Friday, May 29, 2026

Qualification vs Discovery: What’s the Difference?

Qualification is done for the vendor’s benefit only;

Discovery is done for the benefit of both parties.

 

Qualification is about establishing boundaries;

Discovery is about broad exploration.

 

Qualification is mostly limited to closed probes with “Yes” or “No” answers;

Discovery expands investigation through open probes, yielding detail and nuance.

 

Qualification provides zero value to the prospect;

Discovery provides value to both parties.

 

Qualification is an interrogation;

Discovery is a bidirectional conversation.

 

BANT is an example of qualification:

Is there a budget? 

Are you the decision-maker?

Do you have a defined set of needs?

Do you have a timeline?

 

The Doing Discovery methodology is a highly successful example of discovery, embracing:

Opening

•       About you

•       Demographics

•       Company

•       Team

•       Workflows/processes

Environment

•       Physical

•       Technical/Infrastructural

•       Know-how

Major Pain

•       Workflow Analysis

•       Do well

•       Do better

•       Quantify

•       Vision Generation and Reengineering

•       Specific Capabilities

Extended Environment

•       Adjacent

•       Impacted

Related Pain(s)

•       Do well

•       Do better

•       Quantify

•       Vision Generation and Reengineering

•       Specific Capabilities

Culture

•       Uniqueness

•       Implementation

•       Adoption

Wrap-up

•       Getting worse, Do nothing

•       Timing – VREs

•       Drivers (CBIs)

•       Final open-ended 

•       Mutual action plan

 

Pro tip: For complex solutions, buyers want to be discovered.

 

And here’s how!

 

The ground-breaking Doing Discovery book:

https://www.amazon.com/Doing-Discovery-Important-Enablement-Processes/dp/B0B8RJK4C2/)

 

The upcoming Doing Discovery Semi-Private Workshop 

(June 3-5):

https://your.greatdemo.com/course/doing-discovery-ilt 

Thursday, May 28, 2026

What Does Superior Discovery Deliver?

Vendors who perform superior discovery enjoy…

 

With Prospects:

 

-       Timely Decisions

-       Precise Demos

-       Better Product Fit

-       Closing Doors to Competitors

-       Positive Differentiation

-       Accurate Proposals

-       Expanded Opportunities

-       “Found” Money

-       Reduced Discounting 

-       Grateful Champions

-       Living in the “Land of Science”

-       More Accurate Forecasts and Pipelines

-       More Predictable Sales and Buying Cycles

 

With Customers:

 

-       Happier customers

-       Referenceable customers

-       Referencing customers

-       Customer UGM Presentations

-       Renewing customers

-       Expanding customers

-       Vendors as Partners

-       Customer Success vs. “Customer Rescue”

-       Reduced Churn

-       Success Lanes Feedback

-       Realization of CLV (Customer Lifetime Value)

 

Any more to add?

 

Which are your top three?

 

And here’s how to do superior discovery!

 

The ground-breaking Doing Discovery book:

https://www.amazon.com/Doing-Discovery-Important-Enablement-Processes/dp/B0B8RJK4C2/)

 

The upcoming Doing Discovery Semi-Private Workshop 

(June 3-5):

https://your.greatdemo.com/course/doing-discovery-ilt 

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

What Does Insufficient Discovery Yield?

 

Insufficient discovery causes:

 

-       Delayed Decisions

-       No Decisions

-       Unwarranted Discounting 

-       “Buying It Back”

-       Slowed Sales Cycles

-       Wasted Sales Cycles

-       Harbor Tour Demos

-       Stunningly Awful Demos

-       Wasted Demos

-       Poor Proposals

-       Wasted Proposals

-       Inaccurate Forecasts

-       Overly Optimistic Forecasts

-       Living in the “Land of Hope”

-       Inaccurate Pipelines

-       Overly Optimistic Pipelines

-       Opening Doors for Competitors

-       Negative Differentiation

-       Poor Product Recommendations

-       Poor Product Fit

-       Unhappy Prospects

-       Burn-Victim Prospects

-       Insufficient Value Perceptions

-       Insufficient Business Cases

-       Money Left on the Table

-       Piles of Objections

-       Poor Relationships

-       Distrusted Vendors

 

Any more to add?

 

Which are your top three?

 

And here’s how to avoid insufficient discovery!

