Page 199 - The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience by Carmine Gallo
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180    REFINE AND REHEARSE



          of grueling practice to prepare for a presentation? The honest
          answer is probably “never.” If you really want to talk the way
          Jobs does, plan on spending more time rehearsing every portion
          of your presentation.

          Glimpse Behind the Magic Curtain

          In an article published in the Guardian on January 5, 2006, for-
          mer Apple employee Mike Evangelist wrote about his personal
          experience rehearsing a portion of a demonstration for a Jobs
          keynote: “To a casual observer these presentations appear to be
          just a guy in a black shirt and blue jeans talking about some new
          technology products. But they are in fact an incredibly complex
          and sophisticated blend of sales pitch, product demonstration,
          and corporate cheerleading, with a dash of religious revival
          thrown in for good measure. They represent weeks of work, pre-
          cise orchestration, and intense pressure for scores of people who
          collectively make up the ‘man behind the curtain.’ ” 2
             According to Evangelist’s first-person account, Jobs begins
          his preparation weeks in advance, reviewing products and tech-
          nologies he is going to talk about. Evangelist had been tapped
          to demo the new iDVD, Apple’s DVD-burning software, for
          Macworld 2001. Evangelist said his team spent hundreds of
          hours preparing for a segment that lasted five minutes. That’s
          not a typo: hundreds of hours for a five-minute demo.
             Evangelist said Jobs rehearsed for two full days before the
          presentation, asking for feedback from the product managers in
          the room. Jobs spends a lot of time on slides, personally writing
          and designing much of the content, along with some help from
          the design team. “On the day before show time, things get much
          more structured, with at least one and sometimes two complete
          dress rehearsals. Throughout it all Steve is extremely focused.
          While we were in that room, all his energy was directed at mak-
          ing this keynote the perfect embodiment of Apple’s messages.” 3
             In the weeks before the keynote, Evangelist saw the full range
          of Steve’s emotions from disappointment to elation. “I believe it
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