ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Nancy Duarte - CEO, presentation designer
Nancy Duarte believes that ideas are the most powerful tools people have. Her passion is to help every person learn to communicate their world-changing idea effectively.

Why you should listen

Nancy Duarte is an expert in presentation design and principal of Duarte Design, where she has served as CEO for 21 years. Nancy speaks around the world, seeking to improve the power of public presentations. She is the author of Slide:ology: The Art and Science of Creating Great Presentations as well as Resonate: Present Visual Stories that Transform Audiences and the recent HBR Guide to Persuasive Presentations.

Watch Duarte's recent webinar on making presentations remotely >>

More profile about the speaker
Nancy Duarte | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxEast

Nancy Duarte: The secret structure of great talks

Filmed:
2,423,996 views

From the "I have a dream" speech to Steve Jobs' iPhone launch, many great talks have a common structure that helps their message resonate with listeners. In this talk, presentation expert Nancy Duarte shares practical lessons on how to make a powerful call-to-action.
- CEO, presentation designer
Nancy Duarte believes that ideas are the most powerful tools people have. Her passion is to help every person learn to communicate their world-changing idea effectively. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
It's really, really great to be here.
0
0
2616
00:14
You have the power to change the world.
1
2640
1896
00:16
I’m not saying that to be cliché,
2
4560
1656
00:18
you really have the power
to change the world.
3
6240
2320
00:21
Deep inside of you,
every single one of you
4
9040
2096
00:23
has the most powerful device known to man.
5
11160
3240
00:27
And that's an idea.
6
15080
1200
00:29
So a single idea, from the human mind,
7
17240
3056
00:32
it could start a groundswell,
8
20320
1536
00:33
it could be a flash point for a movement
9
21880
2776
00:36
and it can actually rewrite our future.
10
24680
2776
00:39
But an idea is powerless
11
27480
2696
00:42
if it stays inside of you.
12
30200
1816
00:44
If you never pull that idea out
for others to contend with,
13
32040
3056
00:47
it will die with you.
14
35120
1200
00:49
Now, maybe some of you guys
have tried to convey your idea
15
37120
3296
00:52
and it wasn't adopted, it was rejected,
16
40440
1896
00:54
and some other mediocre
or average idea was adopted.
17
42360
2856
00:57
And the only difference between those two
is in the way it was communicated.
18
45240
4336
01:01
Because if you communicate an idea
in a way that resonates,
19
49600
2816
01:04
change will happen,
and you can change the world.
20
52440
2640
01:07
In my family, we collect
these vintage European posters.
21
55880
2656
01:10
Every time we go to Maui,
we go to the dealer there,
22
58560
2456
01:13
and he turns these great big posters.
23
61040
1816
01:14
I love them. They all have one idea
24
62880
1816
01:16
and one really clear visual
that conveys the idea.
25
64720
2576
01:19
They are about the size of a mattress.
They're really big.
26
67320
2776
01:22
They're not as thick as a mattress,
but they're big.
27
70120
2496
01:24
And the guy will tell the story
as he turns the pages.
28
72640
2536
01:27
And this one time
I was flanked by my two kids
29
75200
2176
01:29
and he turns the page
and this poster is underneath,
30
77400
2776
01:32
and right when I lean forward and say,
31
80200
1856
01:34
"Oh my God, I love this poster,"
32
82080
2656
01:36
both of my kids jumped back
and they are like,
33
84760
2176
01:38
"Oh my God, mom, it's you."
34
86960
1336
01:40
And this is the poster.
35
88320
1216
01:41
(Laughter)
36
89560
1296
01:42
See, I'm like "Fire it up!"
37
90880
2256
01:45
The thing I loved
about this poster was the irony.
38
93160
2536
01:47
Here's this chick all fired up,
headed into battle --
39
95720
2496
01:50
as the standard bearer --
40
98240
1256
01:51
and she's holding these
little Suavitos baking spices,
41
99520
3016
01:54
like something so seemingly insignificant,
42
102560
2856
01:57
though she's willing to risk, you know,
life and limb to promote this thing.
