Demo Script Templates
Scene-by-scene templates for different call types, with timing, talk tracks, and interaction guidance.
Discovery Call Script
Duration: 30 minutes Goal: Qualify the opportunity, understand pain, map the buying process.
Scene 1: Opening (3 min)
Talk track:
"Thanks for taking the time, [Name]. I've done some research on [Company] but I'd love to hear from you directly. My goal for today is to understand what you're working on and see if there's a fit — and if there's not, I'll tell you that too. Sound good?"
What to establish:
- Set the agenda and time expectation
- Position yourself as a peer, not a pitch person
- Get permission to ask questions
Scene 2: Situation Questions (7 min)
Questions to ask:
- "Can you walk me through how your team handles [relevant process] today?"
- "What tools are you currently using for this?"
- "How many people are involved in this workflow?"
- "How long has this been in place?"
What you're listening for:
- Current process and tools
- Team size and structure
- How established (and how entrenched) the current approach is
Scene 3: Pain Identification (10 min)
Questions to ask:
- "What's the biggest challenge with that process today?"
- "When that breaks down, what happens?"
- "How much time does your team spend on [specific task] per week?"
- "What have you tried to fix this?"
- "If you could wave a magic wand, what would change?"
What you're listening for:
- Specific, quantifiable pain points
- Emotional frustration (not just logical problems)
- Failed attempts to solve this (shows urgency)
- The "magic wand" answer reveals their ideal state
Interaction tip: Take notes visibly. Repeat back what you hear: "So if I understand correctly, the biggest issue is [X], which costs you about [Y] per month. Is that right?"
Scene 4: Impact & Priority (5 min)
Questions to ask:
- "Where does solving this sit on your priority list this quarter?"
- "What happens if you don't solve this in the next 6 months?"
- "Who else is affected by this problem?"
- "Is there budget allocated for solving this?"
What you're listening for:
- Priority level (nice-to-have vs. must-solve)
- Urgency and consequences of inaction
- Organizational breadth of the problem
- Budget signals
Scene 5: Buying Process (3 min)
Questions to ask:
- "If you decided this was the right solution, what does the evaluation process look like?"
- "Who else would be involved in the decision?"
- "Have you evaluated solutions for this before?"
- "What's your timeline for making a decision?"
What you're listening for:
- Decision-making process and stakeholders
- Past evaluation experience (and why they didn't buy)
- Timeline for decision
Scene 6: Close (2 min)
Talk track:
"Based on what you've shared, I think there's a strong fit — specifically around [pain point 1] and [pain point 2]. What I'd suggest as a next step is a 30-minute demo where I can show you exactly how we'd address those. I'll customize it to your workflow. Does [specific date/time] work?"
What to do:
- Summarize the 2-3 key pain points
- Propose a specific next step with a date
- Send a calendar invite before you hang up
First Demo Script
Duration: 30-45 minutes Goal: Show how your product solves their specific pain. Advance to evaluation/pilot.
Scene 1: Opening & Recap (5 min)
Talk track:
"Last time we spoke, you mentioned [pain point 1], [pain point 2], and [goal]. I've put together a demo focused on those three areas. If I've missed anything, flag it and we'll adjust. Sound good?"
What to do:
- Recap discovery findings to show you listened
- Confirm priorities haven't changed
- Set expectation for what they'll see
Scene 2: Workflow 1 — Primary Pain Point (10 min)
Structure:
- Restate the pain: "You mentioned [specific problem]..."
- Show the solution: Walk through the workflow step by step
- Highlight the outcome: "This means [specific benefit]..."
Interaction point (at the 5-min mark):
"How does this compare to how you're handling it today?"
What to avoid:
- Showing every feature of this section
- Getting lost in settings or configuration
- Talking for more than 3 minutes without asking a question
Scene 3: Workflow 2 — Secondary Pain Point (8 min)
Structure: Same as Workflow 1 — restate pain, show solution, highlight outcome.
Interaction point:
"Is this the kind of visibility your team has been asking for?"
Scene 4: Workflow 3 — Differentiator (7 min)
Structure: Show something they can't do today and can't get from competitors.
Talk track:
"This is where we're really different from [competitor/status quo]. [Explain the unique capability]. For example, [Customer] uses this to [specific outcome]."
Interaction point:
"How would your team use this?"
Scene 5: Proof Point (3 min)
Talk track:
"Let me share a quick example. [Customer similar to them] was in a similar situation — [brief challenge]. After implementing, they saw [specific metrics]. Their [role] said [quote]."
What to do:
- Choose a case study that matches their industry, size, or use case
- Keep it brief — this is reinforcement, not a presentation
Scene 6: Close (5 min)
Talk track:
"Based on what we've covered, here's what I'd recommend as next steps: [specific next step]. This typically takes [timeline]. Who else on your team should be involved? I can set up a [follow-up meeting type] for [date]."
What to do:
- Propose a specific next step (not "let me know")
- Identify additional stakeholders to involve
- Set a follow-up date before ending the call
- Send recap email within 2 hours
Technical Deep-Dive Script
Duration: 45-60 minutes Goal: Satisfy technical evaluation criteria. Address architecture, security, and integration concerns.
