Page 69 - The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience by Carmine Gallo
P. 69

50    CREATE THE STORY



             Jobs draws a verbal road map for his audience, a preview of
          coming attractions. Typically these road maps are outlined in
          groups of three—a presentation might be broken into “three
          acts,” a product description into “three features,” a demo into
          “three parts.” Jobs’s love of threes can be traced back at least
          as early as the original Macintosh introduction on January 24,
          1984. Appearing at the Flint Center, in Cupertino, California,
          Jobs told the audience, “There have only been two milestone
          products in our industry: the Apple II in 1977 and the IBM PC
          in 1981. Today we are introducing the third industry milestone
          product, the Macintosh. And it has turned out insanely great!” 2
             Verbal guideposts serve as road maps, helping your listeners
          follow the story. When coaching clients to appear in the media,
          I always instruct them to create an easy-to-follow story by clearly
          outlining three or, at the most, four main points before filling
          in the details. When this technique is followed, reporters will
          often take extensive notes. If the spokesperson misses a point,
          reporters will ask, “Didn’t you say you had three points? I heard
          only two.” A verbal road map of three things will help your lis-
          teners keep their place. See Figure 5.1.
























             Figure 5.1 Jobs sticks to the rule of three in his presentations.
             ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images
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