 

Doing Discovery book:

https://www.amazon.com/Doing-Discovery-Important-Enablement-Processes/dp/B0B8RJK4C2/)

 

And the upcoming Doing Discovery Semi-Private Workshop (June 3-5):

https://your.greatdemo.com/course/doing-discovery-ilt 

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

How Much Discovery Is Enough?

 

Vendors constantly struggle to answer this question – so let’s address it!

 

How much discovery is enough? Is it…

 

When you have a qualified Lead?

 

When you have completed a list of questions? How many?

 

10 questions?

20 questions?

50 questions?

 

When you’ve done thirty minutes per person? One hour per person?

 

When you have a clear definition of “Pain”?

 

None of these are sufficient!

 

Here’s a practical measure – you have done enough discovery when two criteria have been met:

 

1.     When you, the vendor, have sufficient information to confidently and clearly propose a precise solution;

 

AND

 

2.     When your prospect is confident that you have a sufficient understanding of their situation to be able to confidently and clearly propose a precise solution.

 

Both conditions need to be satisfied!

 

(And here’s how to accomplish this:

https://www.amazon.com/Doing-Discovery-Important-Enablement-Processes/dp/B0B8RJK4C2/)

 


Friday, May 22, 2026

Multitask?


Multitask? Heck, I have trouble even single tasking…!

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Software Demos by Musicians: Musicians Have an Advantage!

 

Why?

 

Musicians understand dynamics (louds and softs). They know when and how to drop their voice to a whisper or deliver a forceful phrase.

 

Musicians understand the power of the pause. They know how a pause adds punctuation and generates intrigue.

 

Musicians understand the importance of phrasing. They know when a short phrase is appropriate and when a longer statement should be made.

 

Musicians understand how to listen. They know that listening should be constant, whether or not they are contributing to the overall sound.

 

Musicians understand how to respond. They know how to take turns and how to support and encourage their colleagues.

 

Musicians understand how to blend. They know how harmonies are built and change.

 

Musicians understand how to lead. They know how and when to establish or further develop a theme.

 

Musicians understand live performance. They know how to connect with and react to an audience.

 

Musicians understand the importance of having a plan. They know when the score is to be performed precisely and when to improvise; and groups of musicians know they need to agree on parameters such as timing, key, and instrumentation.

 

Musicians know how to end. They understand the importance of the last chord, phrase, and dynamics, and how that finish impacts the audience.

 

And each of these has its equivalent in presenting demos!

 

 

"It's not the notes you play, it's the notes you don't play."

– Miles Davis

 

If you are a musician, take advantage of these attributes when you are presenting demos. If you are not a musician, see Chapter 15 “Style” in Great Demo! for many of these ideas, but without the music!

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

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Using AI to Annoy Prospects?

 

AI personalizes but often without correct context. 

 

I can’t tell you how many LinkedIn messages I get that are “personalized” but ignore key information. For example, they personalize based on me being a founder and demo/discovery skills training but ignore the fact that I’m not producing software, taking external funding, or hiring employees. Similarly, they all assume that I’m an early-stage company. 

 

Yes, I’m the Founder, but I founded the company 23 years ago. Definitely not early stage!

 

Yes, I work with software but not producing software. Stop offering me development services!

 

And no, I’ve never taken external funding for this business and never will!

 

And no, I don’t have or want any employees (led a team of 120 folks before and don’t need the whining or headaches!).

 

“Quick chat?” I don’t think so!

 

So: Either train your AI to dig deeper and assess more effectively or suffer the consequences!

Monday, May 18, 2026

Do Best Practices Age?

Of Course! 


Best Practices Are Just Local Maxima…

 

Five thoughts:

 

1.     What is currently considered a best practice today will likely be exceeded by another practice; today’s “best” is accordingly just a “better” practice.

 

2.     Nevertheless, organizations and individuals should continue to perfect their application of current best practices.

 

3.     Organizations and individuals should be on the lookout for new best practices that replace or complement existing practices. Note that some of the most fertile ground for finding new best practices may include your competition, partners, and customers!

 

4.     Early explorers of new best practices need to remember that early application may not yield results representative of their full potential (you may be on a shoulder or slope that needs further exploration, testing, and improvement).

 

5.     Organizations and individuals need to carefully assess AI-defined best practices:

a.     Is the data really representative (or is AI recommending a safe mediocrity)?

b.     Are important outliers being ignored (that may represent new or different best practices: other local maxima)?

 

Any ideas to add?