the Best
ACT III: Refine and Rehearse

   Scene 14: Master Stage Presence

   Scene 15: Make it look effortless

   Scene 16: Wear the Appropriate Costume

   Scene17: Toss the Script

   Scene 18: Have Fun

Encore: One More Thing

Notes
43


                                            Act I

                         Scene 4. Create Twitter-Like Headlines

            “Today Apple is reinventing the phone.” --Steve Jobs, Macworld 2007



“Welcome to Macworld 2008. There is something clearly in the air today.”1 With that

introduction Steve Jobs set the theme for what would ultimately be the big announcement

of his keynote presentation--the introduction of an ultra-thin notebook computer. How

thin? Look at your index finger. It’s about that thin. No portable computer could compare

to this 3-pound, .16-inch thin “dreambook” as some observers 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 ultra-thin notebook computer. The best way to

describe it is, well, the world’s thinnest notebook. Search for “world’s thinnest notebook”

on Google and the search engine will return about thirty thousand links, most of which

were written after the announcement. Jobs takes the guesswork out of a new product by

creating a one-line description or headline which best describes the product. The

headlines work so well that the media will often run with it word for word. You see,

reporters (and your audience) are looking for a category to place your product and a way

of describing your product in one sentence. Take the work out of it and write the headline

yourself.
44


140 Characters Or Less

Jobs creates headlines that are specific, 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 email and blogs. Millions of users “tweet” about the daily happenings in

their life and can choose to follow others. Twitter is changing the nature of business

communication 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’ description of the MacBook Air takes thirty characters, including 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 presentation, press releases and marketing material

are finished. Most importantly, 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, web site, interviews, advertisements, billboards and

posters.

       In Table 4., you will see some other famous “twitter-like” headlines Jobs has

delivered.



[Insert Table 4. here: “Examples of Jobs’ Twitter-like Headlines for MacBook Air”]

                 Headline                                         Source

  “What is MacBook Air? In a sentence,                      Steve Jobs keynote

   it’s the world’s thinnest notebook.”2

    “The world’s thinnest notebook.”3                      Words on Jobs’ slide
45


    “This is the MacBook Air. It’s the       Steve Jobs 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 in the

            thinnest notebook.”5                        same CNBC interview

   “MacBook Air. The world’s thinnest          Tagline that accompanied the full screen

                notebook.”                    photograph of the new product on Apple’s

                                                              home page

  “Apple Introduces MacBook Air—The                       Apple press release

      World’s Thinnest Notebook.”6

     “We’ve built the world’s thinnest       Steve Jobs’ quote in the Apple press release

                notebook.”7

  “This is the amazing Core 2 Duo chip.                    Macworld 2008

             It’s a screamer.”8



Most presenters cannot describe their company, product or service in one sentence. And,

understandably, it becomes nearly 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.



Setting the Stage for the Marketing Blitz

The minute Jobs delivers a headline on stage, the Apple publicity and marketing teams

kick in to full fear. Posters are dropped down inside the Macworld Expo, billboards go
46

up, the front page of the Apple Web site reveals the product and headline, and ads reflect

the headline in newspapers, magazines, 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.




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 combined 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 recognized 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 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, memorable and

consistent: Apple Reinvents the Phone.

       During the keynote presentation in which Jobs unveiled the iPhone, he used the

term “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

hand on it, you’ll agree, we have reinvented the phone.”9

       Jobs does not wait for the media to create a headline. He writes it himself and

repeats it several times in his presentation. Jobs delivers the headline before explaining

the details of the product. He then describes the product, typically with a demo, and
47

repeats the headline immediately upon ending the explanation. For example, here is how

Jobs introduced GarageBand for the first time: “Today we’re announcing something so

cool. A fifth app that will be part of the iLife family. It’s name is GarageBand. What is

GarageBand? GarageBand is a major new pro music tool. But it’s for everyone.”10

Jobs’ slide mirrored the headline. When he announced the headline for GarageBand, the

slide on the screen read: “GarageBand. A major new pro music tool.” Jobs followed the

headline with a longer, one sentence description of the product: “What it does is turn your

Mac into a pro-quality musical instrument and complete recording studio,” Jobs told the

audience. This is typical Jobs method of introducing a product. He reveals the headline,

expands on it, and hammers it home again and again.



The Excitement Of the Internet; The Simplicity Of Macintosh

The original iMac (the “i” stood for Internet), made getting on the Web easier than ever.

The customer only had to go through two steps to connect to the Internet (“there’s no step

three,” actor Jeff Goldblum declared in one popular ad). The introduction captured the

imagination of the computer industry in 1998 and was one of the most influential

computer announcements of the decade. According to Macworld.com, the iMac

redeemed Steve Jobs, who had returned to Apple in 1997, and it saved Apple itself at a

time the media had pronounced the company all but dead. Jobs had to create excitement

about a product that threw some common assumptions out the window--the iMac shipped

with no floppy drive, a bold move at the time and a decision met with considerable

skepticism.
48

       “iMac combines the excitement of the Internet with the simplicity of

Macintosh,”11 Jobs said as he introduced the computer. The slide on the screen behind

Jobs read simply: “iMac. The excitement of the Internet. The simplicity of Macintosh.”

