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Presentation-Secrets-Of-Steve-Jobs

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50 CREATE THE STORY<br />

<strong>Jobs</strong> draws a verbal road map for his audience, a preview of<br />

coming attractions. Typically these road maps are outlined in<br />

groups of three—a presentation might be broken into “three<br />

acts,” a product description into “three features,” a demo into<br />

“three parts.” <strong>Jobs</strong>’s love of threes can be traced back at least<br />

as early as the original Macintosh introduction on January 24,<br />

1984. Appearing at the Flint Center, in Cupertino, California,<br />

<strong>Jobs</strong> told the audience, “There have only been two milestone<br />

products in our industry: the Apple II in 1977 and the IBM PC<br />

in 1981. Today we are introducing the third industry milestone<br />

product, the Macintosh. And it has turned out insanely great!” 2<br />

Verbal guideposts serve as road maps, helping your listeners<br />

follow the story. When coaching clients to appear in the media,<br />

I always instruct them to create an easy-to-follow story by clearly<br />

outlining three or, at the most, four main points before filling<br />

in the details. When this technique is followed, reporters will<br />

often take extensive notes. If the spokesperson misses a point,<br />

reporters will ask, “Didn’t you say you had three points? I heard<br />

only two.” A verbal road map of three things will help your listeners<br />

keep their place. See Figure 5.1.<br />

Figure 5.1 <strong>Jobs</strong> sticks to the rule of three in his presentations.<br />

ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images

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