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  • Al Sargent 10:05 pm on February 12, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: advertising, demos, , , Parisian Love, , , software, Super Bowl   

    Brevity is the soul of demos 

    As a product marketer, I’m very impressed with Google’s Super Bowl ad, the Parisian Love demo.

    First, given all the special effects in other Super Bowl ads, the Google ad was quite spare and effective — literally, a 30 second recording of someone’s desktop, minimally edited. Spare and effective, just like Google’s website, and brand.

    Second and more important: I think of all the demos I’ve given, and which I’ve sat through. None of them have ever lasted 30 seconds. And yet not has been quite so effective. It shows the power of telling a good story in your demo.

    As product marketers, we need to get better at telling stories. We spend too much time showing off features, too much time talking about the buttons and fields, and not enough time telling a good story of how our software actually can be used. We need to string together a compelling set of use cases into a seamless narrative.

    Shakespeare wrote, “brevity is the soul of wit“. It’s also the soul of an effective demo.

    If our software can’t be used to create a compelling narrative in two minutes, then we need to work with our engineering team so they make the changes required. We need to help them understand what’s missing. Is it a feature that will make the audience say “wow”? A less impressive feature that somehow fills a gap in the narrative? A fast-to-use, search-oriented UI? Fast-responding functionality? Bigger, faster servers? Richer demo data?

    Whatever the requirements end up being, you can call this thought process Demo-Driven Development. And we, the software industry, could use more of it. We need to keep that target narrative in the collective mind of our team, and not let up — or launch prematurely — until it’s achieved. The Parisian Love demo might have been created in mere days, but the underlying product took twelve years to build. Building something that provides a compelling 30 second demo takes a long time.

     
    • LETITIA TURNER 1:31 am on June 1, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      I do not believe I have seen this described in such an informative way before. You actually have made this so much clearer for me. Thank you!

  • Al Sargent 10:38 pm on October 26, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: demos, , ,   

    Four essential online marketing resources 

    Today, I shared the links below with a friend who’s starting a business. In the spirit of helpfulness, I’m republishing them below.

    Granted, these won’t be new to anyone reads the major social marketing / Web 2.0 blogs out there. Nonetheless, these are solid resources for online marketing that might not be known to mainstream business folks.

    • Presentation design: http://www.presentationzen.com/
    • Inspirational presentations often have minimal words and great pictures. Here’s where to find the latter: http://flickr.com/ (tip: sort pictures by “Most Interesting”)
    • Social marketing is a very capital efficient way to market. This guy’s a master: http://www.chrisbrogan.com/
    • Screencasts on your web site — of you talking about your service, or better yet, one of your customers talking about it — are very effective. Here’s a very easy way to create them: http://www.jingproject.com/ Then upload to YouTube — lots of traffic there, and thus people who could potentially find your service useful.
     
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