Mea culpa. Years ago, when I was a chief product officer involved in helping my company’s sales team conduct demonstrations with prospects, I made many of the mistakes I am ranting about here. At Cornerstone Advisors, I’m now on the other side of the table. I watch two or three software demonstrations each week and it kills me to see so many basic mistakes being made.
I offer up this feedback with good intentions so we can all improve how we demonstrate our products to prospects and customers.
These are a few of my suggestions. Let me know in the comments some of yours.
John Meyer is a senior director at Cornerstone Advisors. Follow John on LinkedIn.
Amen, John Meyer. I agree with all of it, but this statement especially: Please don’t show me seven slides with industry stats on fraud.
In fact, just as I expect the vendor to do their homework, if I have agreed to a demo or meeting you can be certain that not only have I done my homework on the issue at hand, but also on your company. So please, skip the industry statistics (which frankly can be skewed any way you want them to be skewed to help your cause) and skip the extra 10-15 minutes upfront to tell me about your company, your culture, and your leadership team. I should already know that. You can keep it in your slide deck so I can refer to it, but I don’t need you to read it to me. As an aside, I prefer if you ask me if I can email you the names of who will be attending on my side and what their role is, so that we don’t also spend 10 minutes going around and introducing ourselves like we are the defensive unit of the Chicago Bears. “David Kreiman – Chief Experience Officer – THE Liberty Bank for Savings University”.
David,
Great feedback! I agree wholeheartedly that vendors love to share their history, timelines, private equity investments, etc., to bankers who only have an hour to see if feature/functionality is going to address their problems. When we lead system selections for our bank and credit union clients, we try to encourage vendors to spend no more than a few minutes reinforcing that they are financially healthy and will be around for the length of the contract to keep enhancing their product. I judge that is what bankers care about more than ABC Investment Group led a series X funding round.
-John
Amen, David!
John:
Couldn’t agree more, these presentations have been become a real pain point over the years. In a community bank, a lot of us wear several different hats. I don’t have the time or frankly the desire to explain repeatedly to a vendor or several different members of a vendor’s team what I’m looking for, what my issue is, what my core is, etc. Know this information when you come in. Listen to me when I tell you why I’ve reached out to you! I’ve already done my due diligence on your company, leadership team, reputation, etc. Finally, I’m not buying a car and don’t want to go through the dance of pricing negotiations for 6 weeks.