This jerk was a liar and a cheat and a con artist. Nothing more than a sales rep. I read that even he did not really believe in the iphone. When you visited his house, everyone had to dump their iphones in a box near the front door. It was never allowed in his home. Yet you can all have your tracking and surveillance devices in yours. I never bought it in 2007. I still don't buy it. I predicted a host of issues that would result. I was right. We now have a whole generation of young people who cant even talk. Now I'm swamped with complicated apps and security software that takes most of my day wading through. Now a whole generation of fat blobs.And now a cashless economy, and increasing big WEF control. It's all just technocrap future pollution. I wonder if he went to WEF back then. I hate Steve Jobs.
I remember watching this announcement live and being so impressed and excited about a silly electronic device. Since then, I think I have watched this maybe a dozen times over because it is such a great example of how to make an announcement. When I need to speak in front of a group, I find watching this again a good reminder of some winning techniques.
Jobs does a lot of things right! Plus, most great speakers tend to have similar strengths even though their personalities come out differently. It's all about fundamentals, really.
I was also taught that the product sells itself. If you've produced something that really fulfills a missing need or demand, you don't even need a huge auditorium to walk around on. The product will promote itself.
Absolutely an A+ . I see an adequate preparedness in his speech, a thorough ownership of his speech content. Total confidence in his product delivery. I can't ask for.a better public speaker 💪
A quick trick for slideshows and presentations: To help create the storyline of the presentation, most people (as do I) are using the slides as chapters and cram the complete story on the slides. Do this: Copy the slideshow, go through every slide, erase everything except one or two words or even a single image. This way, you get a Jobs like slide show, minimalistic. Use your original slides as cue-cards or as handout. Audience attention is directed at the presenter, not the slideshow. Plus, it prevents the presenter from unconsciously reading from the slides, facing away from the audience. BTW, the Keynote app was originally created by Apple for Jobs' keynotes. He could not be caught using Microsoft PowerPoint.
As always, Alex, you are so right on with your critique. I love that you plopped in that "D-" kidding. So fun to listen to you. Thank you. You have helped me immensely with my future public speaking attempts.
Extraordinary content! I have recently discovered your channel and I am impressed by your objective analysis. I also find them very useful and practical to not just only identify the way we give or receive communication, but also how to set our boundaries. You point out all the key aspects that help people be more aware of their psychological shortcomings that come out from the communication we have and also give practical solutions. Thank you so much! 🙏
What’s amazing is that this presentation was done in 2007! Public speakings at the time are not what is today. Steve jobs presentation still holds up highly to today’s standards. But TBH, what kept me engaged was his story telling in which the core driving force is his Passion! Thanks for the video 🙏❤️
I give him an A especially considering he has a multitude of hard tasks running a global billion dollar business. Most CEO’s can barely get a passing grade for presentations without a teleprompter.
still funny that the most important revolution of the iPhone was "internet communication" - nobody had any idea how revolutionary this aspect would become
We're not all born with 10 fingers, Steve was such a player to the crowd! I give this a B+ for, as you mentioned, I also take poorly to the expectation to applaud. Thanks Alex, your productions are always informative and entertaining!
Good video. I think that what made the speech fly was Steve’s persona. Most everyone, especially in the audience, knew how Steve presented new products. So his personality allowed him to do things, such as lots of pauses, slower pacing, and nonverbal behaviors, that would have otherwise not worked for less experienced presenters. I’ll give him a B, keeping in mind he didn’t follow all the rules. But rules were meant to be broken, especially if you have a persona of someone like Steve Jobs. Alex, thanks for your great comments and evaluation of this exceptional product presentation speech.
It was a solid B+ for me. I agree with the pauses and to me the pacing was effected b/c of the pauses. To me the opening and conclusion both felt a bit sterile. The body details were much better. Maybe he really did practice so much it was robotic 😂. I look back at the Ashton Kutcher speech you covered (I know this is apples and oranges) but man that speech moved me. Steve Jobs had the biggest tech breakthrough on his hands, and his presentation was subdued. Perhaps it is due to his nature and him being himself, or maybe presenting this way leads way to let the product shine above the presentation. Either way it was epic and very well done. Thanks for sharing and creating a great video! I learned a lot!
