Friday, November 18, 2011

Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs


Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs


As the sad news of the death of co-founder and former CEO of Apple, Steve Jobs, hits the headlines, we pay tribute by sharing his ‘Presentation Secrets’ courtesy of Carmine Gallo.


1. Create memorable moments
Every Steve Jobs presentation has one moment that leaves everyone in awe. These ‘moments’ are scripted ahead of time to complement Steve Jobs’s slides, the Apple website, press releases and advertisements. At Macworld 2008, Jobs pulled the new 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 common photograph of the event.
At last month’s ‘Rock & Roll’ event, the ‘water cooler’ moment wasn’t a product at all. Instead, it was Steve Jobs himself walking on stage after a long, health-related absence. He told the audience he now had the liver of a mid-twenties person who had 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
A Steve Jobs presentation is typically divided into three parts. The Rule of Three is one of most powerful concepts in dramatic writing –how many times have you seen a ‘two-act’ play? The human mind can only retain three or four ‘chunks’ of information, and Jobs is well aware of this principle. He even has a lot of fun with it.
During Macworld 2007, he teased the audience with ‘three’ revolutionary products: an MP3 player, a phone and an Internet communications device. Of course, he really only had one device — the iPhone.

3. Dress up the numbers
When Jobs introduced the iPod in 2001, he said it came with a 5GB hard-drive. Only the most technical audience would understand the implications of that number. Jobs broke it down by saying, “That’s enough storage for 1,000 songs.” He made the number even more compelling by announcing that all those songs could fit in your pocket. Apple presenters never leave big numbers hanging without putting those numbers in perspective.
For example, during the ‘Rock & Roll’ music event, marketing head Phil Schiller announced that Apple had sold 220 million iPods to date. “That’s 73% of the market,” he said. Schiller took it one step further, and got a laugh, when he said Microsoft was ‘pulling up the rear’ with 1% market share.

4. 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 forty words, there were far fewer than forty words in the first dozen slides of last week’s event. When Jobs talked about the popularity of iTunes around the world, his slide showed twenty-three flags of different countries instead of country names.
When he 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. Psychologists call this picture superiority: ideas are more easily recalled when presented with text and images instead of text alone.

5. Create Twitter-friendly headlines
Apple makes it simple for the media to talk about its 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 it’s the best way to describe it. It’s the world’s thinnest notebook. Period.
Steve 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 Genius Mix for iTunes? “It’s like having a DJ mix the songs in your library.”

6. Share the stage
Jobs rarely gives an entire presentation by himself. Instead he surrounds himself with a supporting cast. He had a large supporting cast at the September 9 music event, including Apple VPs Jeff Robbin and Phil Schiller.
In October 2008 Jobs introduced lead designer Jonathan Ive, who gave the audience a tutorial about Apple’s newest line of aluminium MacBooks. Although few companies are more closely associated with their founder than Apple, a Jobs presentation is rarely a one-man play. He features supporting characters who play a key role in the narrative.

7. Practise, practise and practise more
According to some observers, Steve Jobs labours over every slide, each one “written like a piece of poetry.” Jobs has been known to spend hours upon hours over many days rehearsing every section of his keynotes. Nothing is left to chance. Jobs makes a presentation look effortless because he has spent hours preparing it.

8. Sell dreams, not products
Steve Jobs is passionately committed to changing the world and his passion shows in every presentation. In May 2005, Steve Jobs told Stanford graduates, “Your work is going to fill a large part of your life… and the only way to do great work is to love what you do.” Anyone can learn the specific techniques Jobs uses to create visually creative slides and to craft an interesting story, but that message will fail to inspire an audience if there’s no enthusiasm behind it. Jobs has a nearly messianic  zeal to change the world. In your own way, so should you.


9. Introduce the antagonist
In every classic story, the hero fights the villain. The same holds true for a Steve Jobs presentation. In 1984, the villain was IBM, “Big Blue.” Before Jobs introduced the famous 1984 Ridley Scott ad to the Apple sales team, he painted a picture of Big Blue “bent on world domination” with Apple as the only one to stand in its way. Conquering a shared enemy is a powerful motivator, attracting fans and followers.

