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What's the Ultimate How to Be Steve Jobs Guide?

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Paul Keith:
After reading this link, the thought went to my head that I hate clicking on linkbaits on "How to Be Steve Jobs" but I just have to because it might be awesome.

That's why I give up and just decided to create a thread here in the hopes that whenever there's a worthwhile "How to Be Steve Jobs" article, maybe someone will post it here.

(Besides, I'm starting to think I should type less and just talk like everything's a sales pitch   :P :tellme:)

Btw the content of the article is:

By Carmine Gallo, Author of The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience
--- End quote ---

1. Create a “holy smokes” moment.

Every Steve Jobs presentation has one moment that leaves everyone in awe—the water cooler moment. These “moments” are scripted ahead of time to compliment his slides, the Apple Web site, press releases and advertisements. In 2008, Jobs pulled the MacBook Air out of a manila, inter-office envelope to show everyone just how thin it was. Bloggers went nuts and it was the most popular photograph of the event. On September 9, 2009, the “water cooler” moment wasn’t a product at all. Instead, it was Steve Jobs himself walking onstage after a long, health related absence. He told the audience he now had the liver of a mid twenties person who died in a car crash and was generous enough to donate their organs. “I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for such generosity,” he said.

2. Stick to the rule of three.

The Rule of Three is one of most powerful concepts in writing. The human mind can only retain three or four “chunks” of information and Jobs is well aware of this principle. A Steve Jobs presentation is typically divided into three parts. During the September 9th event, Jobs outlined the presentation into three areas: iPhone, iTunes and iPod. Jobs has even been known to have fun with the principle. At Macworld 2007, he introduced “three revolutionary products;” an mp3 player, a phone, and an internet communicator. After repeating the three products several times, he disclosed the big announcement—all three would be wrapped up in one, the iPhone. The rule of three turned into a water cooler moment. Ask yourself, what are the three things I want my audience to know? Not twenty things, just three. You can get away with more points in written form (like an article) but stick to three in public presentations and verbal conversations.

3. filler

4. be a douche

5. Think visually.

Apple presentations are strikingly simple and visual. For example, there is very little text on a Steve Jobs slide. While the average PowerPoint slide has 40 words, there were far fewer than forty words in the first dozen slides of the September music event. When Jobs talked about the popularity of iPhone around the world, his slide showed 23 flags of different countries instead of country names. When said the iPhone app store was celebrating its first anniversary, a slide appeared with a birthday cake holding one candle. When he talked about lower iPod prices, the new price was accompanied by photos of the iPods. This is what psychologists call “picture superiority.” It simply means that ideas are more easily recalled when presented in text and images than in text alone.

6. Create Twitter-friendly headlines.

Apple makes it simple for the media to talk about their products—the company writes the headlines for them. Now, reporters will tell you that they like to come up with their own headlines, but why then did hundreds of them use “World’s thinnest notebook” to describe the MacBook Air? Because that’s the way Steve Jobs described it, and frankly, it’s hard to come up with a better way of saying it. Jobs always describes a new product with a concise phrase that fits well within a 140 character Twitter post. What’s an iPod? “One thousand songs in your pocket.” What’s Genuis Mix for iTunes? “It’s like having a DJ mix the songs in your library.” If you can’t describe what you do in one sentence, go back to the drawing board.

7. Sell dreams, not products.

Steve Jobs is passionately committed to changing the world and his passion shows in every presentation. Anyone can learn the specific techniques he uses to create visually creative slides, but those slides will fall flat if delivered without passion and enthusiasm. When Jobs introduce the iPod in 2001, he said that music was a transformative experience and that in its own small way, Apple was changing the world. Where most observers saw a music player, Jobs saw an opportunity to create a better world for his customers. That’s the difference between Jobs and the vast majority of mediocre leaders—Jobs is genuinely committed to changing the world and he’s not afraid to say it.

 

40hz:
Based on my close observation of Steve Jobs and Apple over the years, I'd like to propose an additional factor:

Be the sort of person who is fortunate enough to be surrounded by very smart people who are willing to give you credit for their ideas and innovations; and who are also willing to 'hype up' your contributions, no matter how minor.

Look at these quotes from a Wharton School interview with Steve Wozniak as just one example:

Steve's role was to learn how to run every aspect of a company, to be an executive at every level. I had already come to a very non-political point in my life where I didn't want to run a company, because I didn't want to push other people around, act superior to others, tell them what they had [done] was lousy. So I just said: I will do my engineering as well as it can be done, and I'll do that perfectly. I won't tromp into other people's territory.

So we went into two parts of the company. And from then on, we were very much working on different things almost forever.

Steve did an excellent job of melding the marketing, operations and technology. He understood which technology was good and what people would like.

