Skip to main content

The 7P, the Demo and B2B Customer Experience


Being a consultant being called into or asked to do a product demo is inevitable. A demo is one of the most powerful tools that product/solution vendors and their partners have in their arsenal to convince prospects.
The demo is a key part of the customer journey that the buyer of enterprise software takes. A good experience in this step will establish the trust that is necessary to go any further with a vendor and/or implementation partner.
A great demo can make an underdog a winner while a poor demo can make the frontrunner an outright loser. Well, and sometimes the underdog’s killer demo scores them only the second place in a winner-takes-it-all world.
I have seen and done that on both sides of the table, given good and bad demos, sat as a customer or trusted adviser, attending bad to great demos. And it is always amazing to see and participate.
One thing is for sure: If you get into the make or break position of a competitive demo in a short list, you better remember

The 7 P of Planning

Proper Prior Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance.
Know thy customer; and know her well.
·      Who is part of the buying center?
·      Who decides?
·      Who influences who?
·      Who has the money?
·      What are their likes and dislikes?
·      What are their interests?
·      What do they want to achieve?
·      What do they expect to see?
·      How can I surprise/wow them?
·      Who is my friend?
These are only some of the more important questions that you need to get answers for before the demo.
Other ones include answering how important this deal is for me? And related to it how much effort you would like to invest into it. Who is the competition? Is it another partner working with the same software that you are working with? Or is it a competing vendor?
With most of the questions above clarified and given that the customer is important enough to warrant some investment it is time to prepare the demo. More often than not there are a number of functions and features that the customer wants to see, and usually, they are given as that, functions, and features.
Often the demo requirements are prepared from the point of view of what customer employees are doing now, sometimes even to an extent that they are just translating their current way of working into the world of the new system that they want to implement.
Expect a check list that helps your audience in making sure that the relevant points got covered and to what extent. Expect this check list being mainly organized by the sequence of functions and features that have been asked for.
Means, you are cornered.
Are you?

How to make your demo a success?

This is the demo dilemma that places you squarely between a rock and a hard spot, as a demo needs to have a flow, you want to tell a convincing story, and then users of your solution surely do things different than users of most other solutions. And then your solution can do a few things that make it shine over the competition, doesn’t it? You also do not want to do a ‘hard sell’ but gain trust to become an advisor. It is the long-term relationship that matters.
Technically, the most important part of the demo is translating the required functions and features into a story with a good flow that covers the required topics. Coverage should happen in a sequence that mainly covers the sequence of appearance of the features in the demo requirements document. Be sure to also plan to show some topics that are not necessarily asked for but that are eye-openers for the audience.
You have a friend in the organization?
Talk to him/her and make sure to get a deeper understanding of what is really wanted, how processes currently look like and what the pain points or unmet needs, especially of the most important people in the audience, are.
Be sure you listen and then use the advice.
It is not really necessary to explicitly mention the pain points but just demoing a solution for an unmentioned pain point gives you credits and helps establishing trust. You show that your solution can support more than the imminent pain points, that you know your stuff – and, what is more, your customer’s business.
Last, but not least: Be sure you have the right person to demo the solution. This person needs to know the customer’s industry, ideally the customer, and speak the customer’s language – as in language and jargon. There is no point in having a German with poor English skills demo to an English-speaking audience – or vice versa. In addition, demoing is almost like acting. It is a performance!
So, make sure that the presenter can perform and speak vividly in front of an audience. There isn’t a much better possibility to put an audience asleep than a droning on presentation. Doing a few dry runs helps in this regard.

To sum it up

As you guess by here, delivering a killer demo is not really rocket science, but the application of a simple recipe.
·      Know your customer
·      Know your stuff
·      Get the right intelligence
·      Prepare
·      Tell a story
·      Perform
A killer demo is also a surefire way to deliver a mind-blowing customer experience. Does it guarantee a win? No. But it brings you a lot closer to it by establishing the necessary trust into software and implementation partner.
Now, you say that this is a lot of effort for a demo?
It is.
But then this is the only way to go for bigger deals, or deals that you just want to win. Having a good infrastructure surely helps to contain the necessary efforts, but it still is effort.
Are there less expensive ways? Yes, there are. Ask me for ideas if you are interested …


