Extreme preparation, including analog backups for digital presentations, can turn a potential disaster into a demonstration of competence. A Bloomberg employee salvaged a key demo by using a binder of screen printouts, impressing the client and closing the deal on the spot.
To overcome a prospect's fear of risk, go beyond generic demos. Use their actual documents, data, and processes to show how your solution fits into their existing workflow. This makes the change feel less like a leap of faith and more like a natural evolution.
Effective call planning goes beyond setting a goal; it involves scenario planning for failure. A powerful question for managers to ask reps is, "If this call were to go sideways, what would be the most likely way that it does?" This forces reps to anticipate and prepare for common objections or derailments.
After a sales pitch to a major influencer failed, a 10X engineer built a working version of the proposed app in just four hours. Putting the functional product directly in the influencer's hands immediately vaulted 10X back to the top of their list, demonstrating that rapid AI-enabled prototyping is a powerful sales tool.
Most reps prepare for calls, but this effort is often invisible to the prospect. By explicitly showing your work—like presenting a hypothesis slide based on your research—you demonstrate conscientiousness and earn respect, especially when selling to more senior executives.
After a buggy POC, the founder presented the economic buyer with a simple slide: a timeline showing every issue raised and how quickly it was fixed, often in days. This demonstration of extreme responsiveness and partnership outweighed the product's imperfections and built the trust needed to close the deal.
To land an unresponsive prospect, the founder flew to their office. He arrived as they were fighting a database fire and immediately helped them fix it. This impromptu help session proved his expertise and built immense trust that led them to become a customer.
To win their first enterprise deal, Nexla's co-founder live-coded a solution to a specific data problem during the sales meeting with Instacart. This "magical moment" demonstrated their agility and technical depth in a way no slide deck could, immediately building trust and differentiating them from slower, incumbent processes.
Even when a virtual sales presentation descends into chaos with distracting software glitches and a physically collapsing background, a salesperson can still succeed. By maintaining professionalism and focusing on the message, it's possible to overcome the technical failures and secure the next meeting.
Stories begin with words and intent, not with PowerPoint. If you need a slide deck to deliver your message, you don't truly know your story and have created a vulnerability. A true performer can deliver their message even if the power goes out, while a "slide monkey" cannot.
Don't rely on recalling the right story in the moment. Proactively build and maintain a "story library" with dozens of categorized examples. While you may only use a few core stories regularly, having a deep, accessible catalog ensures you have a relevant narrative for any customer situation.