Jobs then explained who the computer was created to attract: “We are targeting this for

the number one use consumers tell us they want a computer for, which is to get on the

Internet simply and fast.”

       The headlines Steve Jobs creates work effectively because they are written from

the perspective of the user. They answer the question, “why should I care?” (See Scene 2,

Answer the One Question that Matters Most). Why should you care about the iMac?

Because it lets you experience “the excitement of the Internet with the simplicity of

Macintosh.”



1,000 Songs In Your Pocket

Apple is responsible for one of the greatest product headlines of all time. According to

author, Leander Kahney, Jobs himself settled on the description for the original iPod. On

October 23, 2001, Jobs could have said, “today we’re introducing a new, ultra portable

MP3 player with a 6.5-ounce design and a 5GB hard drive, complete with Apple’s

legendary ease of use.” Of course, Jobs did not say it quite that way. Instead he simply

said, “iPod. One thousand songs in your pocket.”12 No one could describe it better in

more concise language. One thousand songs that could fit in your pocket. What else is

there to say? One sentence tells the story and also answers the question, “why should I

care?” Many reporters covering the event used the description as the headline to their

articles. Matthew Fordahl’s headline in the Associated Press on the day of the
49

announcement read, Apple’s new iPod puts “1,000 songs in your pocket.”13 This

headline was memorable because it met three criteria: It is concise (27 characters),

specific (1,000 songs) and offers a personal benefit (you can carry the songs in your

pocket).

       Following are some other Apple examples of headlines that meet all three criteria.

Although some of these are slightly longer than ten words, they can fit in a Twitter-post.



• “The new iTunes store. All songs are DRM-free.” (Changes to iTunes music store,
   January, 2009)

• “The industry’s greenest notebooks.” (New MacBook family of computers introduced
   in October, 2000)

• “The world’s most popular music player made even better.” (Introduction of the
   fourth generation iPod nano, September 2008)

• “iPhone 3G. Twice as fast at half the price.” (Introduction of iPhone 3G, July 2008)

• “It gives Mac users more reasons to love their Mac and PC users more reasons to
   switch.” (Introduction of iLife ’08 announced July, 2007)

• “Apple reinvents the phone.” (Introduction of iPhone, January, 2007)

• “The speed and screen of a professional desktop system in the world’s best notebook
   design.” (Introduction of the 17-inch MacBook Pro, April 2006)

• “The fastest browser on the Mac and many will feel it’s the best browser ever
   created.” (Unveiling Safari, January, 2003)



{START SIDEBAR}
50



Headlines that Changed the World

When the “Google guys,” Sergey Brin and Larry Page, walked into Sequoia Capitol to

seek funding for their new search engine technology, they described their company in one

sentence: “Google provides access to the world’s information in one click.” That’s sixty-

three characters or ten words. An early investor in Google told me that with those ten

words, the investors immediately understood the implications of Google’s technology

Since that day, entrepreneurs who walk into Sequoia Capital have been asked for their

“one liner”; a headline that describes the product in one sentence. As one investor told

me, “If you cannot describe what you do in ten words or less, I’m not investing, I’m not

buying, I’m not interested. Period.” Following are some more examples of ten-word

headlines that have changed the world:



• “Cisco changes the way we live, work, play and learn.”--Cisco CEO John Chambers,
   who repeats this line in interviews and presentations.

• “Starbucks creates a third place between work and home.”--Starbucks CEO Howard
   Schultz describing his idea to early investors.



“We see a PC on every desk, in every home.” Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was having

cold feet shortly after joining Microsoft. Founder Bill Gates pulled him aside and said,

“Steve, you see yourself as a bean counter for a start-up. I see a PC on every desk in

every home.” Ballmer stayed and, with a personal net worth of $15 billion, he is glad he

did.

{END SIDEBAR}
51




Keynote Beats PowerPoint in the Battle of the Headlines

Microsoft’s PowerPoint has one big advantage over Apple’s Keynote presentation

software--it’s everywhere. Microsoft commands 90 percent of the computing market and,

among the 10 percent of computer users on a Mac, many of them still use PowerPoint

software designed for Macs. While the number of presentations conducted on either

PowerPoint or Keynote are not publicly available, it’s safe to say that the number of

Keynote presentations given daily are miniscule in comparison to PowerPoint. Although

most presentation designers familiar with both formats prefer to work in the more elegant

Keynote system, those same designers will tell you that the majority of their client work

is done in PowerPoint. As I mentioned in the prologue, this book is software-agnostic

because all of the techniques apply equally to PowerPoint or Keynote. Having said all

this, Keynote is still the application that Steve Jobs prefers and the Twitter-like headline

he created to introduce the software was certainly an attention grabber. “This is another

brand new application that we are announcing here today and it is called Keynote,”14 Jobs

said at Macworld 2003.



