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Presentation-Secrets-Of-Steve-Jobs

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N E 9<br />

SCENE 9<br />

SCE<br />

Dress Up<br />

Your Numbers<br />

We have sold four million iPhones to date. If you<br />

divide four million by two hundred days, that’s<br />

twenty thousand iPhones every day on average.<br />

—STEVE JOBS<br />

On October 23, 2001, Apple launched a digital music<br />

player that would revolutionize the entire music<br />

industry—the iPod. At $399, however, it was an<br />

expensive gadget. The iPod stored songs on a fivegigabyte<br />

drive, but the number itself—5 GB—meant very little to<br />

the average music lover. In his keynote presentation, <strong>Jobs</strong> made<br />

that number more meaningful by saying that 5 GB provided<br />

enough storage for one thousand songs. While that sounds more<br />

impressive, it still did not provide a compelling value, since competitors<br />

were offering devices containing more storage at a lower<br />

price. But wait, <strong>Jobs</strong> assured his audience, there’s more. <strong>Jobs</strong> said<br />

the new iPod weighed 6.5 ounces and was so small that it could<br />

“fit in your pocket.” When <strong>Jobs</strong> pulled one out of his own pocket,<br />

it immediately clicked with the audience. The iPod’s slogan said<br />

it all: “1,000 songs in your pocket.” 1<br />

Rarely do numbers resonate with people until those numbers<br />

are placed in a context that people can understand, and<br />

the best way to help them understand is to make those numbers<br />

relevant to something with which they are already familiar. Five<br />

gigabytes may mean nothing to you, but one thousand songs<br />

105

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