“In the world of life sciences, we often fall into the trap of the "Harbor Tour"—dragging our prospects through every single feature, button, and technical spec of our software or service. But as our guest today discovered when the "scales fell from his eyes" as a buyer: your prospects don't want to see how the car battery works; they want to know the mileage.
Dr. Shannon Gregg is joined by Peter Cohan, the founder of the Great Demo! methodology and author of Doing Discovery. Peter shares his journey from a bench chemist who successfully freeze-dried beer to a global sales leader who revolutionized the way we present solutions to scientific audiences.
In this episode, we dissect:
-Doing the "Last Thing First": Why flipping your demo upside down and leading with the end-state dashboard or report is the fastest way to engage senior leadership.
-The "Curse of Knowledge": How to avoid the trap of assuming your prospect’s workflow and instead use discovery to surface their "perceived uniqueness."
-Buyer Enablement vs. Sales Process: Why we must stop dragging prospects through our CRM stages and start mapping our actions to their internal buying journey.
-The "Menu Approach": A tactical masterclass in handling large, diverse audiences (like 175 Swedish scientists) by letting them choose the agenda.
-The Least Expensive Form of Proof: How to determine the "minimal viable proof" needed to secure an order—from social proof to technical demos—without wasting months on unnecessary POCs.
Whether you are a Sales professional looking to reduce friction in the sales cycle or a leader aiming to truncate the "change management" burden for your clients, Peter’s insights provide a laboratory-tested framework for driving real results.”
You can find the podcast here – enjoy!
https://rss.com/podcasts/lifesciencessaleslab/
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