Black Sabbath

When Ozzy Osbourne was starting out, there was no Black Sabbath. There was just some random dude named Ozzy (he was probably sleeping on his mom’s couch at the time), and somehow he got a gig at some random bar, and he needed a band to back him up, so he put up some posters, some friends responded, and that’s how Black Sabbath formed.

Black Sabbath went on to revolutionize rock. They practically invented heavy metal, and as revolutionary as they were, now when you listen to them, you often think, “Well, pretty much all rock sounds that way now.” That’s how you know you’ve revolutionized something: 40 years later, everyone sounds like you.

You might be wondering what this has to do with your presentations, and it’s this:

The world doesn’t need you to hide. It needs you to let your freak flag fly. The board might be asking you to present on last year’s sales, or tell them how that big IT project is going. But that’s just data, that’s not what they really want. What they really want is to know the crazy behind the person who is leading this project.

Black Sabbath didn’t set out to revolutionize rock. They just said, “hey, instead of doing that, let’s try this,” and boom, 40 years later what they did seems obvious, but at the time it wasn’t.

So when you are putting your presentation together, and the little voice in the back of your head says, “instead of that, try this,” listen to it.

Related Posts

The founder-led sales myth: So what?

Last week I wrote about the myth of founder-led sales. If you missed that one, you can read it here: https://recipientlabs.com/the-myth-of-founder-led-sales/ You might wonder, "So what?" or "Why would anyone care?" Here's one of the reasons I mentioned it: Founders...

The myth of founder-led sales

I've seen the myth stated and restated for years, and it is time for us to admit that it is an inaccurate description of the world. The myth is that early in a company's history, it evolves past the point at which the head is leading the sales. The myth is that this...

Half-finished paintings

On Saturday afternoons when I was a kid about 10 years old, my Grandpa Hofer used to sit me and my younger brother Mark, and our two cousins, Heather and James, down to read us stories from the Bible. The day usually started earlier with the four of us cousins, three...