Comments

Last Year's Top 5 Popular Posts

SAP CRM and SAP Jam - News from CRM evolution

During CRM Evolution 2017 I had the chance of talking with Volker Hildebrand and Anthony Leaper from SAP. Volker is SAP’s Global Vice President SAP Hybris and Anthony is Senior Vice President and Sales GM - Enterprise Social Software at SAP. Topics that we covered were things CRM and collaboration, how and where SAP’s solutions are moving and, of course, the impact that the recent reshuffling in the executive board has. Starting with the latter, there is common agreement, that if at all it is positive as likely to streamline reporting lines and hence decision processes. First things first – after all I am a CRM guy. Having the distinct impression that the SAP Hybris set of solutions is going a good way I was most interested in learning from Volker about how there is going to be a CRM for S4/HANA. SAP’s new generation ERP system is growing at a good clip, and according to the Q1/2017 earnings call, now has 5,800 customers with 400 new customers in the last quarter alone. Many...

How to play the long game Zoho style

The news On February 7 and 8 2024, Zoho held its annual ZohoDay conference, along with a pre-conference get together and an optional visit to SpacX’s not-too-far-away Starbase. Our guide, who went by Chief, and is probably best described as a SpaceX-paparazzi was full of facts and anecdotes, which made the visit very interesting although we couldn’t enter Starbase itself. The event was jam-packed with 125 analysts, 17 customer speakers, and of course Zoho staff for us analysts to talk to. This was a chance we took up eagerly. This time, the event took place in MacAllen, TX, instead of Austin, TX. The reason behind this is once more Zoho’s ruralization strategy, transnational localism.  Which gives also one of the main themes of the event. It was more about understanding Zoho than about individual products, although Zoho disclosed some roadmaps. More about understanding Zoho in a second.  The second main theme was customer success and testimonials. Instead of bombarding us with...

SaaS or the Rise of the Undead

SaaS is dead! It will be replaced by agentic systems that replace coded business logic by AI agents that autonomously interact to bring said business logic to life, just smarter. Satya Nadella said it - or at least something in these lines, if I believe all the pundits around. His words lit up the Internet. And Satya Nadella being the CEO of a 3 trillion dollar company is the ultimate fount of truth and wisdom, when it comes to business applications. Is he not? So, what should we take from his statements? After all, the words of the CEO of one of the top 3 valuable companies on this Earth carry some weight. Let me start straight.  I call BS! SaaS, first of all, is a delivery model of logic that also had some implications on vendors‘ business models and their approaches to pricing. For a variety of good and not so good reasons this delivery model succeeded vs. the prevalent model of on-premises software. Some of the more important reasons have been “no lock in by vendors”, “only pay...

Zoho - A True Unicorn

End of January Zoho held its 2020 Zoho Days, an analyst summit, which I was happy to attend, along with more than 60 colleagues, as the only analyst from Germany, as it seems. Sadly, it took me quite a while to complete this – Zoho deserves a faster commentare. But hey, let’s look forward and get rolling. Zoho is a privately owned enterprise software company that has quietly evolved from a small software company in 1996 to an ambitious global player that serves the SMB- and enterprise CRM market with cloud applications. The company has a set of 45+ business apps with more than 50 million users, 10 data centres and counting, and is available in 180 countries. The company is profitable and maintained a CAGR of more than 30 percent over the past five years. But why quietly? Because Zoho managed its growth pretty unusually (almost) fully organically with only very minor acquisitions. Crunchbase lists one. Following this unique approach, which defies the tradit...

Salesforce stock tanks after earnings report - a snap analysis

The news On May 29, 2024, Salesforce reported its results for the first quarter of the fiscal year 2025. Highlights are a total quarterly revenue of $9.133bn US, resembling a year-over-year growth of 11 percent a current remaining performance obligation of $26.4bn US a remaining performance obligation of $53.9B US an operating margin of 18.7 percent. diluted earnings per share of $1.56 The company reported a revenue guidance of $9.2bn - $9.25bn US for the next quarter and a full year guidance of $37.7bn - $38.0bn US, resembling growth rates of 7 – 8 percent and 8 – 9 percent, respectively. With these numbers, Salesforce ended up at the lower end of last quarter’s guidance on the revenue growth side while exceeding the earnings per share projection and slightly lowered the guidance for the fiscal year 2025. The result: The company’s share price dropped from $272 to bottom out at $212. The bigger picture Salesforce is the big gorilla in the CRM and CX industry. The company has surpassed ...