       Keynote is a presentation app for when your presentation really counts (slide

       reads: When your presentation really counts). And Keynote was built for me

       (slide reads: Built for me). I needed an application to build the kind of slideshow

       that I wanted to show you at these Macworld keynotes. Very graphics intensive.

       We built this for me. Now I want to share it with you. We hired a low-paid beta

       tester to beta test this app for an entire year and here he is (audience laughs as
52

       screen shows photo of Jobs). Rather than a bunch of slides about slides, let me

       just show you” (walks to stage right to demo the new software).



Again, we see a remarkable consistency in all of Apple’s marketing material surrounding

the new product launch. The Apple press release for Keynote described it as “The

application to use when your presentation really counts.”15 This headline can easily fit in

a Twitter post and, without revealing the details, tells a story in one sentence. If a

customer wanted more details, he could read the press release, watch Jobs’ demonstration

or view the online demo on Apple’s Web site. But the headline itself offered plenty of

information. We learned that it was a new application specifically for presentations and

made for those times when presentations can make or break your career. And, as an

added bonus, it was built for Jobs. For many people who give frequent presentations, that

headline was enough.

       Journalists learn to write headlines on the first day of J-school. Headlines are what

persuade you to read particular stories in newspapers, magazines or blogs. Headlines

matter. As individuals become their own copywriters for blogs, presentations, twitter

posts and marketing material, learning to write catchy, descriptive headlines becomes

even more important to professional success.



Director’s Notes

• Create your headline; a one sentence vision statement for your company, product, or
   service. The most effective headlines are concise (140 characters or less), specific and

   offer a personal benefit.
53


• Consistently repeat the headline in your conversations and marketing material:
   presentations, slides, brochures, collateral, press releases, Web site.

• Remember, your headline is a statement that offers your audience a vision of a better
   future. It’s not about you. It’s about them.

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente (7)

Steve Jobs: 10 Presentation Tactics
Steve Jobs: 10 Presentation TacticsSteve Jobs: 10 Presentation Tactics
Steve Jobs: 10 Presentation Tactics
 
Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
Presentation Secrets Of Steve JobsPresentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
 
Presentation secrets of_steve_jobs
Presentation secrets of_steve_jobsPresentation secrets of_steve_jobs
Presentation secrets of_steve_jobs
 
Los secretos de las presentaciones de Steve Jobs
Los secretos de las presentaciones de Steve JobsLos secretos de las presentaciones de Steve Jobs
Los secretos de las presentaciones de Steve Jobs
 
Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
Presentation Secrets Of Steve JobsPresentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
 
Go To Meeting Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
Go To Meeting Presentation Secrets Of Steve JobsGo To Meeting Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
Go To Meeting Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
 
The Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
The Presentation Secrets Of Steve JobsThe Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
The Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
 

Destacado

Alfabeto de nomes h
Alfabeto de nomes   hAlfabeto de nomes   h
Alfabeto de nomes h
Dário Reis
 

Destacado (19)

Ebay
EbayEbay
Ebay
 
Best peer++
Best peer++Best peer++
Best peer++
 
Superliving (concise edition) dr. shriniwas kashalikar
Superliving (concise edition) dr. shriniwas kashalikarSuperliving (concise edition) dr. shriniwas kashalikar
Superliving (concise edition) dr. shriniwas kashalikar
 
Six Tips for Great Customer Interviews
Six Tips for Great Customer InterviewsSix Tips for Great Customer Interviews
Six Tips for Great Customer Interviews
 
Joy of life
Joy of lifeJoy of life
Joy of life
 
Edi
EdiEdi
Edi
 
श्रीराम समर्थ Dr shriniwas kashalikar
श्रीराम समर्थ  Dr shriniwas kashalikarश्रीराम समर्थ  Dr shriniwas kashalikar
श्रीराम समर्थ Dr shriniwas kashalikar
 
Project Management Experience - Anthony D. Braunscheidel
Project Management Experience - Anthony D. BraunscheidelProject Management Experience - Anthony D. Braunscheidel
Project Management Experience - Anthony D. Braunscheidel
 
Alfabeto de nomes h
Alfabeto de nomes   hAlfabeto de nomes   h
Alfabeto de nomes h
 
Przepisy na zdrowe posiłki dla dzieci, młodzieży, dorosłych - Łukasz Konik - ...
Przepisy na zdrowe posiłki dla dzieci, młodzieży, dorosłych - Łukasz Konik - ...Przepisy na zdrowe posiłki dla dzieci, młodzieży, dorosłych - Łukasz Konik - ...
Przepisy na zdrowe posiłki dla dzieci, młodzieży, dorosłych - Łukasz Konik - ...
 