Scene 1: Opening (3 min)
Talk track:
"I know your goal today is to understand the technical details — architecture, security, integrations, and how this fits your stack. I'll walk through each area and leave plenty of time for questions. What's your top priority for this session?"
Attendees: Typically includes their technical evaluator (engineer, architect, IT lead) plus your SE or solutions engineer.
Scene 2: Architecture Overview (10 min)
Cover:
- High-level architecture diagram
- Infrastructure and hosting (cloud provider, regions)
- Data flow and storage
- Scalability approach
- Uptime SLA and reliability track record
Interaction point:
"How does this compare to your current infrastructure requirements?"
Scene 3: Security & Compliance (10 min)
Cover:
- Certifications (SOC 2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, etc.)
- Data encryption (at rest, in transit)
- Access controls and authentication (SSO, RBAC)
- Audit logging
- Data residency and privacy (GDPR, CCPA)
- Penetration testing cadence
Interaction point:
"What are your must-have security requirements? I want to make sure we address them specifically."
Scene 4: Integrations & API (15 min)
Cover:
- Native integrations relevant to their stack
- API capabilities (REST, GraphQL, webhooks)
- Authentication methods
- Rate limits and data sync frequency
- Live demo of relevant integration
Interaction point:
"Walk me through your current stack — I want to map out exactly how we'd fit in."
Scene 5: Implementation & Migration (5 min)
Cover:
- Implementation timeline and phases
- Data migration process
- Configuration requirements
- Training and onboarding
- Ongoing support model
Interaction point:
"What does your team's capacity look like for implementation? That helps me scope the right timeline."
Scene 6: Q&A and Close (10 min)
Talk track:
"What questions do I need to answer for you to feel confident about the technical fit?"
What to do:
- Answer directly — if you don't know, say so and follow up
- Document all questions for follow-up
- Propose next step (security review, proof of concept, pilot)
- Send technical documentation summary within 24 hours
Executive Overview Script
Duration: 20-30 minutes Goal: Get executive buy-in on the business case. Advance to budget approval or decision.
Scene 1: Opening (2 min)
Talk track:
"Thanks for your time, [Name]. [Champion] has been evaluating [your product] and the results look strong. I'll keep this focused on the business impact and what a partnership looks like. I know your time is valuable so I'll aim to leave 10 minutes for questions."
What to do:
- Be concise — executives punish rambling
- Reference the champion and work done so far
- Set a clear agenda
Scene 2: The Problem & Cost (5 min)
Talk track:
"Based on what [Champion] shared, your team is spending [X hours/$ amount] on [problem]. That's [annual cost]. It's also creating [secondary impact: risk, delays, churn]. This isn't unique to you — it's an industry-wide challenge, and the companies solving it are seeing [outcome]."
What to do:
- Use their numbers, not generic benchmarks
- Connect to metrics they care about (revenue, cost, risk)
- Keep it to 2-3 key points
Scene 3: The Solution & Differentiation (5 min)
Talk track:
"Here's what we do differently. [One-sentence explanation]. For your team specifically, this means [specific benefit 1] and [specific benefit 2]. [Champion]'s team has already seen [early result or reaction from evaluation]."
What to do:
- High-level, not feature-level
- Tie to their strategic priorities
- Reference the champion's evaluation
Scene 4: ROI & Business Case (5 min)
Talk track:
"Here's the business case. Based on your team's numbers: [walk through ROI calculation]. Expected payback period is [X months]. Over 3 years, the total value is [$ amount]. [Customer similar to them] saw [specific result] within [timeframe]."
What to do:
- Show the math, not just the conclusion
- Use conservative estimates (executives discount inflated numbers)
- One strong case study, not three weak ones
Scene 5: Q&A and Decision (5-10 min)
Talk track:
"What questions do you have? And — assuming the business case holds up, what does the decision process look like from here?"
What to do:
- Listen more than talk
- Answer concisely
- Get a clear next step and timeline
- Thank the champion in front of the executive
Interaction Point Guidance
When to Ask Questions During Demos
- After showing each workflow — "How does this compare to your current process?"
- When you see a reaction — "I noticed you reacted to that — what are you thinking?"
- Before moving to the next section — "Any questions on this before we move on?"
- When showing a differentiator — "How would your team use this?"
- At the midpoint — "Are we covering the right things, or should we adjust?"
Questions NOT to Ask During Demos
- "Does that make sense?" (patronizing)
- "Are you still with me?" (implies they're lost)
- "Isn't that cool?" (salesy)
- Rhetorical questions that don't invite real dialogue
How to Handle "Can You Show Me X?"
When a prospect asks to see something during the demo:
- If it's quick — show it now, then return to your flow
- If it's a tangent — "Great question. Let me note that and show you after the main flow so we stay on track."
- If it's not possible — "We don't do that today. Here's how customers handle it: [alternative]."
Never say "I'll get back to you" without writing it down and following up within 24 hours.