To make the product's value tangible, a sales leader embedded a screenshot of a risk notification from Gong's platform directly into his email. This visual proof instantly communicates the problem and solution more powerfully than text alone, making the abstract concrete for the prospect.
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.
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.
Go beyond static prototypes by using text-to-video tools like Flow or Sora to create promotional clips. This final step allows stakeholders to visualize the product in a real-world context and emotionally connect with the user experience, making your pitch significantly more persuasive.
To stand out from generic DMs, use video outreach tools that let you record personalized messages while scrolling through a prospect's own LinkedIn profile or website. This allows you to offer immediate, specific feedback or insights, demonstrating tangible value before asking for a meeting.
During a sales cycle with Seismic, the rep held back specific pain points gathered from end-users to use in a follow-up email with personalized micro-demos. Instead of sharing everything in the first call, this unexpected, high-value touchpoint changed the course of the deal by demonstrating deep understanding.
The idea of sending 'value-only' emails without a call to action is flawed. Solving a customer's problem *is* the value, and your product is the tool for that solution. Including a path to purchase in every email respects the customer's intent and provides critical data on which messages resonate.
Asking for a prospect's time or interest is less effective than giving them something valuable. Emails that include a tangible offer (e.g., a benchmark, an audit, a unique insight) see a 28% higher reply rate. You get their time by not asking for it directly.
A successful media pitch follows a simple formula: start with a genuine, researched comment to build rapport. Briefly introduce yourself and your product. Embed high-quality photos directly in the email, not as attachments. Finally, end with a clear, question-based call to action like, 'What items catch your eye?' to prompt a direct response.
Without customer logos for social proof, pitching features is ineffective. Lead messaging with operational insights gathered from lower-level employees inside the target account. Frame the conversation around improving concrete metrics like costs, risks, and speed, using phrases like, "Here's what your team is telling us..."
Instead of generic praise like "we love this product," use testimonials with specific numbers (e.g., "saved 12 hours a month"). This allows prospects to visualize tangible value and see themselves in the outcome, making social proof significantly more persuasive.