La Regolazione per i Sistemi di Distribuzione Chiusi (SDC)
La Regolazione per i Sistemi di Distribuzione Chiusi (SDC)La Regolazione per i Sistemi di Distribuzione Chiusi (SDC)
La Regolazione per i Sistemi di Distribuzione Chiusi (SDC)
 
Financing the water sector
Financing the water sectorFinancing the water sector
Financing the water sector
 
Broker de Forex RoboForex
Broker de Forex RoboForexBroker de Forex RoboForex
Broker de Forex RoboForex
 
Estrategia de trading Nihilist para Forex basada en MT4
Estrategia de trading Nihilist para Forex basada en MT4Estrategia de trading Nihilist para Forex basada en MT4
Estrategia de trading Nihilist para Forex basada en MT4
 
PPt on internet
PPt on internetPPt on internet
PPt on internet
 
Indagine conoscitiva avviata con deliberazione 595/2015/R/idr sulle strategie...
Indagine conoscitiva avviata con deliberazione 595/2015/R/idr sulle strategie...Indagine conoscitiva avviata con deliberazione 595/2015/R/idr sulle strategie...
Indagine conoscitiva avviata con deliberazione 595/2015/R/idr sulle strategie...
 
An Overview of Scenario Planning - Introduction, Overview and Examples
An Overview of Scenario Planning - Introduction, Overview and ExamplesAn Overview of Scenario Planning - Introduction, Overview and Examples
An Overview of Scenario Planning - Introduction, Overview and Examples
 
Artificial Intelligence and the Law of Armed Conflict
Artificial Intelligence and the Law of Armed ConflictArtificial Intelligence and the Law of Armed Conflict
Artificial Intelligence and the Law of Armed Conflict
 
Sustainability Hub Presentation
Sustainability Hub PresentationSustainability Hub Presentation
Sustainability Hub Presentation
 

Similar a The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs

Presentation geniusstevejobs
Presentation geniusstevejobsPresentation geniusstevejobs
Presentation geniusstevejobs
Sheik Ahmed
 
apple and Steve job
apple and Steve jobapple and Steve job
apple and Steve job
CALM-SUTRA
 
STEVE JOB n apple
STEVE JOB n appleSTEVE JOB n apple
STEVE JOB n apple
CALM-SUTRA
 
Apple inc slide 1 97 2003 azaan
Apple inc slide 1 97 2003 azaanApple inc slide 1 97 2003 azaan
Apple inc slide 1 97 2003 azaan
Azaan Afsar
 
Sids og.......
Sids og.......Sids og.......
Sids og.......
sidsau
 
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795-phpapp01
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795-phpapp01Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795-phpapp01
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795-phpapp01
Wonderful Brain LLC
 
The Presentation secrets of Steve Jobs
The Presentation secrets of Steve JobsThe Presentation secrets of Steve Jobs
The Presentation secrets of Steve Jobs
John Felix
 
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795 Phpapp01 1
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795 Phpapp01 1Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795 Phpapp01 1
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795 Phpapp01 1
Tom Terlizzi
 

Similar a The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs (20)

Presentation geniusstevejobs
Presentation geniusstevejobsPresentation geniusstevejobs
Presentation geniusstevejobs
 
apple and Steve job
apple and Steve jobapple and Steve job
apple and Steve job
 
STEVE JOB n apple
STEVE JOB n appleSTEVE JOB n apple
STEVE JOB n apple
 
Apple inc slide 1 97 2003 azaan
Apple inc slide 1 97 2003 azaanApple inc slide 1 97 2003 azaan
Apple inc slide 1 97 2003 azaan
 
The Apple Story
The Apple StoryThe Apple Story
The Apple Story
 
THE HISTORY OF APPLE
THE HISTORY OF APPLETHE HISTORY OF APPLE
THE HISTORY OF APPLE
 
Apple inc
Apple incApple inc
Apple inc
 
Apple inc
Apple incApple inc
Apple inc
 
Sids og.......
Sids og.......Sids og.......
Sids og.......
 
How to Make a Presentation like Steve Jobs
How to Make a Presentation like Steve JobsHow to Make a Presentation like Steve Jobs
How to Make a Presentation like Steve Jobs
 
48 apple story
48 apple story48 apple story
48 apple story
 
How to make a presentation like Steve Jobs
How to make a presentation like Steve JobsHow to make a presentation like Steve Jobs
How to make a presentation like Steve Jobs
 
A study on the working practices at Apple inc---'Byte into Apple'
A study on the working practices at Apple inc---'Byte into Apple'A study on the working practices at Apple inc---'Byte into Apple'
A study on the working practices at Apple inc---'Byte into Apple'
 
The secret of steve jobs
The secret of steve jobsThe secret of steve jobs
The secret of steve jobs
 
The Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
The Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs The Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
The Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
 
presentation secrets of steve jobs
presentation secrets of steve jobspresentation secrets of steve jobs
presentation secrets of steve jobs
 
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795-phpapp01
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795-phpapp01Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795-phpapp01
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795-phpapp01
 
The Presentation secrets of Steve Jobs
The Presentation secrets of Steve JobsThe Presentation secrets of Steve Jobs
The Presentation secrets of Steve Jobs
 
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795 Phpapp01 1
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795 Phpapp01 1Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795 Phpapp01 1
Thepresentationsecretsofstevejobs 12624250623795 Phpapp01 1
 
Apple, product mix
Apple, product mixApple, product mix
Apple, product mix
 

Más de McGraw-Hill Professional

How Much Do We Pay for Things Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
How Much Do We Pay for Things Numbersense by Kaiser FungHow Much Do We Pay for Things Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
How Much Do We Pay for Things Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
McGraw-Hill Professional
 