That's fair. I agree that Kutcher's speech was much more passionate. I think it's more about audience and personality as if fits to the situation. Thanks for contributing as always.
I had been using an ordinary cell phone until last December, and finally decided to get myself a smartphone (not an "iPhone" though). It took me a while to get used to it, but after a while, I realized what a wonderful time I'm having every morning and evening in bed listening to a meditation channel on RUclips. An educational channel like yours can be watched while I'm out at the laundromat. Steven Jobs is really a great man so passionate about his creative mind. I know he was into Zen😊 That's awesome!
16:44 Agree with this thought, especially near the start, when 1984 Mcintosh is displayed and then the 1st IPod...it seems that a handful of ppl are seated in the crowd to start clapping and thereafter the rest of the crowd follows... Perhaps, because most ppl didn't know what was about to be revealed to them, they kept anticipating and forgot to clap but soon realized that Mr. Jobs was watching 😂
let me tell you something.. im not communication expert by any means, but ive noticed that, if you know a subject better than the audience, and you know that you know more than them.. you will automatically be confident, and without confidence there will be no effective communication skills for sure.. so most important thing, know the ins and the outs of the subject before you open your mouth
Fantastic presentation by Steve, and he must have a practiced it a few times. I will not put a number to the times he practiced, however, a rehearsal for or 4 or 5 times looks reasonable. Any number more than ten could have a negative effect. Alex, your smile during your presentation gives a glow on your face, and provides a positive effect. Do you practice before making a Video?
I don't "practice" much really as I would for an actual presentation, but I do have notes so I don't forget something important. The benefit of recording is that I can always redo something if I say something that comes out wrong. Then I cut out the mistakes later when I edit.
Thank you Alex, Steve showed a great example of how to effectively market a new product. Jobs's charisma, showmanship, and ability to make complex ideas accessible to a general audience made it a memorable event and set the standard for product launches in the tech industry. I think this review you put together added to its value lots. “home base”, “actively gesturing” “This is a less is more approach” “pauses” = I guess you get to notice and tend to less like them after li10+ and more times. Once or twice, you kind of like them a lot! A + to both of you!
Very good American English to listen and to learn. Not to mention professional way of lecturing and making presentation of innovative hardware. Thank you for your lessons and advises, pleasure to watch and listen 👍👍👍
Keeping in mind that the demo iPhones he had were still far away from functioning stable his confidence is even more astounding. I have watched the whole keynote 30 to 40 times because it is so great, even for Jobs.
when I saw this back in 2007, I thought the cheers for internet communicator was weak, and I wonder if the 3 should be swapped around. Internet communicator, wide screen ipod and revolutionary mobile phone instead....
Thank you for your insights. Personally I liked the 2008 MacBook Air rollout better than this one. This visuals for the iPhone intro are quite good--the rotary phone spoof is a hoot. However, the next year's visuals are even better, in my opinion.
If there’s any imperfection during the pitch, I won’t blame him. Allegedly, the product was not ready and very crash - prone, even during practice they managed to demo everything without crash only several times. I would be sweating gallons if I were him
A+ from my side. The problem-solution slide about keyboard was so effective! Thanks for reviewing, I do agree with you on the pauses and little bit of drama here and there. In hindsight that revolutionary product launch deserved it 😁
"AN IPOD. A PHONE. AND AN INTERNET COMMUNICATIONS DEVICE... ARE YOU GETTING IT?" I remember my Aunt telling me how much she freaked out during that part of the event. I wasn't alive when the phone was announced, but boy I would've freaked out during that announcement as well.
It'd be interesting to analyse Alexander's reaction to Job's speech, especially at 4:05 & at 10:53. He's obviously a massive Apple fanboy. As such it's a sickeningly biased & I'd grade Alex's reaction as a D-.