43
105440
3920
02:02
So if you are to swap out
those little Suavitos baking spices
44
110120
3576
02:05
with a presentation --
45
113720
1256
02:07
Yeah, it's me, pretty fired up.
46
115000
2336
02:09
I was fired up about presentations
47
117360
1656
02:11
back when it wasn't cool
to be fired up about presentations.
48
119040
3216
02:14
I really think they have the power
to change the world
49
122280
2576
02:16
when you communicate
effectively through them.
50
124880
2416
02:19
And changing the world is hard.
51
127320
2176
02:21
It won't happen with just one person
with one single idea.
52
129520
3376
02:24
That idea has got to spread,
or it won't be effective.
53
132920
3376
02:28
So it has to come out of you
54
136320
1816
02:30
and out into the open for people to see.
55
138160
2120
02:33
And the way that ideas are conveyed
the most effectively is through story.
56
141600
4376
02:38
You know, for thousands of years,
57
146000
1616
02:39
illiterate generations would pass on
their values and their culture
58
147640
3416
02:43
from generation to generation,
59
151080
1696
02:44
and they would stay intact.
60
152800
1656
02:46
So there's something kind of magical
about a story structure
61
154480
2856
02:49
that makes it so that when it's assembled,
62
157360
2176
02:51
it can be ingested and then recalled
63
159560
2256
02:53
by the person who's receiving it.
64
161840
1600
02:56
So basically a story,
you get a physical reaction;
65
164600
3656
03:00
your heart can race, your eyes can dilate,
66
168280
2816
03:03
you could talk about,
"Oh, I got a chill down my spine"
67
171120
2616
03:05
or, "I could feel it
in the pit of my stomach."
68
173760
2216
03:08
We actually physically react
when someone is telling us a story.
69
176000
3056
03:11
So even though the stage is the same,
a story can be told,
70
179080
2736
03:13
but once a presentation is told,
it completely flatlines.
71
181840
2696
03:16
And I wanted to figure out why.
72
184560
1536
03:18
Why is it that we physically sit
with rapt attention during a story,
73
186120
3376
03:21
but it just dies for a presentation.
74
189520
1760
03:24
So I wanted to figure out, how do you
incorporate story into presentations.
75
192200
3536
03:27
So we've had thousands of presentations
back at the shop --
76
195760
2816
03:30
hundreds of thousands
of presentations, actually,
77
198600
2336
03:32
so I knew the context
of a really bad presentation.
78
200960
2456
03:35
I decided to study cinema and literature,
79
203440
2656
03:38
and really dig in
and figure out what was going on
80
206120
2376
03:40
and why it was broken.
81
208520
1400
03:42
So, I want to show you
some of the findings
82
210480
2896
03:45
that led up to what I've uncovered
as a presentation form.
83
213400
3520
03:50
So it was obvious to start with Aristotle,
84
218000
2056
03:52
he had a three-act structure,
a beginning, a middle and an end.
85
220080
2976
03:55
We studied poetics and rhetoric,
86
223080
1576
03:56
and a lot of presentations don't even
have that in its most simple form.
87
224680
3456
04:00
And then when I moved on
to studying hero archetypes,
88
228160
2496
04:02
I thought, "OK, the presenter is the hero,
89
230680
2056
04:04
they're up on the stage,
they're the star of the show."
90
232760
2656
04:07
It's easy to feel, as the presenter,
that you're the star of the show.
91
235440
3376
04:10
I realized right away,
that that's really broken.
92
238840
2336
04:13
Because I have an idea,
I can put it out there,
93
241200
2856
04:16
but if you guys don't grab that idea
and hold it as dear,
94
244080
2696
04:18
the idea goes nowhere
and the world is never changed.
95
246800
2496
04:21
So in reality,
the presenter isn't the hero,
96
249320
2216
04:23
the audience is the hero of our idea.