Law School Escaped Great Recession from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
Law School Escaped Great Recession from Numbersense by Kaiser FungLaw School Escaped Great Recession from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
Law School Escaped Great Recession from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
McGraw-Hill Professional
 
Coaching Ability for Fantasy Football from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
Coaching Ability for Fantasy Football from Numbersense by Kaiser FungCoaching Ability for Fantasy Football from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
Coaching Ability for Fantasy Football from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
McGraw-Hill Professional
 
The Human Dimension and Management as a Liberal Art
The Human Dimension and Management as a Liberal ArtThe Human Dimension and Management as a Liberal Art
The Human Dimension and Management as a Liberal Art
McGraw-Hill Professional
 
Applied Social Ecology Innovation & Change
Applied Social Ecology Innovation & ChangeApplied Social Ecology Innovation & Change
Applied Social Ecology Innovation & Change
McGraw-Hill Professional
 
Social Ecology and the Practice of Management
Social Ecology and the Practice of ManagementSocial Ecology and the Practice of Management
Social Ecology and the Practice of Management
McGraw-Hill Professional
 
Federalism and the Distribution of Power and Authority
Federalism and the Distribution of Power and AuthorityFederalism and the Distribution of Power and Authority
Federalism and the Distribution of Power and Authority
McGraw-Hill Professional
 
Contributions of Management as a Liberal Art Practice
Contributions of Management as a Liberal Art PracticeContributions of Management as a Liberal Art Practice
Contributions of Management as a Liberal Art Practice
McGraw-Hill Professional
 
Management and Liberal Arts Traditions Bridging the Two Worlds
Management and Liberal Arts Traditions Bridging the Two WorldsManagement and Liberal Arts Traditions Bridging the Two Worlds
Management and Liberal Arts Traditions Bridging the Two Worlds
McGraw-Hill Professional
 
Management's Origins as a Study Within the Liberal
Management's Origins as a Study Within the LiberalManagement's Origins as a Study Within the Liberal
Management's Origins as a Study Within the Liberal
McGraw-Hill Professional
 

Más de McGraw-Hill Professional (20)

Learn How to Gain Insights and Perspective from Think to Win co-author Peter ...
Learn How to Gain Insights and Perspective from Think to Win co-author Peter ...Learn How to Gain Insights and Perspective from Think to Win co-author Peter ...
Learn How to Gain Insights and Perspective from Think to Win co-author Peter ...
 
Leading with Data: Boost Your ROI with Open and Big Data
Leading with Data: Boost Your ROI with Open and Big DataLeading with Data: Boost Your ROI with Open and Big Data
Leading with Data: Boost Your ROI with Open and Big Data
 
Leverage Content Marketing and Social Media to Engage More Customers
Leverage Content Marketing and Social Media to Engage More CustomersLeverage Content Marketing and Social Media to Engage More Customers
Leverage Content Marketing and Social Media to Engage More Customers
 
Remarkable Leadership to Inspire Great Work
Remarkable Leadership to Inspire Great WorkRemarkable Leadership to Inspire Great Work
Remarkable Leadership to Inspire Great Work
 
How Much Do We Pay for Things Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
How Much Do We Pay for Things Numbersense by Kaiser FungHow Much Do We Pay for Things Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
How Much Do We Pay for Things Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
 
Law School Escaped Great Recession from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
Law School Escaped Great Recession from Numbersense by Kaiser FungLaw School Escaped Great Recession from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
Law School Escaped Great Recession from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
 
Coaching Ability for Fantasy Football from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
Coaching Ability for Fantasy Football from Numbersense by Kaiser FungCoaching Ability for Fantasy Football from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
Coaching Ability for Fantasy Football from Numbersense by Kaiser Fung
 
The Tasti D-Lite Way
The Tasti D-Lite WayThe Tasti D-Lite Way
The Tasti D-Lite Way
 
Building Long-Term Value in a Short-Term World
Building Long-Term Value in a Short-Term WorldBuilding Long-Term Value in a Short-Term World
Building Long-Term Value in a Short-Term World
 
What Would Drucker Do Now? by Rick Wartzman
What Would Drucker Do Now? by Rick WartzmanWhat Would Drucker Do Now? by Rick Wartzman
What Would Drucker Do Now? by Rick Wartzman
 
Saving Capitalism from Short-Termism
Saving Capitalism from Short-TermismSaving Capitalism from Short-Termism
Saving Capitalism from Short-Termism
 
The Present and Future of High Frequency Trading
The Present and Future of High Frequency TradingThe Present and Future of High Frequency Trading
The Present and Future of High Frequency Trading
 
The Human Dimension and Management as a Liberal Art
The Human Dimension and Management as a Liberal ArtThe Human Dimension and Management as a Liberal Art
The Human Dimension and Management as a Liberal Art
 
Applied Social Ecology Innovation & Change
Applied Social Ecology Innovation & ChangeApplied Social Ecology Innovation & Change
Applied Social Ecology Innovation & Change
 
