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!