97
251560
2520
04:26
So if you look at
Joseph Campbell's hero's journey,
98
254680
2416
04:29
just in the front part, there were
some really interesting insights there.
99
257120
3476
04:32
So there is this likable hero
in an ordinary world,
100
260620
2396
04:35
and they get this call to adventure.
101
263040
1736
04:36
So the world is
kind of brought out of balance.
102
264800
2216
04:39
And at first they're resistant.
103
267040
1536
04:40
They're like, "I don't know
if I want to jump into this,"
104
268600
2667
04:43
and then a mentor comes along
105
271291
1405
04:44
and helps them move
from their ordinary world
106
272720
2136
04:46
into a special world.
107
274880
1216
04:48
And that's the role of the presenter.
108
276120
1816
04:49
It's to be the mentor.
You're not Luke Skywalker, you're Yoda.
109
277960
2976
04:52
You're the one
that actually helps the audience
110
280960
2216
04:55
move from one thing
and into your new special idea,
111
283200
3576
04:58
and that's the power of a story.
112
286800
1524
05:01
So in its most simple structure,
it's a three-part structure of a story.
113
289240
3856
05:05
You have a likable hero who has a desire,
114
293120
2736
05:07
they encounter a roadblock
115
295880
1656
05:09
and ultimately they emerge, transform,
and that's the basic structure.
116
297560
4440
05:14
But it wasn't until I came across
a Gustav Freytag's pyramid --
117
302720
3336
05:18
he drew this shape in 1863.
118
306080
2936
05:21
Now, he was a German dramatist ...
119
309040
3296
05:24
he was a German dramatist
120
312360
1256
05:25
and he believed
there is a five-act structure,
121
313640
2896
05:28
which has an exposition, a rising action,
122
316560
3016
05:31
a climax, a falling action
and a denouement,
123
319600
2576
05:34
which is the unraveling
or the resolution of the story.
124
322200
3136
05:37
I love this shape.
So we talk about shapes.
125
325360
2096
05:39
A story has an arc --
well, an arc is a shape.
126
327480
2376
05:41
We talk about classical music
having a shapeliness to it.
127
329880
3200
05:45
So I thought, hey,
if presentations had a shape,
128
333600
2256
05:47
what would that shape be?
129
335880
1256
05:49
And how did the greatest
communicators use that shape,
130
337160
3056
05:52
or do they use a shape?
131
340240
1536
05:53
So I'll never forget,
it was a Saturday morning.
132
341800
2256
05:56
After all this study --
it was a couple of years of study --
133
344080
2856
05:58
I drew a shape.
134
346960
1216
06:00
And I was like,
"Oh my gosh, if this shape is real,
135
348200
2416
06:02
I should be able to take
two completely different presentations
136
350640
3016
06:05
and overlay it, and it should be true."
137
353680
1856
06:07
So I took the obvious,
138
355560
1256
06:08
I took Martin Luther King's
"I Have a Dream" speech,
139
356840
2456
06:11
and I took Steve Jobs'
2007 iPhone launch speech,
140
359320
2376
06:13
I overlaid it over it, and it worked.
141
361720
2336
06:16
I sat in my office, just astounded.
142
364080
1856
06:17
I actually cried a little,
143
365960
1856
06:19
because I was like,
"I've been given this gift,"
144
367840
2376
06:22
and here it is,
145
370240
1216
06:23
this is the shape of a great presentation.
146
371480
2040
06:26
Isn't it amazing?
147
374520
1576
06:28
(Laughter)
148
376120
1216
06:29
I was crying.
149
377360
1216
06:30
I want to walk you through it,
it's pretty astounding.
150
378600
2576
06:33
There is a beginning, a middle and an end,
and I want to walk you through it.
151
381200
3616
06:36
Because the greatest communicators --
I went through speeches, everything --
152
384840
3616
06:40
I can overlay the shape.
153
388480
1216
06:41
Even the Gettysburg Address
follows the shape.
154
389720
2176
06:43
At the beginning of any presentation,
you need to establish what is.
