I really hope its that easy.
I've purchased 4 different Cephalotus over the past two years. The first one was killed from lack of light and over-watering (it slowly grew smaller and smaller before rotting away). The second one I killed from over-watering (I made the soil waterlogged and when I checked it the next day, I touched the crown of the plant and it just liquidated). The third one I killed from lack of light (it grew smaller and smaller before eventually it stopped growing altogether).
I bought a fourth Cephalotus back in early October. I repotted it into a 4-inch pot, the soil is 2 parts perlite, 1 part sand, 1 part peat with a top dressing of sphagnum moss. I have a water-tray but there is no water in it. I keep the soil damp (occasionally top-watering the plant) and I have it growing under a desk lamp. Currently, it's produced 3 mature pitchers since it arrived and it seems to put out a new leaf every couple weeks. The current pitchers and leaves are turning red from the light. In short, this is the most successful I've been growing Cephalotus.
In order to grow Cephalotus, you need the following:
1) a well-drained soil (perlite is excellent for this)
2) damp soil (do not have the pot sitting in a tray of standing water)
3) reasonable humidity (I had a humidity dome for a couple months, but removed it several weeks ago. None of the new leaves or pitchers have shriveled and it's still thriving)
4) good light (in shade, the plant remains green and is prone to rot. In abundant light, the plant is tough and turns into nice shades of red and purple)
5) occasional feeding (I once fed a pitcher a large insect and the pitcher died the next day. And since Cephalotus grows slowly, killing off many pitchers will be very harmful to the plant)
6) Don't mess with it too much (if you constantly repot it, it will go into shock and stop growing and perhaps even start dying. If you keep it in the same pot and don't change the conditions, it will grow and spread and divide)
Here is mine: