Start every demo with two slides: one confirming the prospect's priorities ('What I Learned') and a second outlining the demo's agenda ('Demo Flow'). This ensures alignment and gives you control over the conversation, preventing unexpected detours.
Presenting a 'Demo Flow' or 'Click Path' slide at the start does more than set an agenda. It gives you a pre-agreed framework to reference when prospects try to derail the demo, allowing you to politely maintain control and stick to the most relevant topics.
Go beyond persuasion during a sales call. Use "pre-suasion" to shape the conversation's context beforehand. By strategically sending relevant content, links, and discussion topics, you can prime the prospect to focus on your strengths, making the eventual sales meeting far more effective.
For prospects who have already booked a meeting, use the video's call-to-action to explicitly set expectations. Instead of a generic closing, state the specific questions you'll ask and how you'll structure the call, positioning yourself as the conversation's guide from the outset.
Instead of waiting until the end to close, establish the meeting's potential outcomes upfront. Get the prospect's permission to deliver a 'no' if it's not a fit, and pre-agree on a specific next step if neither party says 'no'. This eliminates the buyer's power to stall later on.
A common sales mistake is showcasing a product's full capabilities. This "push" approach often overwhelms and confuses buyers. In a "pull" model, the demo should be surgically focused, showing only the clicks required to solve the specific, pre-identified problem on the buyer's "to-do list."
Founders often over-explain their product, showing every feature from the login screen to settings. Instead, demo only the specific functionality that solves the customer's stated problem. Anything more introduces confusion and causes them to lose interest.
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.
A successful sales call is not about pitching; it's about asking two simple questions: "Why did you take this call?" and "What do you hope to get out of it?" The entire conversation should be structured around the customer's answers, rendering any pre-planned agenda secondary and potentially counterproductive.
Founders mistakenly believe a demo should showcase every feature to prove the product works. The real goal is to make the buyer feel understood. Show the minimum necessary to make it 'click' for them that your solution fits the specific demand they just described.
Accelerate sales cycles by focusing conversations on aligning the prospect's vision with your mission and demonstrating clear value. Prospects often don't grasp product specifics in a demo anyway, so solution details should come only after high-level alignment is achieved.