Wow. Thanks for the video. Definetely the speaker gets an A++ I think that if Jobs was an introvert, he did practiced a lot to achieve high excellence or perfection if Jobs was an extrovert, he rehearsed in his mind and went on stage to naturally flow. What do you think was he an introvert or extrovert?
Good question. I have not heard either way if he was an extrovert of introvert. But I know many introverts who are amazing public speakers and it gives the impression that they are extroverts. I'd be curious to see if that impacts the way they practice. The rumors about Jobs, however, is that he practiced on that very stage at least dozens of times for hours and hours.
@@starchannel123 how is he tricking the viewer exactly? He said they created "multi-touch" which I don't believe that technology was in any device prior to that, and it's more advanced than a regular old touchscreen. I'm pretty sure everyone in that room have already used a touchscreen, they could differentiate between the two.
Free Download 7 Public Speaking Tips for More Confidence: www.alexanderlyon.com/free-resources
This jerk was a liar and a cheat and a con artist. Nothing more than a sales rep. I read that even he did not really believe in the iphone. When you visited his house, everyone had to dump their iphones in a box near the front door. It was never allowed in his home. Yet you can all have your tracking and surveillance devices in yours.
I never bought it in 2007. I still don't buy it. I predicted a host of issues that would result. I was right. We now have a whole generation of young people who cant even talk. Now I'm swamped with complicated apps and security software that takes most of my day wading through. Now a whole generation of fat blobs.And now a cashless economy, and increasing big WEF control. It's all just technocrap future pollution.
I wonder if he went to WEF back then.
I hate Steve Jobs.
Best reveal speech ever - I honestly doubt it will be beaten
I remember watching this announcement live and being so impressed and excited about a silly electronic device. Since then, I think I have watched this maybe a dozen times over because it is such a great example of how to make an announcement. When I need to speak in front of a group, I find watching this again a good reminder of some winning techniques.
I feel like at least 80% of what I have learned from your videos comes together in one video. Sort of like an MBA in one day.
Jobs does a lot of things right! Plus, most great speakers tend to have similar strengths even though their personalities come out differently. It's all about fundamentals, really.
I was also taught that the product sells itself. If you've produced something that really fulfills a missing need or demand, you don't even need a huge auditorium to walk around on. The product will promote itself.
Absolutely an A+ .
I see an adequate preparedness in his speech, a thorough ownership of his speech content.
Total confidence in his product delivery.
I can't ask for.a better public speaker 💪
A quick trick for slideshows and presentations: To help create the storyline of the presentation, most people (as do I) are using the slides as chapters and cram the complete story on the slides.
Do this: Copy the slideshow, go through every slide, erase everything except one or two words or even a single image.
This way, you get a Jobs like slide show, minimalistic.
Use your original slides as cue-cards or as handout.
Audience attention is directed at the presenter, not the slideshow. Plus, it prevents the presenter from unconsciously reading from the slides, facing away from the audience.
BTW, the Keynote app was originally created by Apple for Jobs' keynotes. He could not be caught using Microsoft PowerPoint.
As always, Alex, you are so right on with your critique. I love that you plopped in that "D-" kidding. So fun to listen to you. Thank you. You have helped me immensely with my future public speaking attempts.
Hi, Julie. Thanks for the positive words. I appreciate it.
Extraordinary content! I have recently discovered your channel and I am impressed by your objective analysis. I also find them very useful and practical to not just only identify the way we give or receive communication, but also how to set our boundaries. You point out all the key aspects that help people be more aware of their psychological shortcomings that come out from the communication we have and also give practical solutions. Thank you so much! 🙏
Welcome aboard! Thank you for your thoughts.
Thanks a lot Alex. I find this very useful.
steve was a master at presenting new stuff, simple smart funny passionate.
What’s amazing is that this presentation was done in 2007!
