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How Steve Jobs pitches a startup

October 20th, 2008

Watch the master pitch man, Steve Jobs, analyze the market for NeXT workstations in Part 1 of his Chalk Talk. He explains:

“Who is our target customer? Why are they selecting our products over our competiton’s? And what distribution channels are we going to use to reach these customers?”

Steve covers a handful of the slides that you see in a typical startup deck: Marketing, Sales, Competition, and a little bit of Problem and Solution. We should all strive to present with Steve’s clarity and simplicity.

Here’s part two of the video. Thanks to Daring Fireball for pointing me to this video.

Learn more about: Case Studies · Pitching

12 responses so far · Comments RSS

# Steve Dekorte · Oct 20, 2008

In retrospect he was right about the custom apps but was overly optimist on the numbers. NeXT sold 20,000 computers in 1992 (mostly to Wall Street and the CIA).

It’s curious that relatively little has been done to extend their custom app development strength over the last 20 years (now that NeXTstep is called OSX). OSX’s development environment is, IMO, only a small step above that of NeXTstep in 1990. The biggest change is the recent addition of garbage collection to Objective-C, though it still isn’t widely supported (some frameworks still don’t work with it).

 

# wisher · Oct 20, 2008

Market analysis and the search of users’ needs.
This video should be taught in schools.

 

# CVOS man · Oct 20, 2008

What is really impressive is Steve’s frontal attack on a competitor 10000 times his size. He isn’t afraid of any company, no matter their size.

His advantage: he never perceives himself as an underdog.

 

# Saku · Oct 20, 2008

Great stuff. Covers the fundamentals very well.

 

# Swedish For Idiots · Oct 21, 2008

What’s interesting-whether right or wrong in terms of final market share-is the clarity with which Jobs presents his ideas. He doesn’t waste words and, thus, gets one’s attention.

 

# Jason Davies · Oct 21, 2008

Steve Jobs is the don.

 

# Andrew Laffoon · Oct 21, 2008

Wow, love the video. I think this format would be a great way to send out regular investor/team updates. Instead of calling an in-person meeting, you can communicate your thoughts with a video.

Very cool!

Andrew

 

# Stephan Schmidt · Oct 22, 2008

Best pitcher ever. Nice to see it in him in 1990 and it’s still there 2008.

Just bad luck that the PC market grew into the power&networked market and killed the NeXT target market. But my NeXT color cube at the university was an awesome machine.

Peace
-stephan

 

# Vanessa · Oct 22, 2008

Steve Jobs is magnetic in his simple approach to laying the foundation of taking a startup company head to head with the big competitors of the time.

Thanks for this timeless pitch!

 

# Anonymous · Oct 23, 2008

Well someone has to point out to the drooling fanbots the folly of mindless prostration in His presence.

While you’re praising “market analysis and the search of users’ needs”, the “frontal attack”, and “best pitch ever”, perhaps you should take note of a couple inconvenient truths.

He was spectacularly wrong. About user needs. About the size of the market. About the market segmentation. About the basis of competition. About who the real competition was. About the value proposition. About the selling strategy. Almost everything He said in these videos was proven wrong.

NeXT was a failure because He was, in this case, clueless about the customers and the competition. He has done a lot of things well, but NeXT belongs in the Business Hubris Hall of Shame. What’s really sad for the fanbots is that even He has admitted it.

It doesn’t matter how beautiful the presentation, if the content is full of crap, as in these videos, then it is a horrible pitch.

# Jeff · Oct 23, 2008

>It doesn’t matter how beautiful the presentation,
> if the content is full of crap, as in these videos, then
> it is a horrible pitch.

You’re missing the point. One can always look backward and find mistakes. But business make decisions for tomorrow, not yesterday. Given what was known in 1990, Steve lays down a plausible, coherent, and compelling vision of the future. And that’s why he and others like him are leaders, rather than whiners.

 
 

# Anonymous · Jan 16, 2009

Interesting video, thanks for posting it.

For anyone who is unable to view the video or would just prefer to read the content in text form, we have created a transcript of the video here:

http://public.youtranscript.com/zs/1.html

Thanks, YouTranscript

 

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