demo

Twenty years ago, prior to a product announcement, marketers would hit the road and visit all the major publications in their industries.  One on one with journalists, they would pitch the story, answer their questions, and then move on to the next.  At Microsoft in the early 90’s that meant a two day west coast trip, and another day and half on the east coast.

Today, that model of public relations is obsolete. The cost and inconvenience of travel, TSA pat-downs, and the 24 hour news culture are making the press-tour a quaint  relic of the past.  Instead, people are turning to online meetings for press announcements.

Yesterday I spent 20 minutes on a press conference hosted by a company launching a new product on Apple’s App Store.  Now, launch presentations are hard.  I know.  In 2006, iotum was one of the winners at the DEMO conference. That’s the Matterhorn of launch events. Unfortunately, the event I attended yesterday failed miserably.

  • The main presenter mumbled his way through an incoherent and barely rehearsed speech.  To make matters worse, he was speaking in a room with an echo, on a speaker phone.  He lost me within 30 seconds because I could barely make out what he was saying.
  • While the presenter was speaking to us, the Goto Meeting session that was to be used to demonstrate the software was animated, showing a website that had little bearing on the speaker’s words. Cognitive dissonance, combined with bad audio, left me wondering what I was listening to.
  • The demonstration, when it finally came, was excellent.  Audio was good, and the presenter zipped through all the high points of the product.
  • The follow-on Q&A was text only.  I could ask a question by typing it, and the response would be spoken back.  Three questions from the attendees, and then event was over.
  • Nevertheless, I thought the product interesting enough that I signed up for an account, and went to download it from the app store. It’s not there, unfortunately.

The basic problem most people face with launch events is economy of message.  As marketers we want everyone to know all the cool features of our products.  As launch presenters, however, we’ve only got a very short amount of time to make two or three points, and then wow the audience with a killer demo.  If this had been my presentation, I would have:

  1. Insisted that everyone presenting use a high quality headset while speaking.  There’s simply no excuse for bad audio when you’re trying to make a good impression.
  2. Cut the main speaker’s intro to 30 seconds, and then gone directly to demo.  The point of this event was to get people excited about the product.  So don’t keep us waiting!
  3. Presented two or three short slides, following the demo, to reinforce the points made in the demo, then mailed those slides to everyone in attendance.
  4. Used a real online conferencing system that allows for moderator control of Q&A by voice, not text.  Our Calliflower is one, but there are other choices as well. The point is that each of those questions were an opportunity for a short conversation, which was badly missed because of the technology choice made.
  5. Ensured that the product was available on the app store before making the announcement.  Not being ready to capitalize on the news you’re generating has been the biggest failure of many a product launch.
  6. Rehearsed, rehearsed, rehearsed. None of us are news anchors on major networks, but that’s the standard we have to hold ourselves to for these events.  The only way to get there is to have rehearsed the event 3 or 4 times in it’s entirety.

Bottom line: Launch events are always hard.  To be effective, they have to be well rehearsed, with practiced demos and slick messaging.  Online tools are an attractive alternative to travel.  However, they make the job even harder, so you have to be even better prepared.

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Shipley moves on

by alec on February 19, 2009

I’ve been to DEMO both as a presenter, and as a blogger / podcaster covering the show.  Yesterday’s announcement that DEMO producer Chris Shipley will be moving on is disappointing, but not unexpected.  After watching prominent Silicon Valley personalities with competing conferences hammer on DEMO for the last 24 months, it’s unsurprising that DEMO owner IDG Conferences might choose to make changes. 

I remain a fan of DEMO, and the great work that Chris has done over the last 13 years.  Certainly, our experience launching at DEMO and winning a DEMOgod was one that generated more visibility for iotum than we could have at any other venue.  It was truly a defining experience for the company, and I’m certain that the same is true for other companies that chose to launch at DEMO. 

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Squawk Box September 24 – PaidInterviews CEO Jim Weaver

September 24, 2008

Paidinterviews is transforming the traditional recruiting model. Using PaidInterviews, candidates are better able to market themselves by building digital career profiles complete with videos, pictures and work samples. They can also network with other candidates and search the “Watercooler” to find employer ratings created by previous employees. Jobs are uniquely matched to candidates based on the way their ideal job is outlined. Once hired, a candidate is paid their “ask fee” as a success bonus.

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Squawk Box Conference Call Sept 11: DEMO recap

September 11, 2008

This morning our guest was Chris Shipley, DEMO Executive Producer. We talked about the DEMOgod awards — the process by which the judges arrived at who the winners were, and some of the winners themselves, including Microstaq, Fusion-IO, UGA Digital, and people’s choice winner Plastic Logic. In addition, we discussed the ways in which micropayments [...]

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Squawk Box September 8 – live from DEMOfall with Chris Shipley and Peter Yared of iWidgets

September 8, 2008

Today and tomorrow I’m in sunny San Diego for the DEMOfall conference.  This is grand daddy of product launch conferences. This morning we chatted with DEMOfall Executive Producer and Host, Chris Shipley.  We talked about the origins of demo, what makes it special, and what companies presenting here can expect to get from the show.  [...]

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Going to DEMOFall?

September 4, 2008

I’ll be visiting the DEMOfall on Monday and Tuesday of next week. Arriving in San Diego Saturday at noon, and taking the redeye back on Tuesday night.  I’m looking to meet up with companies and other folks attending the show.  Especially interested in cool product companies that might be interested in appearing on the SquawkBox. [...]

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Architecting a great demo

April 30, 2008

David Spark has a great piece up titled The worst product demonstration I’ve ever seen.  It’s full of good advice on fit and finish around demos.  I enjoyed his critique.  One of the things that I would add to his comments is that you have to focus on the architecture of your demo. If you [...]

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SquawkBox January 28

January 28, 2008

We had another great SquawkBox session this morning, discussing: The issue of forced invites on Facebook applications. Some of the fastest growing Facebook applications of late have been those that require users to invite other users PRIOR to installing the application.  It's provoking a small backlash on Facebook. There's now a group called "No, I [...]

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Vizrea/WebFives shuts down

December 1, 2007

Mike Toutonghi's startup WebFives (formerly Vizrea) is shutting down.  They have sold the assets to Microsoft, and Mike's heading back to work for them.  Pity. Vizrea came out at Demo 2006, along with iotum.  They had a promising idea — that people wanted a natural and easy way to share photos and videos from mobile phones.  [...]

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Zink: cool product, tough to demo

February 2, 2007

Demonstrating a new printer at a conference like DEMO has to be a tough proposition.  That’s what Zink did.  Zink stands for “Zero Ink”.  At DEMO, they debuted the Zink printer, a print platform which prints without ink cartridges.  Their technology uses heat to fuse die crystals embedded in their special paper, resulting in beautiful [...]

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