Page 189 - The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience by Carmine Gallo
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170    REFINE AND REHEARSE



          thinking of giving public speaking workshops to underprivi-
          leged youth.” 2
             Sigman spent forty-two years at AT&T, rising from the lowest
          rungs in the company to running its wireless division. Yet, to
          many people unfamiliar with his leadership, Sigman’s appear-
          ance at Macworld will be his lasting legacy. It wasn’t Sigman’s
          fault. He had to follow the master. And, unfortunately, this book
          wasn’t out yet to help him prepare!

          Three Techniques to Improve

          Body Language


          Steve Jobs resigned from Apple in 1985 after losing a board-
          room battle for control of the company in a power struggle
          with then CEO John Sculley. He would remain away for eleven
          years, returning triumphantly when Gil Amelio, Apple’s CEO
          in 1996, announced that Apple was going to buy Jobs’s NeXT
          for $427 million. “I was hooked by Steve’s energy and enthusi-
          asm,” Amelio wrote in On the Firing Line: My Five Hundred Days at
          Apple. “I do remember how animated he is on his feet, how his
          full mental abilities materialize when he’s up and moving, how
          he becomes more expressive.” 3
             Jobs comes alive when he is up and moving onstage. He has
          seemingly boundless energy. When he’s at his best, Jobs does
          three things anyone can, and should, do to enhance one’s speak-
          ing and presentation skills: he makes eye contact, maintains an
          open posture, and uses frequent hand gestures.

          EYE CONTACT
          Great communicators such as Jobs make appreciably more eye
          contact with the audience than average presenters. They rarely
          read from slides or notes. Jobs doesn’t eliminate notes entirely.
          He often has some notes tucked out of view during demonstra-
          tions. Apple’s presentation software, Keynote, also makes it easy
          for speakers to see speaker’s notes while the audience sees the
          slides displayed on the projector. If Jobs is reading, nobody can
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