155
391920
3216
06:47
You know, here's the status quo,
here's what's going on.
156
395160
2656
06:49
And then you need
to compare that to what could be.
157
397840
2416
06:52
You need to make that gap
as big as possible,
158
400280
2856
06:55
because there is this commonplace
of the status quo,
159
403160
3456
06:58
and you need to contrast that
with the loftiness of your idea.
160
406640
2936
07:01
So it's like, you know,
here's the past, here's the present,
161
409600
2856
07:04
but look at our future.
162
412480
1240
07:06
Here's a problem,
but look at that problem removed.
163
414240
2816
07:09
Here's a roadblock,
let's annihilate the roadblock.
164
417080
2976
07:12
You need to really amplify that gap.
165
420080
2056
07:14
This would be like
the inciting incident in a movie.
166
422160
2816
07:17
That's when suddenly
the audience has to contend
167
425000
2256
07:19
with what you just put out there:
168
427280
1576
07:20
"Wow, do I want to agree
with this and align with it or not?"
169
428880
2896
07:23
And in the rest of your presentation
should support that.
170
431800
2720
07:27
So the middle goes back and forth,
171
435280
2216
07:29
it traverses between
what is and what could be,
172
437520
2216
07:31
what is and what could be.
173
439760
1296
07:33
Because what you are trying to do
174
441080
1616
07:34
is make the status quo
and the normal unappealing,
175
442720
3096
07:37
and you're wanting to draw them
176
445840
1496
07:39
towards what could be
in the future with your idea adopted.
177
447360
2800
07:42
Now, on your way to change the world,
people are going to resist.
178
450560
3056
07:45
They're not going to be excited,
they may love the world the way it is.
179
453640
3416
07:49
So you'll encounter resistance.
180
457080
1536
07:50
That's why you
have to move back and forth.
181
458640
2016
07:52
It's similar to sailing.
182
460680
1296
07:54
When you're sailing against the wind
and there is wind resistance,
183
462000
3136
07:57
you have to move your boat back and forth,
and back and forth.
184
465160
3176
08:00
That's so you can capture the wind.
185
468360
1696
08:02
You have to actually
capture the resistance
186
470080
2016
08:04
coming against you when you're sailing.
187
472120
1936
08:06
Now interesting,
if you capture the wind just right
188
474080
2416
08:08
and you set your sail just right,
189
476520
1616
08:10
your ship will actually
sail faster than the wind itself.
190
478160
2696
08:12
It is a physics phenomenon.
191
480880
1336
08:14
So by planting in there
192
482240
1256
08:15
the way they're going to resist
between what is and what can be,
193
483520
3016
08:18
is actually going to draw
them towards your idea
194
486560
2256
08:20
quicker than should you not do that.
195
488840
1736
08:22
So after you've moved back and forth
between what is and what could be,
196
490600
3456
08:26
the last turning point
is a call to action,
197
494080
2016
08:28
which every presentation should have,
but at the very end.
198
496120
2816
08:30
You need to describe the world
as a new bliss.
199
498960
2176
08:33
"This is utopia with my idea adopted."
200
501160
2296
08:35
"This is the way
the world is going to look,
201
503480
2096
08:37
when we join together
and we solve this big problem."
202
505600
2496
08:40
You need to use that as your ending,
203
508120
1736
08:41
in a very poetic and dramatic way.
204
509880
2040
08:45
So, interestingly, when I was done,
205
513080
2416
08:47
I was like, "You know what?
I could use this as an analysis tool."
206
515520
3495
08:51
I actually transcribe speeches,
207
519039
2017
08:53
and I would actually map out,
how much they map to this tool.
208
521080
3416
08:56
So I want to show you some of that today,
209
524520
1953
08:58
and I want to start
with the very two people
210
526497
2079
09:00
that I used when I first did.
211
528600
1416
09:02
Here's Mr. Jobs,
has completely changed the world.
