Page 92 - The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience by Carmine Gallo
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INTRODUCE THE ANTAGONIST   73



             carries him higher for about ten seconds. As he’s tracking the
             graph upward, he turns to the audience and says, “You’ve heard
             of ‘off the charts’? Well, here’s where we’re going to be in less
                             10
             than fifty years.”  It’s funny, memorable, and powerful at the
             same time. Gore takes facts, figures, and statistics and brings
             them to life.
                Gore uses many of the same presentation and rhetorical tech-
             niques that we see in a Steve Jobs presentation. Among them
             are the introduction of the enemy, or the antagonist. Both men
             introduce an antagonist early, rallying the audience around a
             common purpose. In a Jobs presentation, once the villain is
             clearly established, it’s time to open the curtain to reveal the
             character who will save the day . . . the conquering hero.





                             DIRECTOR’S NOTES

                    Introduce the antagonist early in your presentation.
                     Always establish the problem before revealing your
                     solution. You can do so by painting a vivid picture of
                     your customers’ pain point. Set up the problem by ask-
                     ing, “Why do we need this?”
                    Spend some time describing the problem in detail. Make
                     it tangible. Build the pain.
                    Create an elevator pitch for your product using the four-
                     step method described in this chapter. Pay particular
                     attention to question number 2, “What problem do you
                     solve?” Remember, nobody cares about your product.
                     People care about solving their problems.
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