It was a weird situation. He couldn't design a computer -- he was never a designer or a programmer -- but he could understand it well enough to understand what was good and what was bad.

I think that was more important -- having one mind that could put the entire landscape together. Whereas I just did one piece excellently.
--- End quote ---

 :-\

When you judge Steve as a person -- the great things he brings to the world versus, maybe, these encroachments on personal decency or personal honesty with other people or disrespect of people when they've worked very hard and do a great job and he'll say, "Oh, that's just shitty," that sort of thing -- those are probably outweighed by the good that he does for the world.

We can sometimes see the future -- that, for example, all of our television signals are going to come over the Internet, all our entertainment and phone calls and music. Movie theaters even might go away some day because the Internet has taken their place.

How do you actually get there? It is so difficult to try to move the world to change, especially when there are money interests involved.

What Steve does on the good side -- like the music scenario [in which] we didn't bring just a music device called the iPod, we brought a whole music system: a store that sells it, a computer that manages and organizes it. And an iPod is just a satellite to your computer. Plug it in and it works. You don't have to do anything.

You've got to admire Steve for that kind of thinking.

Nobody's perfect. [Everybody is] going to have cases where they did something bad to somebody, said something nasty to them and maybe regret it later.
--- End quote ---

Link to full interview here: http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1903



Almost reminds me of the father of a friend of mine. He made absolutely horrible homebrew ice cream. This stuff was so bad it gave whole new meaning to the concept of badness. Everybody in his family knew it. And everybody DIDN'T know it. They loved him. So they just ate it when it was offered and heaped on the praise. Now that it's been some years since he quit this mortal clay, the memory (of that wretched, tasteless, godawful crap he used to heap in front of his suffering family and friends) has now been transformed into a dish fit for the gods themselves. The grandchildren (who never had the misfortune of tasting it) now talk about it with a tone of reverence, almost resentful they were born too late.

I think a lot of Steve's professional bio works like that. :P

Paul Keith:
The sad and unfunny part is that it sounds like the general anecdote of any guy who got hired as a manager and got himself promoted faster than the people more suited for being promoted.  :(

Still; you have to be at least impressed by how this guy was able to understand enough without being a programmer and a designer and how he got back to Apple after being fired but the thing that still really impresses me and the thing I still don't quite understand is how he managed to maneuver through with the whole Pixar and Disney thing.

In fact, I don't quite understand what Jobs adds to Pixar but man... there has to be some huge amount of luck involved with getting all those circumstances or there is still some secret Jobs technique that is yet to be unearthed.



Lashiec:
Still; you have to be at least impressed by how this guy was able to understand enough without being a programmer and a designer and how he got back to Apple after being fired but the thing that still really impresses me and the thing I still don't quite understand is how he managed to maneuver through with the whole Pixar and Disney thing.
-Paul Keith (October 10, 2009, 02:47 PM)
--- End quote ---

Disney needed Pixar. They make very successful movies, which also helps when selling merchandise based on them. The movies are also pretty good, but that wasn't the main concern at Disney, because Disney was pouring money. Pixar knew that, so they said, if you want us, the price is going to be a bit higher than you might think. And that's why Jobs managed to pull such deal.

How he managed to get back in Apple? The old Mac OS needed a radically new version, and it's was either BeOS or NeXT (Apple's own attempt, Copland, was turning into a joke). It was a matter of money, really, the BeOS guys wanted too much, although they ended paying up even more for NeXT.

I think Jobs success boils down to two points: Recruit good people, like 40hz says, and being a good speaker. While he never manages to trick me into buying Apple products, his keynotes are excellent, and his oratory skills really shine there.

Paul Keith:
@Lashiec,

True but how many guys, even skilled speakers, get fired and get back in?

It's not like Jobs was the only choice.

However, he has some influence and past successes with Apple. That's true.

With Pixar though, Jobs had to at least had the foresight and the people to realize how big Pixar would eventually be...or he got extremely lucky.

This wasn't a company that was starting from scratch nor was Pixar some software/hardware where you get the product and then market it away.

Any marketing effect goes away after every movie, every trailer, every little new series and Hollywood was full of flashy marketing competitors compared to the tech industry that by the time Disney needed Pixar, Pixar has took over as the new Disney for this generation.

That is a huge huge successful leap for a guy who basically isn't a designer or a programmer to one day be able to foresee the company he's buying as THE company that would take over Disney's brand as the premier go to Hollywood kid's movie maker of this generation.

It's one way to recruit good tech people (especially when he had Wozniak already) and serve as the gap that make these tech products sell but to recruit good tech people and basically redefine the industry standards of movies... I mean that's something else.

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