212
530040
2776
09:04
Changed the world of personal computing,
changed the music industry
213
532840
3176
09:08
and now he's on his way
to change the mobile device industry.
214
536040
2936
09:11
So he's definitely changed the world.
215
539000
1896
09:12
And this is the shape
of his iPhone launch 2007,
216
540920
2976
09:15
when he launched his iPhone.
217
543920
1376
09:17
It's a 90-minute talk
and you can see he starts with what is,
218
545320
2896
09:20
traverses back and forth
and ends with what could be.
219
548240
2560
09:23
So I want to zoom in on this:
220
551800
1816
09:25
the white line
is him speaking, he's talking.
221
553640
3336
09:29
The next color line
you'll see popped up there,
222
557000
2216
09:31
that's when he cuts to video.
223
559240
1416
09:32
So he's adding some variety
and he cuts to demo.
224
560680
2256
09:34
So it's not just him
talking the whole time.
225
562960
2096
09:37
And these lines are representative there.
226
565080
2440
09:40
And then towards the end
you'll see a blue line,
227
568400
2256
09:42
which will be the guest speaker.
228
570680
1576
09:44
So this is where it gets
kind of interesting:
229
572280
2136
09:46
every tick mark here
is when he made them laugh.
230
574440
2296
09:48
And every tick mark here
is when he made them clap.
231
576760
2496
09:51
They are so involved physically,
232
579280
1856
09:53
they are physically reacting
to what he is saying,
233
581160
2376
09:55
which is actually fantastic,
234
583560
1376
09:56
because then you know
you have the audience in your hand.
235
584960
3056
10:00
So he kicks off what could be with,
236
588040
3096
10:03
"This is a day I've been looking
forward to for two and a half years."
237
591160
3336
10:06
So he is launching a product
238
594520
1416
10:07
that he's known about already
for a couple of years.
239
595960
2456
10:10
So this is not a new product to him.
240
598440
1736
10:12
But look at this,
241
600200
1216
10:13
he does this other thing: he marvels.
242
601440
1816
10:15
He marvels at his own product.
243
603280
1456
10:16
He marvels himself
more than the audience laughs or claps.
244
604760
2736
10:19
So he is like, "Isn't this awesome?
Isn't this beautiful?"
245
607520
3496
10:23
He is modeling for the audience
what he wants them to feel.
246
611040
3576
10:26
So he is actually doing a job
of compelling them to feel a certain way.
247
614640
4040
10:31
So he kicks off with what could be with,
"Every once in a while,
248
619440
3496
10:34
a revolutionary product comes along
that changes everything."
249
622960
2936
10:37
So he starts to kick in
and talk about his new product.
250
625920
2616
10:40
Now, at the beginning of it,
he actually keeps the phone off.
251
628560
2896
10:43
You'll see that the line
is pretty white up until this point,
252
631480
3056
10:46
so he goes off between,
253
634560
1416
10:48
"Here's this new phone,
and here's the sucky competitors.
254
636000
2936
10:50
Here's this new phone,
and here's the sucky competitors."
255
638960
3216
10:54
And then, right about here,
he has the star moment --
256
642200
2776
10:57
and that something we'll always remember.
257
645000
2096
10:59
He turns the phone on.
258
647120
1496
11:00
The audience sees scrolling
for the first time,
259
648640
2216
11:02
you can hear the oxygen
sucked out of the room.
260
650880
2216
11:05
They gasped. You can actually hear it.
261
653120
1856
11:07
So he creates a moment
that they'll always remember.
262
655000
2456
11:09
So if we move along this model,
you can see the blue,
263
657480
2496
11:12
where the external speakers are going,
264
660000
2016
11:14
and towards the bottom right,
the line breaks.
265
662040
2176
11:16
That's because his clicker broke.
266
664240
1616
11:17
He wants to keep
this heightened sense of excitement.
267
665880
2496
11:20
He tells a personal story,
268
668400
1496
11:21
right there, where
the technology didn't work.
269
669920
2176
11:24
So he's the master communicator,
270
672120
1576
11:25
and he turns to story
to keep the audience involved.
