Authors: Presentation Secrets
satellites for worldwide communications. Fourth, an
additional seventy-five million dollars will help give
us at the earliest possible time a satellite system for
worldwide weather observation. Let it be clear that I am
asking the Congress and the country to accept a firm
commitment to a new course of action, a course which
will last for many years and carry heavy costs . . . If we
are to go only halfway, or reduce our sights in the face
of difficulty, in my judgment it would be better not to
go a
t all.9
U.S. president Barack Obama, a fan of Kennedy’s speeches,
adopted some of Sorensen’s rules to make his own speeches
more impactful. Here are some samples from Obama’s
speeches that follow the rule of three, beginning with the
speech that put him on the map, his keynote address at the
2004 Democratic National Convention:
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59
I believe that we can give our middle class relief and
provide working families with a road to opportunity
. . . I believe we can provide jobs to the jobless, homes
to the homeless, and reclaim young people in cities
across America from violence and despair . . . I believe
that we have a righteous wind at our backs and that as
we stand on the crossroads of history, we can make the
right choices and meet the challenges that face us
.10
As illustrated in this excerpt, Obama not only breaks up his
speeches into paragraphs of three sentences but also often
delivers three points within sentences.
When Obama took the oath of office to become America’s
forty-fourth president on Tuesday, January 20, 2009, he
delivered a historical address to some two million people who
gathered to watch the speech in person and millions more
on television around the world. Obama made frequent use of
threes in the speech:
“I stand here today humbled by the task before us, grateful for
the trust you have bestowed, mindful of the sacrifices born by
our ancestors.”
“Homes have been lost, jobs shed, businesses shuttered.”
“Our health care is too costly, our schools fail too many, and
each day brings further evidence that the ways we use energy
strengthen our adversaries and threaten our planet.”
“Today I say to you that the challenges we face are real, they
are serious, and they are many.”
“Our workers are no less productive than when this crisis
began, our minds no less inventive, our goods and services
no less needed than they were last month or last year.
”11
Every time Jobs announced a numeral, his slide contained
just one image—the number itself (1, 2, 3, and 4). We will
explore the simplicity of Jobs’s slide design more thoroughly in
Scene 8, but for now keep in mind that your slides should mirror
your narrative. There is no need to make the slides complicated.
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CREATE THE STORY
Jobs not only breaks up his presentations into groups but
also describes features in lists of three or four items. “There are
three
major breakthroughs in iPod,” Jobs said in 2005. “The
first
one is, it’s ultraportable” [5 GB, one thousand songs in your
pocket]. “
Second
, we’ve built in Firewire” [Jobs explained how
Firewire enabled a download of an entire CD in five to ten sec-
onds, versus five to ten minutes via a USB connection]. “
Third
,
it has extraordinary batter
y life,” Jobs said.12
He then described how the iPod provided ten hours of battery life, ten hours of
continuous music.
This chapter could easily have become the longest in the
book, because every Steve Jobs presentation contains verbal
road maps with the rule of three playing a prominent role. Even
when he’s not using slides in a traditional keynote presenta-
tion, Jobs is speaking in threes. Jobs kicked off his now famous
Stanford commencement address by saying, “Today I want to
tell you
three
stories from my life.”13
His speech followed the outline. He told three personal stories from his life, explained
what they taught him, and turned those stories into lessons for
the graduates.
Applying the Rule of Three
As we’ve learned, business leaders often prepare for major tele-
vision interviews or keynote presentations by structuring their
message around three or four key points. I know, because I train
them to do so! Here is how I would apply the advice from Scenes
4 and 5 to prepare for an interview on the topic of this book.
First, I would create a headline of no more than 140 characters:
“Deliver a presentation like Steve Jobs.” Next, I would write
three big ideas: (1) Create the story, (2) Deliver the experience,
and (3) Package the material. Under each of the three ideas, I
would include rhetorical devices to enhance the narrative: sto-
ries, examples, and facts. Following is an example of how an
abbreviated interview might unfold:
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61
REPORTER: Carmine, tell us more about this book.
CARMINE: The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs reveals, for the
first time, how to do deliver a presentation like Steve Jobs.
The Apple CEO is considered one of the most electrifying
speakers in the world today. This book walks you through
the very steps he uses to sell his ideas. Best of all, anyone
can learn these techniques to improve his or her very next
presentation.
REPORTER: OK, so where would we start?
CARMINE: You can deliver a presentation like Steve Jobs [repeat
the headline at least twice in a conversation] if you follow
these three steps: First, create the story. Second, deliver the
experience. And third, package the material. Let’s talk about
the first step, creating the story . . .
Jimmy V’s Famous Speech
On March 4, 1993, college basketball coach Jimmy Valvano
gave one of the most emotional speeches in recent sports
history. Valvano had led North Carolina State to the NCAA
championship in 1983. Ten years later, dying of cancer, Valvano
accepted the Arthur Ashe Courage & Humanitarian Award.
Valvano’s use of the rule of three provided the two most poi -
g nant moments of the speech (emphasis added):
To me, there are three things we all should do every
day. We should do this every day of our lives. Number
one is laugh. You should laugh every day. Number two
is think. You should spend some time in thought. And
number three is, you should have your emotions moved
to tears—could be happiness or joy. But think about it.
If you laugh, you think, and you cry, that’s a full day . . .
Cancer can take away all my physical ability. It cannot
touch my mind; it cannot touch my heart; and it cannot
touch my soul. And those three things are going to
carry on forever. I thank you and God bless all of yo
u.14
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CREATE THE STORY
As you can tell in this example, providing a road map of three
parts creates an outline for a short interview, a much longer
interview, or an entire presentation.
Your listeners’ brains are working overtime. They’re consum-
ing words, images, and sensory experiences, not to mention
conducting their own internal dialogues. Make it easy for them
to follow your narrative.
D IR EC TO R ’ S N OT E S
Create a list of all the key points you want your audi-
ence to know about your product, service, company, or
initiative.
Categorize the list until you are left with only three
major message points. This group of three will provide
the verbal road map for your pitch or presentation.
Under each of your three key messages, add rhetorical
devices to enhance the narrative. These could include
some or all of the following: personal stories, facts,
examples, analogies, metaphors, and third-party
endorsements.
SCE
SCENNEE 6
6
Introduce the
Antagonist
Will Big Blue dominate the entire computer
industry? Was George Orwell right?
STEVE JOBS
In every classic story, the hero fights the villain. The same
storytelling outline applies to world-class presentations.
Steve Jobs establishes the foundation of a persuasive story
by introducing his audience to an antagonist, an enemy, a
problem in need of a solution. In 1984, the enemy was “Big
Blue.”
Apple is behind one of the most influential television ads