1 / 23

Doing Killer Product Demos

Doing Killer Product Demos. Jeff Zimmerman October 2010. What Is a Product Demo?. “A dramatic visualization of product superiority or a product breakthrough” Scott Cook Founder of Intuit. Goals Of This Presentation.

enichols
Download Presentation

Doing Killer Product Demos

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Doing Killer Product Demos Jeff Zimmerman October 2010

  2. What Is a Product Demo? “A dramatic visualization of product superiority or a product breakthrough” • Scott CookFounder of Intuit

  3. Goals Of This Presentation • Learn general principles and practical tips for creating and giving great product demos • Broadly applicable • Live demos to sales prospects • Live demos to internal stakeholders • Recorded demos (Flash, YouTube) • Static screenshots

  4. Why Are Demos Important? • People judge the demo … not the product • PR coverage is free … great bang for the buck • Increasing use of visual media in marketing

  5. Jeff’s “Top 10” Principles for Creating and Giving Killer Demos

  6. #1. Know Your Objective • The goal is to wow the audience • Make them think “I gotta have that!” or “my friend needs this” • Who is the audience? (e.g., prospect, journalist, sales team) • Does the person have direct experience for this problem or product? • What do you want them to believe after the demo?

  7. #2. Focus! • Limit the demo to 2 or 3 major points • Demo only the best • Benefits • You control the takeaways • Audience assumes the rest

  8. #3. Keep It Short • Live demos: < 30 minutes • Litmus test: can you hit the mainpoints in 10 minutes? • Recorded demos: < 2-3 minutes • Enables conversational meeting • Allows time to get “off track” to address questions … what the audience cares about • Easier to keep the audience’s full attention

  9. #4. Set Up The Problem • Why should the audience care? • How many people are impacted by this problem? • How severe is the impact? • Would people pick up a magazine to read about this problem?

  10. Where’s The Customer Problem? Confidential

  11. #5. Bring It To Life • “Bring to life” both the problem and the solution to drive home the point • Techniques: • Visuals … including physical objects • Analogies • Before and after • Direct comparisons to competitors • Statistical data to prove your point • Customer testimonials and stories

  12. Before After

  13. Visual, Comparison

  14. #6. Slam The Competition • Are you comparing your product to the competition or an older version of your product? • Think broadly about substitutes, not just the direct competition • If you are making comparisons, be explicit

  15. MGD 64 v. Bud Light

  16. #7. Use Structure For Emphasis • Create the demo around 1-3 key points • Create a “module” for each point • Each module is a mini-story, with a beginning (the key benefit), the middle (the demo … proof) and the end (restate the benefit) • Be willing to change the order • Remember high-school English class

  17. #8. Don’t Forget Logistics • Be wary of Internet connections • For in-person demos, face the screen toward the reporter … not yourself • Position yourself properly relative to the computer and the audience • Talk to what you’re doing … navigate slowly and obviously … show them where to look • Be prepared to fill “dead air” • Use large fonts and/or resolution

  18. #9. Invest In Sample Data • Show the feature at its best • Clear customer problem that is visibly solved • Avoid the non-demo • “I want to show you ____, but it doesn’t work in this demo” • “If this was set up, you could see how it could save you time”

  19. Quicken Bank Account Forecast

  20. Clearent Profitability Report

  21. #10. BuildA Great Product! • If the product addresses a real customer problem and solves it well, you have the foundation for a great demo • The demo can be a litmustest for new products

  22. Checklist • Know your objective … to “wow” the audience • Focus! … 1-3 major points … only the best • Keep it short … 30 minutes max • Set up the problem … why is this important? • Bring it to life … visuals, before>after, data, etc • Be willing to slam the competition • Use structure to reinforce points • Don’t forget the logistics • Invest in compelling sample data • Build a great product!

  23. Thank You! Jeff Zimmerman jpzimmerman@gmail.com

More Related