271
673720
2440
11:28
So the top right
he ends with the new bliss.
272
676600
2376
11:31
He leaves them with the promise
273
679000
1576
11:32
that Apple will continue
to build revolutionary new products.
274
680600
3576
11:36
And he says,
275
684200
1200
11:38
"There's an old Wayne Gretzky
quote that I love:
276
686320
2256
11:40
'I skate to where the puck is going to be,
not to where it has been.'
277
688600
3256
11:43
We've always tried to do that
at Apple since the very beginning
278
691880
2976
11:46
and we always will."
279
694880
1256
11:48
So he ends with the new bliss.
280
696160
1456
11:49
So let's look at Mr. King.
281
697640
1256
11:50
He was an amazing visionary, a clergyman
282
698920
2536
11:53
who spent his life
working hard for equality.
283
701480
2656
11:56
And this is the shape
of the "I Have a Dream" speech.
284
704160
2656
11:58
You can see he starts with what is,
285
706840
1696
12:00
moves back and forth
between what is and what could be,
286
708560
2576
12:03
and ends with a very poetic new bliss,
which is the famous part we all know.
287
711160
4136
12:07
So I'm going to spread it out
a little bit here,
288
715320
2256
12:09
stretch it for you,
289
717600
1656
12:11
and what I'm doing here is
I put the actual transcript there
290
719280
2856
12:14
along with the text.
291
722160
1216
12:15
I know you can't read it.
292
723400
1216
12:16
But at the end of every line break,
I broke the line,
293
724640
2496
12:19
because he took a breath and he paused.
294
727160
1896
12:21
Now he was a Southern Baptist preacher,
most people hadn't heard that,
295
729080
3336
12:24
so he had a real cadence and a rhythm
that was really new for people there.
296
732440
3536
12:28
So I want to cover up
these lines of text with a bar
297
736000
2496
12:30
because I want to use this bar
as an information device here.
298
738520
2858
12:33
So let's walk through
how he actually spoke to the people.
299
741920
2880
12:38
The blue bars here
are going to be when he used
300
746040
2216
12:40
the actual rhetorical device
of repetition.
301
748280
2096
12:42
So he was repeating himself,
302
750400
1376
12:43
he was using the same words and phrases,
303
751800
1936
12:45
so people could remember and recall them.
304
753760
2120
12:48
But then he also used
a lot of metaphors and visual words.
305
756640
2736
12:51
This was a way to take
really complicated ideas
306
759400
2536
12:53
and make them memorable
and knowledgeable, so people got it.
307
761960
2976
12:56
He actually created very --
308
764960
1496
12:58
almost like scenes
with his words to make it
309
766480
2136
13:00
so they could envision what he was saying.
310
768640
2000
13:03
And then there were also a lot of familiar
songs and scriptures that he used.
311
771560
3656
13:07
This is just the front end of it
that you're seeing.
312
775240
2496
13:09
And then he also made
a lot of political references
313
777760
2416
13:12
of the promises
that were made to the people.
314
780200
2136
13:14
So if we look at
the very first end of what is,
315
782360
2216
13:16
at the very end of what is
was the very first time
316
784600
2376
13:19
that people actually clapped
and roared really loud.
317
787000
2616
13:21
So the end of what is
what he did is he said,
318
789640
2136
13:23
"America has given
the Negro people a bad check,
319
791800
2256
13:26
a check which has come back
marked insufficient funds."
320
794080
2616
13:28
Well, everyone knows what it's like
to not have money in your account.
321
796720
3296
13:32
So he used the metaphor
people were very familiar with.
322
800040
2616
13:34
But when they really charged up,
323
802680
1576
13:36
the very first time
they really screamed was:
324
804280
2136
13:38
"So we have come to cash this check,
325
806440
2056
13:40
a check that will give us upon demand
326
808520
2096
13:42
the riches of freedom
and the security of justice."
327
810640
2776
13:45
That's when they really clapped.