Public speakings at the time are not what is today. Steve jobs presentation still holds up highly to today’s standards. But TBH, what kept me engaged was his story telling in which the core driving force is his Passion! Thanks for the video 🙏❤️
I give him an A especially considering he has a multitude of hard tasks running a global billion dollar business. Most CEO’s can barely get a passing grade for presentations without a teleprompter.
You're not wrong about many CEOs being relatively ineffective speakers.
Fantastic video. Thank you for your great content
still funny that the most important revolution of the iPhone was "internet communication" - nobody had any idea how revolutionary this aspect would become
Absolutely. It gave rise to more informed, but less knowledgeable, people.
We're not all born with 10 fingers, Steve was such a player to the crowd! I give this a B+ for, as you mentioned, I also take poorly to the expectation to applaud. Thanks Alex, your productions are always informative and entertaining!
Thanks, P A.
I agree, Alex. I found his pauses a bit exhausting for the same reasons as you, but it was still an excellent presentation.
I like how Jobs uses a narrative instead of question-answer.
Very true. He tells it all like a story.
Brilliant analysis - clear and concise
Powerful video and conclusion!
Good video. I think that what made the speech fly was Steve’s persona. Most everyone, especially in the audience, knew how Steve presented new products. So his personality allowed him to do things, such as lots of pauses, slower pacing, and nonverbal behaviors, that would have otherwise not worked for less experienced presenters. I’ll give him a B, keeping in mind he didn’t follow all the rules. But rules were meant to be broken, especially if you have a persona of someone like Steve Jobs. Alex, thanks for your great comments and evaluation of this exceptional product presentation speech.
That's fair, Brian.
It was a solid B+ for me. I agree with the pauses and to me the pacing was effected b/c of the pauses. To me the opening and conclusion both felt a bit sterile. The body details were much better. Maybe he really did practice so much it was robotic 😂. I look back at the Ashton Kutcher speech you covered (I know this is apples and oranges) but man that speech moved me. Steve Jobs had the biggest tech breakthrough on his hands, and his presentation was subdued. Perhaps it is due to his nature and him being himself, or maybe presenting this way leads way to let the product shine above the presentation.
Either way it was epic and very well done. Thanks for sharing and creating a great video! I learned a lot!
That's fair. I agree that Kutcher's speech was much more passionate. I think it's more about audience and personality as if fits to the situation. Thanks for contributing as always.
You don't know what you're talking about, this was easily an A+ presentation, you really can't get any better than this.
Funny and confident, loves his product!
I had been using an ordinary cell phone until last December, and finally decided to get myself a smartphone (not an "iPhone" though).
It took me a while to get used to it, but after a while, I realized what a wonderful time I'm having every morning and evening in bed listening to a meditation channel on RUclips. An educational channel like yours can be watched while I'm out at the laundromat. Steven Jobs is really a great man so passionate about his creative mind. I know he was into Zen😊 That's awesome!
16:44 Agree with this thought, especially near the start, when 1984 Mcintosh is displayed and then the 1st IPod...it seems that a handful of ppl are seated in the crowd to start clapping and thereafter the rest of the crowd follows...
Perhaps, because most ppl didn't know what was about to be revealed to them, they kept anticipating and forgot to clap but soon realized that Mr. Jobs was watching 😂
let me tell you something.. im not communication expert by any means, but ive noticed that, if you know a subject better than the audience, and you know that you know more than them.. you will automatically be confident, and without confidence there will be no effective communication skills for sure.. so most important thing, know the ins and the outs of the subject before you open your mouth
Fantastic presentation by Steve, and he must have a practiced it a few times. I will not put a number to the times he practiced, however, a rehearsal for or 4 or 5 times looks reasonable. Any number more than ten could have a negative effect. Alex, your smile during your presentation gives a glow on your face, and provides a positive effect. Do you practice before making a Video?
I don't "practice" much really as I would for an actual presentation, but I do have notes so I don't forget something important. The benefit of recording is that I can always redo something if I say something that comes out wrong. Then I cut out the mistakes later when I edit.
