"The power to question is the basis of all human progress."
– Indira Gandhi
Gong’s study of tens of thousands of demos found that successful demos enjoyed 28% more questions compared to average performers.
That’s right: More questions are better, much better!
In my personal experience, 28% more questions is low: That’s just the starting point!
But how do you stimulate prospect queries?
First, by not pre-answering questions (also known as “premature elaboration!”). How many times have we heard a rep say, “Here’s a question we always hear…” and then immediately provide the answer? If you expect to hear the question, then let your prospect ask it! Periodic summaries and pauses provide opportunities for your prospect to engage.
A second method that encourages a productive conversation is by not over-answering! Provide just enough information to address the question. Leave room for follow-up and gently test for it: “Is that answer sufficient or would you like to go deeper?”
“Peeling the Onion” (“Peeling Back the Layers” in Great Demo! methodology) is designed to facilitate questions. Your objective is to reveal the answers in as much depth as your individual prospect players have interest.
After all, what happens if you peel an onion too far? You cry!
Consider: Most executives only want the 30,000-foot (9114-meter) view; middle managers typically want to go a bit deeper; staffers want the workflow details; and system administrators desire a different set of specifics. If you answer questions at the wrong level or go too deep, you may be driving yourself into the weeds.
And, as we have all experienced, starting a demo by saying, “Please stop me if you have any questions – we want this to be interactive…” will not drive questions by itself! Nor does asking, “Any questions so far…?” over and over.
What does drive interactivity?
- Pausing is one of the most effective ways to encourage a question or comment from your prospect.
- Even stronger, offer a brief interim summary … followed by a pause.
- Ask for feedback: “Thoughts on what you just saw?” “How does this compare to your current process?” “How does that resonate?”
- An extremely effective method is to use Customer Fill In, where you invite your prospect to choose from a list of options.
- The Menu Approach, by its nature, drives interactivity right from the beginning of your demo.
- And once you’ve “trained” your prospect to respond, shorter prompts may be all you need to continue the conversation, such as: “Comments?” “Feedback?” “Thoughts?” “Questions?”
Is this sufficient or would you like more?
(See Chapter 8 in Great Demo!