Great Demo! provides sales and presales staff with a method to dramatically increase their success in closing business through substantially improved software demonstrations. It draws upon the experiences of thousands of demonstrations, both delivered and received from vendors and customers. The distinctive "Do the Last Thing First" concept generates a "Wow!" response from customers. The Great Demo! method is presented simply and clearly, and is elaborated more fully in each successive chapter, providing a rich toolkit for software sales teams. Real-life anecdotes, examples, and axioms offer humorous and effective punctuation. Updated with new best practices, tips and techniques, this second edition now includes a complete chapter on remote demonstrations--an area of increased activity and unique challenges. An additional chapter on managing evaluations (for fun and profit) extends the utility of the book to those in sales and management. Great Demo! is a terrific read on an airplane or between customer visits. It offers a straightforward process for creating and delivering highly compelling software demonstrations, excellent advice, tips, and the occasional epiphany.
To know I did a podcast interview and taught by this man, brings more depth to this book for me. This guy is amazing, and I feel that this extends beyond software demonstrations. I think this is about how to publicly speak, how to command the crowd, etc. It’s the psychology of things.
I appreciate this book!
I know I have to read it more than once because it’s the manual for doing GREAT demos.
This was a book I read for work, and it was fine. It's a bit out of date, but the central premise was solid. I suspect not a ton for a great salesperson or SE, but still a good framework of how to consider things.
We actually did a quick workshop with the author and that was more impressive than the book itself.
This book is not about “how to create and execute Stunning Software Demonstrations”. It’s not even a book -it seems to be slide notes for a pre sales course. There are 2 major recommendations:start with most important part (inverted pyramid) and do Discovery process to understand customer pains, etc. Can be summarized in 20 pages max.
A good reminder to focus on your audience, not your product. It could use an update on the examples, but the core concepts are sound and more people need to read this book.
Good for the most part, but from “Remote demonstrations” onwards is for some reason riddled with typos and incredibly out of date. Would still highly recommend!
~3.5 stars. I read this one for work. It was written well and easy enough to read. There's a lot of common sense in here, but some decent tidbits and reminders.
In my former SE role we did not follow any one “demo method” and it worked successfully for our team. My new job I will be starting soon uses “The Great Demo!” Method, and my manager recommended I read this book. I absolutely love the method and wish I would have gotten my hand on this book sooner! With that said, they need to write an updated 3rd edition of this book because there was only a small section on remote demos that happen as special circumstances when the new reality is probably 90-95% of software demonstrations are happening remotely now.
This book was suggested by a supervisor. I'm in a job where I do demos of enterprise software. This book covers the basic processes involved in understanding client needs and building a great demo. The book is very good on the basics, and provides some sample checklists and reports. I did notice that it is a bit dated - the software references are from 2001 (these may have been updated in a newer version of this book). The book did not go into team demoing, which comprises a lot of enterprise software demos that I see and give. It also did not go into virtual machines for software demos, which came to the front after the book was written. It separated presentations from the demo themselves and spent no time discussing the presentation aspect. The book's recommendations, followed to the letter, would be truly time consuming, but would lead to great customer demos for many kinds of software.