Jobs Style Generator
Overview
Transform ordinary text into Steve Jobs' legendary presentation style - simple, powerful, and unforgettable. Make your message resonate like an Apple keynote.
When to Use
- User wants to make text sound like a product launch
- User mentions "Jobs style", "Apple keynote", "like Steve"
- User needs persuasive presentation content
- User wants to make announcements impactful
Jobs' Communication DNA
1. The Power of Three
- Always present in threes
- "iPod. iPhone. iPad."
- Three features, three benefits, three points
- Creates rhythm and memorability
2. Simplicity First
- One idea per slide
- Short, powerful sentences
- No jargon, pure clarity
- "It just works"
3. The Narrative Arc
- Set up the problem
- Create tension
- Deliver the solution
- End with vision
4. Signature Phrases
- "One more thing..."
- "Magical"
- "Revolutionary"
- "Incredibly"
- "The best [product] we've ever made"
5. Visual Storytelling
- Minimal text
- Powerful imagery
- Strategic pauses
- Build anticipation
The Jobs Presentation Formula
Act 1: The Setup
- Start with a story or vision
- Define the problem clearly
- Make it relatable and urgent
Act 2: The Tension
- Show current solutions failing
- Highlight the gap
- Build anticipation for the answer
Act 3: The Reveal
- The product/solution
- Why it's revolutionary
- Demo or proof
Act 4: The Closer
- Recap the benefits
- Price and availability
- Vision for the future
- "One more thing..." (optional)
Transformation Process
Step 1: Identify Core Message
What's the ONE thing you want people to remember?
Step 2: Apply Jobs Filter
- Simplify to essence
- Remove all jargon
- Add emotional weight
- Structure in threes
Step 3: Build the Drama
- Create anticipation
- Use strategic reveals
- Add the "wow" moment
Step 4: Polish
- Short sentences
- Powerful words
- Memorable close
Examples
Example 1: Product Launch
Before: "We are launching a new phone with a better camera and faster processor."
After: "Today, we're going to reinvent the phone.
It has three revolutionary features: First, a camera that sees in the dark. Second, a processor that thinks faster than you. Third, a battery that lasts... forever.
This is iPhone 16. The best iPhone we've ever made."
Example 2: Company Announcement
Before: "Our company reached 1 million users last month."
After: "1 million users.
Think about that for a moment.
In just 12 months, 1 million people have joined our journey. That's not just a number. That's a movement.
And we're just getting started."
Example 3: Feature Announcement
Before: "We added a new search feature that is faster."
After: "We asked ourselves: Why does search have to be slow?
What if... search was instant?
Today, I'm thrilled to announce: Instant Search.
You type. It finds. Just like magic."
Example 4: Vision Statement
Before: "We want to be the market leader in our industry."
After: "We have a simple mission: To put a dent in the universe.
Every product we make. Every decision we take. It's all toward one goal: Making the world better than we found it.
That's who we are."
Example 5: The "One More Thing"
Before: "Also, we have one more product."
After: "And there's... one more thing.
We've been working on this for five years.
It's the most ambitious product we've ever created.
Introducing...
[Product Name].
Boom."
Usage Guidelines
- Less is more - Remove words, keep impact
- Use the pause - Let ideas sink in
- Three is magic - Always group in threes
- Build anticipation - Make them wait for it
- End memorably - "Boom" or "One more thing"
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Too many features (pick three)
- Long explanations (show, don't tell)
- Weak openings (start with a bang)
- Missing the reveal moment
- Forgetting the emotional connection
Quick Reference
| Original Phrase | Jobs Translation |
|---|---|
| Good product | "Revolutionary" / "Magical" |
| New feature | "We call it [Name]" |
| Better than before | "The best we've ever made" |
| It works well | "It just works" |
| Many options | "Three things" |
Ready to make your message legendary? 🍎