328
813440
1576
13:47
It was when he compared
what currently is to what could be.
329
815040
3136
13:50
So when we move along
a little farther in the model,
330
818200
2536
13:52
you'll see it goes back and forth
at a more frenzied pace.
331
820760
2896
13:55
And this is when he goes
back and forth, and back and forth.
332
823680
2856
13:58
Now the audience was in a frenzy.
333
826560
1616
14:00
They were all excited,
and so you can actually do this
334
828200
2576
14:02
to keep them in a heightened
sense of excitement.
335
830800
2600
14:06
So he says, "I have a dream
336
834080
1480
14:08
that one day this nation will rise up
and live out the meaning of its creed.
337
836720
4376
14:13
'We hold these truths to be self-evident,
that all men are created equal.'"
338
841120
3696
14:16
So he uses the little orange text there
to remind them of the promise
339
844840
3256
14:20
that the politicians had made to him
or that this country had made.
340
848120
3176
14:23
Then he moves back and forth between
341
851320
1736
14:25
"I have a dream that one day,
I have a dream that one day,
342
853080
2715
14:27
I have a dream that one day,"
343
855819
1397
14:29
and at the end,
it gets really interesting.
344
857240
2096
14:31
Because he uses --
you can look at the four shades of green,
345
859360
2856
14:34
there's a lot of blue there,
which was a lot of repetition --
346
862240
2896
14:37
he had a heightened sense of repetition.
347
865160
1936
14:39
And the green was a heightened sense
of songs and scriptures.
348
867120
3136
14:42
So the first batch of green
349
870280
1776
14:44
was the actual scripture
from the Book of Isaiah.
350
872080
2536
14:46
The second batch of green
was "My Country, 'Tis of Thee."
351
874640
3256
14:49
Now, that's a familiar song
that was specifically very significant
352
877920
3296
14:53
for the black people at the time,
353
881240
1616
14:54
because this song was the song they
chose to change the words to as an outcry,
354
882880
4216
14:59
saying that promises had not been kept.
355
887120
1960
15:01
So the third batch of green was actually
a stanza from "My Country, 'Tis of Thee."
356
889720
4016
15:05
And then the fourth was a Negro spiritual.
357
893760
2160
15:08
"Free at last! Free at last!
Thank God Almighty, I'm free at last!"
358
896800
3143
15:11
So what he did is he actually reached
inside of the hearts of the audience.
359
899967
4369
15:16
He pulled from scriptures,
which is important.
360
904360
2176
15:18
He pulled from songs
that they'd sung together
361
906560
2216
15:20
as an outcry against this outrage,
362
908800
1656
15:22
and he used those as a device
to connect and resonate with the audience.
363
910480
3416
15:25
Ending -- painting a picture
of this new bliss,
364
913920
2296
15:28
using the very things inside of them
that they already held as sacred.
365
916240
3440
15:33
So he was a great man.
He had a big, big dream.
366
921080
2856
15:35
There's a lot of people here,
you guys have really big dreams.
367
923960
2936
15:38
You have really big ideas inside of you
368
926920
1936
15:40
that you need to get out.
369
928880
1216
15:42
But you know what? We encounter hardships.
370
930120
2000
15:44
It's not easy to change the world;
371
932144
1632
15:45
it's a big job.
372
933800
1536
15:47
You know he was --
373
935360
1256
15:48
his house was bombed,
he was stabbed with a letter opener,
374
936640
2736
15:51
ultimately, he lost his life,
375
939400
1416
15:52
you know, for what he cared about.
376
940840
1816
15:54
But a lot of us aren't going to
be required to pay that kind of sacrifice.
377
942680
4096
15:58
But what happens is
378
946800
1256
16:00
that it basically is a little bit
like that basic story structure.
379
948080
3296
16:03
Life can be like that.
380
951400
1376
16:04
You know, you guys are all likable people,
381
952800
2256
16:07
you have a desire,
you encounter roadblocks,
382
955080
3056
16:10
and we stop there.