Social Ecology and the Practice of Management
Social Ecology and the Practice of ManagementSocial Ecology and the Practice of Management
Social Ecology and the Practice of Management
 
Effective Leadership as a Liberal Art
Effective Leadership as a Liberal ArtEffective Leadership as a Liberal Art
Effective Leadership as a Liberal Art
 
Federalism and the Distribution of Power and Authority
Federalism and the Distribution of Power and AuthorityFederalism and the Distribution of Power and Authority
Federalism and the Distribution of Power and Authority
 
Contributions of Management as a Liberal Art Practice
Contributions of Management as a Liberal Art PracticeContributions of Management as a Liberal Art Practice
Contributions of Management as a Liberal Art Practice
 
Management and Liberal Arts Traditions Bridging the Two Worlds
Management and Liberal Arts Traditions Bridging the Two WorldsManagement and Liberal Arts Traditions Bridging the Two Worlds
Management and Liberal Arts Traditions Bridging the Two Worlds
 
Management's Origins as a Study Within the Liberal
Management's Origins as a Study Within the LiberalManagement's Origins as a Study Within the Liberal
Management's Origins as a Study Within the Liberal
 

Último

Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
MateoGardella
 
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in DelhiRussian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
kauryashika82
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
heathfieldcps1
 
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch LetterGardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
MateoGardella
 

Último (20)

Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
Gardella_Mateo_IntellectualProperty.pdf.
 
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptxINDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
 
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
 
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptxSOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT - LFTVD.pptx
 
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfHoldier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
 
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in DelhiRussian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
Russian Escort Service in Delhi 11k Hotel Foreigner Russian Call Girls in Delhi
 
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptxBasic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
 
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and ModeMeasures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
 
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
SECOND SEMESTER TOPIC COVERAGE SY 2023-2024 Trends, Networks, and Critical Th...
 
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
Sports & Fitness Value Added Course FY..
 
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
 
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Structured Data, Assistants, & RAG"
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
 
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SDMeasures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
Measures of Dispersion and Variability: Range, QD, AD and SD
 
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdfKey note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
 
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch LetterGardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
Gardella_PRCampaignConclusion Pitch Letter
 
PROCESS RECORDING FORMAT.docx
PROCESS      RECORDING        FORMAT.docxPROCESS      RECORDING        FORMAT.docx
PROCESS RECORDING FORMAT.docx
 
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptxUnit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
Unit-IV; Professional Sales Representative (PSR).pptx
 
Ecological Succession. ( ECOSYSTEM, B. Pharmacy, 1st Year, Sem-II, Environmen...
Ecological Succession. ( ECOSYSTEM, B. Pharmacy, 1st Year, Sem-II, Environmen...Ecological Succession. ( ECOSYSTEM, B. Pharmacy, 1st Year, Sem-II, Environmen...
Ecological Succession. ( ECOSYSTEM, B. Pharmacy, 1st Year, Sem-II, Environmen...
 
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
Advanced Views - Calendar View in Odoo 17
 

