Page 205 - The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience by Carmine Gallo
P. 205

186    REFINE AND REHEARSE



          slide show to continue. The assistant simply shook his head,
          but the CEO stayed the course. He continued to deliver the rest
          of the presentation with no slides. He did so effortlessly and
          confidently.
             He later told me that without practice (which I had urged
          him to do), he would have lost his confidence and floundered
          in front of employees, analysts, investors, customers, and the
          media. When I asked employees after the presentation what
          they had thought, none of them realized that anything had
          gone wrong.
          VIDEO TRAINING TIPS
          We had used a video camera during rehearsals. Very few pre-
          senters watch themselves on camera, even though perfectly
          appropriate camcorders are available for less than $300. I know
          that watching yourself on TV, especially a wide-screen, is not
          the most pleasant experience, but take my word for it: it’s essen-
          tial. Record your presentation and play it back. If possible, find
          objective friends and colleagues who will offer honest feedback.
          Use an external, clip-on microphone instead of the built-in
          microphone standard on all camcorders. Your voice will sound
          louder, clearer, and more resonant.
             As you watch the video, pay close attention to these five
          areas:


               Eye contact. Commit most of your presentation to memory to
                avoid reading from notes. Your slides should act as your cue.
                Public-speaking expert Andrew Carnegie observed that notes
                destroy the intimacy between speaker and audience and make
                the speaker appear less powerful and confident. Notice that I
                didn’t tell you to give the presentation “completely” without
                notes. Steve Jobs keeps notes out of his audience’s sight. Only a
                careful observer would spot him glancing at them. He refers to
                notes during demonstrations, but since the audience’s atten-
                tion is on the demo itself, his notes do not detract from the
                presentation. The notes he does keep onstage are also unob-
                trusive and simple. He just needs to glance at them to find his
                place. Although it’s easier in Keynote than PowerPoint to have
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