383
958160
1376
16:11
We're just like, you know,
"I had this idea,
384
959560
2096
16:13
but I'm not going to put it out there.
385
961680
1856
16:15
It's been rejected."
386
963560
1256
16:16
You know, we self-sabotage our own ideas,
387
964840
3896
16:20
we just butt up against the roadblocks
and butt up against the roadblocks
388
968760
3456
16:24
instead of choosing
to let the struggle transform us
389
972240
2456
16:26
and choosing to go ahead
and have a dream and make it real.
390
974720
3240
16:30
And you know, if anyone --
if I can do this, anybody can do this.
391
978400
4256
16:34
I was raised in an economically
and emotionally starved environment.
392
982680
3696
16:38
First time I got to go to a camp
with my sister, I was abused.
393
986400
3656
16:42
Wasn't the first time I was abused,
it was just the most aggressive.
394
990080
3216
16:45
And my mom and dad --
they married each other three times,
395
993320
2736
16:48
(Audience murmurs)
396
996080
1216
16:49
Yeah, that was tumultuous,
and when they weren't fighting
397
997320
3016
16:52
they were helping sober up
some alcoholic that was living with us
398
1000360
3096
16:55
because they were both sober alcoholics.
399
1003480
1936
16:57
So my mom abandoned us
when I was sixteen years old.
400
1005440
2456
16:59
And I took on a role of caretaker
of my home and of my siblings.
401
1007920
3336
17:03
And I married. I met a man.
402
1011280
3136
17:06
Fell in love. I went to a year of college.
403
1014440
2256
17:08
I did what every single,
bright, young girl should do --
404
1016720
2686
17:11
I got married when
I was eighteen years old.
405
1019440
2216
17:13
And you know what?
406
1021680
1256
17:14
I knew, I knew
407
1022960
2495
17:17
that I was born for more than this.
408
1025480
2016
17:19
And right at the point
in the story of my life I had a choice.
409
1027520
3056
17:22
I could let all these things push me down
410
1030599
2816
17:25
and I could let all my ideas
die inside of me.
411
1033440
2176
17:27
I could just say, you know,
life is too hard to change the world.
412
1035640
3055
17:30
It's just too tough.
413
1038720
1215
17:31
But I chose a different story for my life.
414
1039960
2080
17:34
(Laughter)
415
1042839
1336
17:36
Don't you know it?
416
1044200
1399
17:38
And so I feel like
there's people in this room --
417
1046760
2336
17:41
you got those little
Suavitos baking spices
418
1049120
2096
17:43
and you're just like,
"You know, It's not that big a deal."
419
1051240
2776
17:46
"It's really not
the whole world I can change."
420
1054040
2216
17:48
But you know, you can change your world.
421
1056280
1905
17:50
You can change your life.
422
1058209
1207
17:51
You can change the world
that you have control over,
423
1059440
2456
17:53
you can change your sphere.
424
1061920
1536
17:55
I want to encourage you to do that.
425
1063480
1667
17:57
Because you know what?
426
1065680
1256
17:58
The future isn't a place
that we're going to go.
427
1066960
2840
18:02
It's a place that you get to create.
428
1070360
2880
18:05
I want to thank you.
Bless you. God bless you.
429
1073953
2143
18:08
(Applause)
430
1076120
1320

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Nancy Duarte - CEO, presentation designer
Nancy Duarte believes that ideas are the most powerful tools people have. Her passion is to help every person learn to communicate their world-changing idea effectively.

Why you should listen

Nancy Duarte is an expert in presentation design and principal of Duarte Design, where she has served as CEO for 21 years. Nancy speaks around the world, seeking to improve the power of public presentations. She is the author of Slide:ology: The Art and Science of Creating Great Presentations as well as Resonate: Present Visual Stories that Transform Audiences and the recent HBR Guide to Persuasive Presentations.

Watch Duarte's recent webinar on making presentations remotely >>

More profile about the speaker
Nancy Duarte | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee