Mintlify's sales motion involves proactively migrating a potential customer's documentation onto its platform and presenting a finished, superior product. This "show, don't tell" approach immediately demonstrates value, bypasses theoretical pitches, and creates an instant desire to adopt the tool.
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.
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 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.
Customers don't buy features, software, or services; they buy change. Your focus should be on selling the results and the transformed future state your solution provides. This shifts the conversation from a commodity to a high-value outcome.
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.
Resist the instinct to explain what a feature is and does. Instead, first explain *why* it was built—the specific business problem it solves and why that's relevant to the prospect. This framing turns a feature walkthrough into a personalized 'test drive'.
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.
Use AI coding tools to build a prospect's requested feature or app in real-time during a sales call. This live demonstration of capability is a powerful sales flywheel that blows clients' minds, as most have never seen their ideas realized so quickly.
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.
Most product demos fail by giving a ground-up tour of features, integrations, and setup, which confuses the customer. A far more effective demo starts by showing the final, valuable output (e.g., the finished report) and simply stating, "This is what you get, and it all happens automatically."