@@alexanderlyon Thanks, Alex.
He was presenting what he invented and whst he knows well, that made him the most confident presenter of all times!
A+++++++++++
My genius, Tim-Cook is also doing well, his one more thing moments are huge too
A+ he changed the entire world in 90 nminutes.
Why am I crying watching this for the nth time
Thank you Alex,
Steve showed a great example of how to effectively market a new product. Jobs's charisma, showmanship, and ability to make complex ideas accessible to a general audience made it a memorable event and set the standard for product launches in the tech industry.
I think this review you put together added to its value lots. “home base”, “actively gesturing” “This is a less is more approach” “pauses” = I guess you get to notice and tend to less like them after li10+ and more times. Once or twice, you kind of like them a lot!
A + to both of you!
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Harber.
Thank you professor
Thanks, Roxani. 🙂
Very good American English to listen and to learn. Not to mention professional way of lecturing and making presentation of innovative hardware. Thank you for your lessons and advises, pleasure to watch and listen 👍👍👍
You are welcome, Anatoly. Thank you for your positive message.
Inspiring.
thanck you
I actually always thought Steve said "you use your fingers too quickly". There should have been a pause.
Keeping in mind that the demo iPhones he had were still far away from functioning stable his confidence is even more astounding. I have watched the whole keynote 30 to 40 times because it is so great, even for Jobs.
when I saw this back in 2007, I thought the cheers for internet communicator was weak, and I wonder if the 3 should be swapped around. Internet communicator, wide screen ipod and revolutionary mobile phone instead....
Thank you for your insights. Personally I liked the 2008 MacBook Air rollout better than this one. This visuals for the iPhone intro are quite good--the rotary phone spoof is a hoot. However, the next year's visuals are even better, in my opinion.
If there’s any imperfection during the pitch, I won’t blame him. Allegedly, the product was not ready and very crash - prone, even during practice they managed to demo everything without crash only several times. I would be sweating gallons if I were him
A+ from my side. The problem-solution slide about keyboard was so effective! Thanks for reviewing, I do agree with you on the pauses and little bit of drama here and there. In hindsight that revolutionary product launch deserved it 😁
Thanks for sharing.
"AN IPOD. A PHONE. AND AN INTERNET COMMUNICATIONS DEVICE... ARE YOU GETTING IT?"
I remember my Aunt telling me how much she freaked out during that part of the event. I wasn't alive when the phone was announced, but boy I would've freaked out during that announcement as well.
It'd be interesting to analyse Alexander's reaction to Job's speech, especially at 4:05 & at 10:53. He's obviously a massive Apple fanboy. As such it's a sickeningly biased & I'd grade Alex's reaction as a D-.
i had a Mcintosh
Damar Hamlin interview Michael Strahan
Wow. Thanks for the video. Definetely the speaker gets an A++
I think that
if Jobs was an introvert, he did practiced a lot to achieve high excellence or perfection
if Jobs was an extrovert, he rehearsed in his mind and went on stage to naturally flow.
What do you think was he an introvert or extrovert?
Good question. I have not heard either way if he was an extrovert of introvert. But I know many introverts who are amazing public speakers and it gives the impression that they are extroverts. I'd be curious to see if that impacts the way they practice. The rumors about Jobs, however, is that he practiced on that very stage at least dozens of times for hours and hours.
Too shelf 😁
RIP
1997 Macworld speech was far more emotional and better.
I'll used to be apple fan after daylight ripper tim coock i'll hate rotten apple
A-
You are fortunate if you can afford an iPhone or iPad.
Yes, they are big bucks.
I actually didn't like this presentation. It was arrogant and pompous. Kinda went with his personality!
I don’t like how he tricks you into thinking apple invented touchscreen.
@@starchannel123 how is he tricking the viewer exactly? He said they created "multi-touch" which I don't believe that technology was in any device prior to that, and it's more advanced than a regular old touchscreen. I'm pretty sure everyone in that room have already used a touchscreen, they could differentiate between the two.