By David Baker on Wednesday, 03 October 2018
Category: Email Strategy

Vendors, you just suck at Demos and Web Meetings!

Sometimes the best way to share ideas is through dark humor, I expect this will hit a nerve with different people in different ways. Some might say, “OMG- YES”, some may say “WTH? - what are you talking about”, yet the reality is with all the vendor choices and aggressive sales teams and fierce competition you can often get a degradation in quality of presentations, demo’s and meetings in general.

Having just been involved in a few RFP processes, I find myself getting more and more agitated at how they go down.   There are four types of pitches personas I’ve seen recently: (and excuse the dark humor)

  1. Blinders Bobby: Bobby is the presenter that is smooth, knows his pitch and likely has given it 200 times in the last month, often these types of presentations are done by sales engineers, that their core role is to Demo the product in a sales fashion.   Deaf Bobby is just that, he is focused on his presentation and how good he sounds, vs what the customer has to say. This presentation typically has lots of information with a few obligatory questions along the way? “Any questions” is the first identifier of this presenter. This is great for learning about a new product. Not so good if you have a big group and the presentation is about “ME” and how you it would work in a Day in the Life of Me.   Deaf bobby may present a retailer to a publisher, or a publisher to a hotel or vice versa.   Get what you can out of these presentations but lower your expectations if you want to be understood.
  2. Tab Tammy: Tammy is the killer presenter that has 40 tabs open when demo’ing the product. Sometimes this can work for speed sake, but in the world of SaaS and cloud-based products, part of the evaluation is latency and performance and demos can help you assess this at an introductory level. The Issue I have with Tab Tammy is, she flips through tabs so fast, a user can’t evaluate how to really use a product. They typically chase ideas and response and get lost in most cases searching for the right tab. Annoying to large groups. This works well for savvy users, not so well for people that don’t live in a product every minute of the day.
  3. Slideshow Joe: Joe is the one that leads with 30 minutes of slideware on a product demonstration. They are so concerned about you knowing about the company differentiators that they lose sight that you are evaluating a software product and want to see it live. Slide Joe is typically with the larger companies that sell “BIG and Credible” as a key selling point.   Makes sense, if you have a BIG BAG to sell as it requires more setup. If you are so big, do you really need to sell your company?
  4. Transition Sally: Sally is the one that brings 8 people to a product demo or RFP call and feels that everyone should talk. This is annoying for online or video-based meetings and even worse if you are showing how a day in the life of a user would survive and thrive.   The other issue Is with distributed workforces, you get suspect connections, so inevitably you have echoes, lost connections, fuzzy voices.

As a vendor, I’ll give you a few tips:

Now to balance out this view, marketers I have a bit of advice too:

In the end it's all about value exchange and time is money, don’t waste it by being unprepared!

May you all find a match made in heaven.

Title: Vendors, you just suck at Demos and Web Meetings
by
About: Saas Product Demonstrations
Audience: Digital Marketers
Publisher: OnlyInfluencers.com
Copyright 2018, Only Influencers, LLC
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