10. One more thing… Have Fun!
have_fun-234Jobs has fun and it shows. Despite relentless planning and hours of rehearsal, sometimes thing go wrong, but Jobs doesn’t let the small stuff get to him. Jobs’s clicker failed to advance the slides during a portion of the iPhone introduction during Macworld 2007. Jobs paused and told a very funny story about the time he and friend Steve Wozniak would hang out in Wozniak’s college dorm with a device that would screw up TV signals. It was a glimpse of Jobs the prankster. Most presenters would have frozen. Jobs acted with cool confidence because he’s up there to have fun.  It’s not about the slides.
This presentation article first appeared on Cult of Mac.
Carmine Gallo is a communications coach and author of The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience.
Thanks to Carmine Gallo for allowing us to publish this.



Material copied from '' http://www.presentationmagazine.com/presentation-secrets-of-steve-jobs-1066.htm'' on 18th of November 2011.The material was published on 6 October 2011.



















Thursday, November 17, 2011

Formal Letter, Writing tips

The formal letter is a polished, professional, and direct form of correspondence. Choosing the formal letter style is safe in most conditions, as it gives the receiver an opportunity to understand you in the most sincer style.Writing a formal letter involves just the right balance of tone, word usage, clarity and layout.
Elements of formal letters
When we write a formal letter we must take care for:
-Layout of paper (margins)
-Addresses
-Dates
-Salutation
-Body (first, second, last paragraph, the end of letter)
-and Abbreviations
Layout of paper ( Margins )
The layout should be a standard letter size page, with the 1 centimetre below and on the top, and 2 centimetres sideways.
Addresses…
Your address should be written in the top right-hand corner of the letter.
The address of the person you are writing to should be written on the left, starting below your address.
Date…
Different people put the date on different sides of the page. You can write the date on the right or the left sideline after the address you are writing. Most important thing is to write the month as a word, because we can read incorrectly the month or the day. One example is: 1.2.2012, and we don’t know the exact date because we can read that as first of February or second of January.
Salutation or greeting...
If you don’t know the person whom you are writing to, you will use Dear Sir or Madam. If you know the person’s full name, use the title and family name only, for example:          Dear Ms.Zeqiri,



Body of the letter…
-The first paragraph should be approximately two or three lines, and the reason of the letter…
Ex.” As second year student on Communication Sciences we (Me and Argjend ) must create public relations with the audience. This letter is related with our public activity, anti-cancer campaign.”
-The second paragraph should be the core of the letter, with all the information and details the receiver needs.
Ex.To deal successfully with this campaign from the beginning we must have our planed budget. We found American Embassy here in Skopje as potential sponsor, but we need one good project proposal written in English. I write to you because we need a good translator from Albanian language to English. We don’t want this service for free, but if we win the project competition we will pay for your effort.
-The third paragraph will describe what the receiver needs to do with this correspondence, and next steps.
Ex. “If you are ready to help us on this campaign it will be good for our communication skills and we will develop our relations with the public. Above all, you will be the first person who says NO to Cancer.”
-The end of letter
If you don’t know the name of the person, you will use “Yours Faithfully”
If you know the person’s full name, use “Yours Sincerely”, followed by four hard spaces (enter) for your signature and your full name.
Ex. “ Yours Sincerely                                             Venhar Ramadani”
Abbreviations
The following abbreviations are widely used in letters:
asap – as soon as possible
cc – carbon copy ( when i have to send this email to our professor Luiza, I must send a copy to Argjend to let him know for this email.)
ps- postscript ( when we want to add something after we finished and signed the letter )
Venhar Ramadani 118146- SEEU- Communication Science-II year
vr18146@seeu.edu.mk

Monday, November 7, 2011

The persuasive speech that i like !

For us, who have to do with speeches and public opinions, we most have one speech as a example.For me, persuasive speech will be with politic topic and this one :                               ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AmUUYo9o9eg ). This miracle !

Friday, November 4, 2011

1 Month without betting ticket

Hello there,

your solutions about my problem were so usefully for me.
I boycot betting and such of that horrible things.
I'm free and every week i save more money.

Thank you !

Yours sincerely.