The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs

  • 1.
  • 2. The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs How to be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience Acknowledgements Prologue: How Steve Jobs Creates and Delivers “Insanely Great” Presentations…and How You Can, too! ACT I: Create the Story Scene 1: Plan in Analog Scene 2: Answer the One Question That Matters Most Scene 3: Develop a Messianic Sense of Purpose Scene 4: Create Twitter-Like Headlines Scene 5: Draw a Road Map Scene 6: Introduce the Antagonist Scene 7: Reveal the Conquering Hero Intermission I: Obey the 10-minute Rule ACT II: Deliver the Experience Scene 8: Channel Their Inner Zen Scene 9: Dress up Your Numbers Scene 10: Use “Amazingly Zippy” Words Scene 11: Share the Stage Scene 12: Stage your Presentation with Props Scene 13: Reveal a “Holy Shit” Moment Intermission II: Schiller Learns from the Best
  • 3. ACT III: Refine and Rehearse Scene 14: Master Stage Presence Scene 15: Make it look effortless Scene 16: Wear the Appropriate Costume Scene17: Toss the Script Scene 18: Have Fun Encore: One More Thing Notes
  • 4. 43 Act I Scene 4. Create Twitter-Like Headlines “Today Apple is reinventing the phone.” --Steve Jobs, Macworld 2007 “Welcome to Macworld 2008. There is something clearly in the air today.”1 With that introduction Steve Jobs set the theme for what would ultimately be the big announcement of his keynote presentation--the introduction of an ultra-thin notebook computer. How thin? Look at your index finger. It’s about that thin. No portable computer could compare to this 3-pound, .16-inch thin “dreambook” as some observers 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 ultra-thin notebook computer. The best way to describe it is, well, the world’s thinnest notebook. Search for “world’s thinnest notebook” on Google and the search engine will return about thirty thousand links, most of which were written after the announcement. Jobs takes the guesswork out of a new product by creating a one-line description or headline which best describes the product. The headlines work so well that the media will often run with it word for word. You see, reporters (and your audience) are looking for a category to place your product and a way of describing your product in one sentence. Take the work out of it and write the headline yourself.
  • 5. 44 140 Characters Or Less Jobs creates headlines that are specific, 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 email and blogs. Millions of users “tweet” about the daily happenings in their life and can choose to follow others. Twitter is changing the nature of business communication 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’ description of the MacBook Air takes thirty characters, including 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 presentation, press releases and marketing material are finished. Most importantly, 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, web site, interviews, advertisements, billboards and posters. In Table 4., you will see some other famous “twitter-like” headlines Jobs has delivered. [Insert Table 4. here: “Examples of Jobs’ Twitter-like Headlines for MacBook Air”] Headline Source “What is MacBook Air? In a sentence, Steve Jobs keynote it’s the world’s thinnest notebook.”2 “The world’s thinnest notebook.”3 Words on Jobs’ slide
  • 6. 45 “This is the MacBook Air. It’s the Steve Jobs 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 in the thinnest notebook.”5 same CNBC interview “MacBook Air. The world’s thinnest Tagline that accompanied the full screen notebook.” photograph of the new product on Apple’s home page “Apple Introduces MacBook Air—The Apple press release World’s Thinnest Notebook.”6 “We’ve built the world’s thinnest Steve Jobs’ quote in the Apple press release notebook.”7 “This is the amazing Core 2 Duo chip. Macworld 2008 It’s a screamer.”8 Most presenters cannot describe their company, product or service in one sentence. And, understandably, it becomes nearly 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. Setting the Stage for the Marketing Blitz The minute Jobs delivers a headline on stage, the Apple publicity and marketing teams kick in to full fear. Posters are dropped down inside the Macworld Expo, billboards go
  • 7. 46 up, the front page of the Apple Web site reveals the product and headline, and ads reflect the headline in newspapers, magazines, 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. 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 combined 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 recognized 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 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, memorable and consistent: Apple Reinvents the Phone. During the keynote presentation in which Jobs unveiled the iPhone, he used the term “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 hand on it, you’ll agree, we have reinvented the phone.”9 Jobs does not wait for the media to create a headline. He writes it himself and repeats it several times in his presentation. Jobs delivers the headline before explaining the details of the product. He then describes the product, typically with a demo, and
  • 8. 47 repeats the headline immediately upon ending the explanation. For example, here is how Jobs introduced GarageBand for the first time: “Today we’re announcing something so cool. A fifth app that will be part of the iLife family. It’s name is GarageBand. What is GarageBand? GarageBand is a major new pro music tool. But it’s for everyone.”10 Jobs’ slide mirrored the headline. When he announced the headline for GarageBand, the slide on the screen read: “GarageBand. A major new pro music tool.” Jobs followed the headline with a longer, one sentence description of the product: “What it does is turn your Mac into a pro-quality musical instrument and complete recording studio,” Jobs told the audience. This is typical Jobs method of introducing a product. He reveals the headline, expands on it, and hammers it home again and again. The Excitement Of the Internet; The Simplicity Of Macintosh The original iMac (the “i” stood for Internet), made getting on the Web easier than ever. The customer only had to go through two steps to connect to the Internet (“there’s no step three,” actor Jeff Goldblum declared in one popular ad). The introduction captured the imagination of the computer industry in 1998 and was one of the most influential computer announcements of the decade. According to Macworld.com, the iMac redeemed Steve Jobs, who had returned to Apple in 1997, and it saved Apple itself at a time the media had pronounced the company all but dead. Jobs had to create excitement about a product that threw some common assumptions out the window--the iMac shipped with no floppy drive, a bold move at the time and a decision met with considerable skepticism.
