Monday, February 9, 2026

Handling Questions in Demos: Verbal Aikido

 

One of the key ideas of Aikido is to deflect your opponent’s 

energy and momentum or use it against them. 

The same idea can apply to demos!

 

 

“If you're going through hell, keep going.”

– Winston Churchill

 

 

I was delivering a demo and halfway through the meeting 

a hostile audience member said, 

“How come your software sucks so bad and costs so much?” 

(This is verbatim!)

 

I responded, “This requires more development 

than I’d like to invest right now. 

I’m going to capture it here on the whiteboard, 

along with all the other questions. 

We’ll plan to address it later on during our Q&A session.”

 

This was acceptable to everyone, but I hesitated 

before adding it to the list. 

 

The classic method of “parking” the topic would be 

to write it as it was expressed. 

 

However, I didn’t want the audience staring at 

“How come your software sucks so bad and costs so much?” 

for the balance of the meeting. 

 

And a slightly distilled version like, 

“software sucks, costs so much” 

wouldn’t improve things.

 

I recalled a lesson I’d learned in a training session 

that discussed reducing prospects’ questions to their 

“Neutral Pillars,” which is a terrific method 

of capturing an idea with a positive spin.

 

I applied the Neutral Pillars approach and wrote down, 

“Quality and Value” on the whiteboard. 

Much better: a bit of verbal aikido!

 

 

Moral: Park hostile questions and use Neutral Pillars!

 

Discussion: Note that if I had written down 

the question verbatim or distilled it, the audience 

would be seeing that text the balance of the demo. 

 

Instead, I identified two relevant Neutral Pillars, 

translating “software sucks so bad” to “Quality,” 

and “costs so much” to “Value.”

 

These were the words the audience saw on 

the whiteboard Parking Lot for the balance of the meeting. 

Much better!

 

Want more bitesize engaging stories and lessons learned? 

See “Suspending Disbelief” https://tinyurl.com/yc7rsrmy 

 

And you’ll find more details on when and how 

to elegantly and effectively park questions in 

Chapter 8 “Managing Time and Questions” of Great Demo! here: 

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C9SNKC2Y/

Friday, February 6, 2026

True Story: Even an Executive Can Run It!

 

He did indeed touch type: He just used two fingers.

 

 

"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication"

– Leonardo da Vinci

 

 

I once worked for a wonderful head of sales named Tom Jones. 

No, not Tom Jones the singer. This Tom was an ex-Marine, 

ex-hardware salesperson who ascended the ladder and 

joined our software company as the Global VP of Sales.

 

He was highly skilled in sales practices, 

but woeful at actually using software.

 

For example, all his email messages were short 

and drafted in ALL CAPS. 

 

We were never sure if he had hit the Caps Lock key 

accidentally and never turned it off, 

or if he really wanted it to appear that he was yelling!

 

To set the stage, we were in the process of

evaluating new sales forecasting systems.

 

While I felt one product had what we needed and 

was far superior to the other options under consideration, 

there were concerns from the sales team 

that this offering might be too difficult to use. 

 

A demo had been scheduled to address this concern.

 

I met with the vendor salesperson and suggested 

that we ask Tom to drive a short portion of the demo 

to really prove how easy it was to use. 

 

The rep was reluctant but agreed.

 

And so, very early in the demo, the vendor rep 

invited Tom to take the mouse and execute a few tasks, 

including accessing reports for the current forecast 

and next two quarters’ pipeline. 

 

Tom managed it without error and immediately 

several of our team members exclaimed, 

“Well, if Tom can do it, we can do it!”

 

Done deal.

 

 

Moral: That’s a very effective way to prove ease of use!

 

 

This is a great example of “Let Your Prospect Drive” in demos 

– see the section starting on page 197 in Great Demo! here: 

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C9SNKC2Y/

 

And here’s some great winter reading: “Suspending Disbelief” 

offers 35 fun, bitesize, engaging stories and lessons learned 

like the one above. Enjoy!

https://tinyurl.com/yc7rsrmy 

 

Thursday, February 5, 2026

“Habit Is Habit…”


“Habit is habit, and not to be flung out of the window by anyone, but coaxed downstairs one step at a time."

— Mark Twain 

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

The “Butter Test” for Demos and Automated Demos

 

What is the “Butter Test”? 

 

It’s another term for the “5-Second” analysis for user interface navigability. Very simply, it is a method to ensure that the minimum effort is required to complete any function or task.

 

We can apply the same principle to demos (live and automated), as well!

 

Every pathway we show in a demo needs to be as short as possible (Just “Do It!”). The more clicks or steps that are shown, the rougher the journey.

 

More clicks or steps generates more friction, resulting in more work for your prospect (and for your sales process). It’s simple physics!

 

Make your demos “as smooth as butter…!”

 

 

From https://qualityandinnovation.com/2009/01/24/the-butter-test/#:~:text=The%20Butter%20Test%20is%20the,formal%205%2DSecond%20test

 

And learn about the “Do It!” pathway starting on page 157 in Great Demo!

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C9SNKC2Y/

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

"The Difficulty Lies, Not in the New Ideas..."

“The difficulty lies, not in the new ideas, but in escaping from the old ones.” 

– John Maynard Keynes

Monday, February 2, 2026

Automated Demos: Garbage In, Amplified Garbage Out?

  

Too many automated demos are uncompelling and ineffective. Why? 

 

If you’re just presenting features, your automated demos will fail.

 

When you create automated demos, consider the following: 

If your live demos aren’t driving CONVERSATIONS, 

your automated versions will be equally poor at driving CONVERSIONS.

 

The most successful automated demos present capabilities 

as BENEFITS based on DISCOVERY.

 

Join Paul Pearce and me as we discuss this and more 

on Tuesday February 10 at 12:00 PM ET in our DemoFest session 

 

“Demo Automation Is the Ultimate Presales Power Play:

Turning Discovery Into After-Hours Deal Momentum”

 

And here are two resources to get you started:

 

https://greatdemo.com/demo-automation-insights/

 

https://greatdemo.com/automated-demos-best-practices-specific-guidance/ 

 

Enjoy – and let us know if you have questions or topics you’d like us to address!

Friday, January 30, 2026

"Who Dares to Teach..."

"Who dares to teach should never cease to learn"

– John Cotton Dana

Thursday, January 29, 2026

How Is Memory Strength Like a Spiderweb?

The more strands and attachment points the better!

 

Have you ever seen a spiderweb in a good breeze and been amazed at its tenacity? Each individual filament isn’t particularly strong, but when they come together from multiple anchors and interconnect, the overall web can be impressively strong!

 

Memory works similarly.

 

Offer a fact or list a feature and you have a single strand from a single anchor. Not particularly strong, and it can easily be blown away in the breeze of business.

 

Communicate an Advantage Statement and you establish something stronger.

 

Include a Benefit Statement and you now have two interconnected fibers from two anchors.

 

Describe an analogy or metaphor and you’ve got the beginnings of a satisfactory memory web.

 

Tell an effective story, and your web stands strong in all kinds of business winds!

 

What makes a good story? See this article:

https://greatdemo.com/effective-storytelling-in-discovery-demos-and-more-a-never-stop-learning-article/

 

Want some example stories?

https://tinyurl.com/yc7rsrmy