Authors: Presentation Secrets
audience a vision of a better future. It’s not about you.
It’s about them.
This page intentionally left blank
SCE
SCENNEE 5
5
Draw a Road Map
Today we are introducing three revolutionary products.
STEVE JOBS, REVEALING THE iPHONE
On January 9, 2007, thousands of Mac faithful
watched as Steve Jobs delivered an electrifying
announcement. “Today Apple reinvents the phone,”
Jobs said as he revealed the iPhone for the first time
to the public
.1
Before delivering that headline, however, Jobs added to the
drama and suspense when he told the audience that Apple
would introduce not one, but three revolutionary products. He
identified the first one as a wide-screen iPod with touch con-
trols. This met with a smattering of applause. Jobs said the
second product would be a revolutionary mobile phone. The
audience cheered that announcement. And the third, said Jobs,
was a breakthrough Internet communications device. At this
point, the audience members sat back and waited for what they
thought would be further product descriptions and perhaps
some demos of the three new devices—but the real thrill was yet
to come. Jobs continued, “So, three things: a wide-screen iPod
with touch controls, a revolutionary mobile phone, and a break-
through Internet communications device. An iPod, a phone,
and an Internet communicator. An iPod, a phone—are you get-
ting it? These are not three separate devices. This is one device,
and we are calling it iPhone.” The audience went wild, and Jobs
basked in the glow of nailing yet another product launch that
would solidify Apple’s role as one of the world’s most innovative
companies.
49
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
DRAW A ROAD MAP
51
It is well established that we can hold only small amounts
of information in short-term, or “active,” memory. In 1956, Bell
Labs research scientist George Miller published a classic paper
titled “The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two.” Miller
cited studies that showed we have a hard time retaining more
than seven to nine digits in short-term memory. Contemporary
scientists have put the number of items we can easily recall
closer to three or four. So, it should not be surprising that Jobs
rarely offers more than three or four key message points. As for
that, in a Steve Jobs presentation, the number three is much
more common than four. Steve understands that the “rule of
three” is one of the most powerful concepts in communication
theory.
Why Goldilocks Didn’t
Encounter Four Bears
Listeners like lists. But how many points should you include in
the list?
Three is the magic number.
Comedians know that three is funnier than two. Writers
know that three is more dramatic than four. Jobs knows that
three is more persuasive than five. Every great movie, book, play,
or presentation has a three-act structure. There were three mus-
keteers, not five. Goldilocks encountered three bears, not four.
There were three stooges, not two. Legendary NFL coach Vince
Lombardi told his players there were three important things in
life: family, religion, and the Green Bay Packers. And the U.S.
Declaration of Independence states that Americans have a right
to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,” not simply life
and liberty. The rule of three is a fundamental principle in writ-
ing, in humor, and in a Steve Jobs presentation.
The U.S. Marine Corps has conducted extensive research
into this subject and has concluded that three is more effec-
tive than two or four. Divisions within the marines are divided
into three: a corporal commands a team of three; a sergeant
52
CREATE THE STORY
commands three rifle teams in a squad; a captain has three pla-
toons; and so on. If the marines were kind enough to study this
stuff, why should we reinvent the wheel? Go ahead and use it.
So few communicators incorporate the rule of three in their pre-
sentations that you will stand apart simply by doing so. The rule
of three—it works for the marines, it works for Jobs, and it will
work for you.
At the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference on June 6,
2005, Jobs announced the switch from IBM’s PowerPC chips to
Intel microprocessors. “Let’s talk about transitions,” Jobs said.
The Mac in its history has had two major transitions so far
[begins to outline three points]. The
first
one, 68K to PowerPC.
That transition happened about ten years ago in the mid-
nineties. The PowerPC set Apple up for the next decade. It
was a good move. The
second
major transition has been even
How the Rule of Three Can Improve Your Golf Game
During a break from writing this chapter, I took a golf lesson
from a local coach. Any golfer will tell you that the toughest
part of the game is remembering the dozens of small moves
that ultimately result in a fluid swing: posture, grip, takeaway,
balance, hinging, weight shift, follow-through, and other
variables. Problems occur when you think about too many
things at the same time. The marines have found that giving
directions in groups of three makes it easier for soldiers to fol-
low the directions. So, I asked my instructor to give me three
directives, and three only, to improve my swing. “Fine,” he said.
“Today you’re going to focus on closing your hips, shifting
your weight to the right side on the backswing, and making a
full follow-through. So, think hips, shift, follow-through.” Hips,
shift, follow. That’s it. The instruction worked wonders, and
since that day, my golf game has improved considerably. The
rule of three—good for presentations and good for golf, too!
DRAW A ROAD MAP
53
bigger. And that’s the transition from OS 9 to OS X that we
just finished a few years ago. This was a brain transplant. And
although these operating systems vary in name by just one
[digit], they are worlds apart in technology. OS X is the most
advanced operating system on the planet, and it has set Apple
up for the next twenty years. Today it’s time to begin a
third
transition. We want to constantly be making the best com-
puters for you and the rest of our users. It’s time for a third
transition. And yes, it’s true. We are going to begin the transi-
tion from PowerPC to Intel processors [emphasis added].
3
Revealing the narrative in groups of three provides direction
for your audience. It shows people where you’ve been and where
you’re going. In the preceding excerpt, Jobs sets the theme of
“transitions,” and we assume there will be at least a third tran-
sition because, as Jobs explains, the Mac has already had two
of them. He also builds the drama with each point. The first
transition was a “good move.” The second was “even bigger.” By
extension, the third must be bigger still.
Apple’s Three-Legged Stool
At the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in September
2008, Jobs displayed a slide of a stool with three legs. “As you
know, there’s three parts to Apple now,” he said. “The first part,
of course, is the Mac. The second part is our music businesses,
the iPod and iTunes. And the third part is now the iPhone.” Jobs
introduced the executives who would speak about the Mac and
the iPod business. Jobs would take the iPhone portion himself.
As he launched into the iPhone discussion, Jobs once again
provided a road map for his listeners—this time, a road map
in
four
parts: “In a few weeks, it’s going to be the iPhone’s first birthday. We shipped our first iPhone on June 29. It was an
amazing introduction, the most amazing one we’ve ever had.
iPhone has had tremendous critical acclaim. It’s the phone that
has changed phones forever. But we have mountains to climb
to reach the next level. What are these challenges? The first,