Traditional sales separates discovery from the demo. A better approach is to start the demo immediately and ask discovery questions in context. Asking "How do you track applicants today?" while showing your applicant tracking dashboard grounds the conversation in reality and makes your product's value more tangible.

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Instead of only showing your solution, ask the prospect to share their screen and walk through their current workflow. This "reverse demo" vividly exposes flaws in their system, making the need for your solution painfully obvious to everyone on the call, as evidenced by a crashing Excel file.

Instead of just describing a feature when asked during Q&A, share your screen and navigate directly to that section in your product portal. This provides tangible proof, builds trust, and helps prospects visualize themselves using the product, turning hesitation into confidence.

Sales teams often treat discovery as a prerequisite to their demo, blindly searching for any 'problem' to pitch to. This wastes up to 90% of the call because they aren't listening for the customer's true, top-priority need, leading to sales *despite* the call, not because of it.

Instead of a feature walkthrough, structure your demo as a story. Remind the prospect of their current painful 'day in the life' (uncovered in discovery) and then show them the future, transformed 'day in the life' using your product. This sells the outcome, not the tool.

Founders often rush discovery to save time for a long demo. This is backward. When you precisely understand a customer's 'pull' (their top blocked priority), your pitch becomes hyper-relevant and can be delivered in 90 seconds, making the entire sales process more efficient.

When a prospect asks if your product does something, it’s a confession that their current process is failing. Instead of just answering "yes," use it as a discovery opportunity. Ask, "How do you currently do that today?" to uncover the underlying problem and tailor your demo to solve it directly.

Passive buyers often give non-committal "yes" or "looks good" answers. To force genuine engagement, ask questions designed to elicit a more complex response. Instead of "Does this look good?", ask "Is there any other product out there that you've seen even similar to this?" to break the passive buyer-seller frame.

Contrary to traditional sales processes, the demo is the ideal moment for discovery. Prospects' defenses are down when viewing the product, making them more open. Prepare specific 'bridge questions' to ask before showing each feature to fill informational gaps.

Instead of asking prospects to educate you with generic questions, conduct pre-call research and present a hypothesis on why you're meeting. This shows preparation and elevates the conversation. Even if you're wrong, the prospect will correct you, getting you to the right answer faster.

Instead of a generic presentation, Decagon scrapes a prospect's public data to build a working, tailored demo before the first sales call. This simulates the prospect's actual workflows, vividly demonstrating immediate value and accelerating the sales cycle.