  • 9. 48 “iMac combines the excitement of the Internet with the simplicity of Macintosh,”11 Jobs said as he introduced the computer. The slide on the screen behind Jobs read simply: “iMac. The excitement of the Internet. The simplicity of Macintosh.” Jobs then explained who the computer was created to attract: “We are targeting this for the number one use consumers tell us they want a computer for, which is to get on the Internet simply and fast.” The headlines Steve Jobs creates work effectively because they are written from the perspective of the user. They answer the question, “why should I care?” (See Scene 2, Answer the One Question that Matters Most). Why should you care about the iMac? Because it lets you experience “the excitement of the Internet with the simplicity of Macintosh.” 1,000 Songs In Your Pocket Apple is responsible for one of the greatest product headlines of all time. According to author, Leander Kahney, Jobs himself settled on the description for the original iPod. On October 23, 2001, Jobs could have said, “today we’re introducing a new, ultra portable MP3 player with a 6.5-ounce design and a 5GB hard drive, complete with Apple’s legendary ease of use.” Of course, Jobs did not say it quite that way. Instead he simply said, “iPod. One thousand songs in your pocket.”12 No one could describe it better in more concise language. One thousand songs that could fit in your pocket. What else is there to say? One sentence tells the story and also answers the question, “why should I care?” Many reporters covering the event used the description as the headline to their articles. Matthew Fordahl’s headline in the Associated Press on the day of the
  • 10. 49 announcement read, Apple’s new iPod puts “1,000 songs in your pocket.”13 This headline was memorable because it met three criteria: It is concise (27 characters), specific (1,000 songs) and offers a personal benefit (you can carry the songs in your pocket). Following are some other Apple examples of headlines that meet all three criteria. Although some of these are slightly longer than ten words, they can fit in a Twitter-post. • “The new iTunes store. All songs are DRM-free.” (Changes to iTunes music store, January, 2009) • “The industry’s greenest notebooks.” (New MacBook family of computers introduced in October, 2000) • “The world’s most popular music player made even better.” (Introduction of the fourth generation iPod nano, September 2008) • “iPhone 3G. Twice as fast at half the price.” (Introduction of iPhone 3G, July 2008) • “It gives Mac users more reasons to love their Mac and PC users more reasons to switch.” (Introduction of iLife ’08 announced July, 2007) • “Apple reinvents the phone.” (Introduction of iPhone, January, 2007) • “The speed and screen of a professional desktop system in the world’s best notebook design.” (Introduction of the 17-inch MacBook Pro, April 2006) • “The fastest browser on the Mac and many will feel it’s the best browser ever created.” (Unveiling Safari, January, 2003) {START SIDEBAR}
  • 11. 50 Headlines that Changed the World When the “Google guys,” Sergey Brin and Larry Page, walked into Sequoia Capitol to seek funding for their new search engine technology, they described their company in one sentence: “Google provides access to the world’s information in one click.” That’s sixty- three characters or ten words. An early investor in Google told me that with those ten words, the investors immediately understood the implications of Google’s technology Since that day, entrepreneurs who walk into Sequoia Capital have been asked for their “one liner”; a headline that describes the product in one sentence. As one investor told me, “If you cannot describe what you do in ten words or less, I’m not investing, I’m not buying, I’m not interested. Period.” Following are some more examples of ten-word headlines that have changed the world: • “Cisco changes the way we live, work, play and learn.”--Cisco CEO John Chambers, who repeats this line in interviews and presentations. • “Starbucks creates a third place between work and home.”--Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz describing his idea to early investors. “We see a PC on every desk, in every home.” Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was having cold feet shortly after joining Microsoft. Founder Bill Gates pulled him aside and said, “Steve, you see yourself as a bean counter for a start-up. I see a PC on every desk in every home.” Ballmer stayed and, with a personal net worth of $15 billion, he is glad he did. {END SIDEBAR}
  • 12. 51 Keynote Beats PowerPoint in the Battle of the Headlines Microsoft’s PowerPoint has one big advantage over Apple’s Keynote presentation software--it’s everywhere. Microsoft commands 90 percent of the computing market and, among the 10 percent of computer users on a Mac, many of them still use PowerPoint software designed for Macs. While the number of presentations conducted on either PowerPoint or Keynote are not publicly available, it’s safe to say that the number of Keynote presentations given daily are miniscule in comparison to PowerPoint. Although most presentation designers familiar with both formats prefer to work in the more elegant Keynote system, those same designers will tell you that the majority of their client work is done in PowerPoint. As I mentioned in the prologue, this book is software-agnostic because all of the techniques apply equally to PowerPoint or Keynote. Having said all this, Keynote is still the application that Steve Jobs prefers and the Twitter-like headline he created to introduce the software was certainly an attention grabber. “This is another brand new application that we are announcing here today and it is called Keynote,”14 Jobs said at Macworld 2003. Keynote is a presentation app for when your presentation really counts (slide reads: When your presentation really counts). And Keynote was built for me (slide reads: Built for me). I needed an application to build the kind of slideshow that I wanted to show you at these Macworld keynotes. Very graphics intensive. We built this for me. Now I want to share it with you. We hired a low-paid beta tester to beta test this app for an entire year and here he is (audience laughs as
  • 13. 52 screen shows photo of Jobs). Rather than a bunch of slides about slides, let me just show you” (walks to stage right to demo the new software). Again, we see a remarkable consistency in all of Apple’s marketing material surrounding the new product launch. The Apple press release for Keynote described it as “The application to use when your presentation really counts.”15 This headline can easily fit in a Twitter post and, without revealing the details, tells a story in one sentence. If a customer wanted more details, he could read the press release, watch Jobs’ demonstration or view the online demo on Apple’s Web site. But the headline itself offered plenty of information. We learned that it was a new application specifically for presentations and made for those times when presentations can make or break your career. And, as an added bonus, it was built for Jobs. For many people who give frequent presentations, that headline was enough. Journalists learn to write headlines on the first day of J-school. Headlines are what persuade you to read particular stories in newspapers, magazines or blogs. Headlines matter. As individuals become their own copywriters for blogs, presentations, twitter posts and marketing material, learning to write catchy, descriptive headlines becomes even more important to professional success. Director’s Notes • Create your headline; a one sentence vision statement for your company, product, or service. The most effective headlines are concise (140 characters or less), specific and offer a personal benefit.
  • 14. 53 • Consistently repeat the headline in your conversations and marketing material: presentations, slides, brochures, collateral, press releases, Web site. • Remember, your headline is a statement that offers your audience a vision of a better future. It’s not about you. It’s about them.