Page 158 - The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience by Carmine Gallo
P. 158

STAGE YOUR PRESENTATION WITH PROPS   139



                  Short. A good demo does not suck the wind out of your audience.
                  Simple. A good demo is simple and easy to follow. “It should
                  communicate no more than one or two key messages. The goal
                  is to show the audience enough to get them tantalized but not
                  so much that they get bewildered.” 3
                  Sweet. A good demo “shows the hottest features and differen-
                  tiates your product from the competition’s.” There’s more: “You
                  have to show real functionality, though. Imagine that every
                  time you show a feature someone shouts, ‘So what?’ ”  4
                  Swift. A good demo is fast paced. “Never do anything in a
                  demo that lasts more than fifteen seconds.” 5
                  Substantial. A good demo clearly demonstrates how your
                  product offers a solution to a real-world problem your audi-
                  ence is experiencing. “Customers want to do things with your
                  product, so they want to know how the product works.” 6

                As noted in Scene 9, Jobs nailed all of Kawasaki’s conditions
             for a good demo when he launched the iPhone 3G at the WWDC
             in October 2008. The phone ran on the faster, 3G cellular net-
             works, an upgrade to the second-generation (2G) wireless data
             networks. Jobs’s words from the presentation are listed in the
             left column of Table 12.1, and the right column describes the
             corresponding slides. 7
                In a brief demo, Jobs had met Kawasaki’s criteria for a great
             demo.

                  It’s short. The EDGE-versus-3G demo lasted less than two
                  minutes.
                 It’s simple. What could be more simple than showing two
                  websites loading on a smartphone? That was as complicated as
                  it got.
                  It’s sweet. Jobs placed the 3G network in a head-to-head face-
                  off with its primary competitor, the EDGE network.
                 It’s swift. Jobs keeps the demo moving but remains silent at
                  critical points to build the drama.
                  It’s substantial. The demo resolves a real-world problem: wait-
                  ing an excruciatingly long time for graphically rich sites to load.
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