Methodology · Practice 01 · Facilitation

The Demo Is the Listening

A client demo is not a pitch. It is the artifact that proves you understood what they actually do.

When this fits
  • First or second meeting with a prospective client
  • The client has sat through generic AI demos before and is skeptical
  • The business has specific operational texture — not just "we want to use AI"
  • There is time to listen for at least 60 minutes before showing anything
How it works
  1. Spend the first 60–90 minutes asking about the work itself — not about AI, not about pain points. What does an ordinary Tuesday look like? Where do hours go? What does the team complain about?
  2. Identify one workflow that has a specific shape — repeated, slow, prone to error, or quietly draining a senior person's time.
  3. In real time, sketch what a 20-minute AI demo of that specific workflow would look like. Not generic AI — the actual workflow, with the actual quirks.
  4. Show it. The demo runs short — twenty minutes — because the listening already did the work.
  5. Close on the conversation, not the tech. The retainer proposal writes itself because the client recognised themselves in the demo.
Why it works

Clients do not buy AI capabilities — they buy the feeling of being understood. A generic demo is a product showcase. A specific demo, built from what the client just told you, is proof the consultant listened. Conversion happens on the listening, not the technology.

Worked example

A founder-led Thai garden retail SME ran a three-hour discovery meeting. The first ninety minutes were about the business — supplier WhatsApp threads, customer order ambiguity, inventory reconciliation done by hand on weekends. The AI demo at the end was twenty minutes, focused entirely on the WhatsApp-to-order workflow. The retainer proposal was drafted the same day.

Anti-patterns
  • Showing a polished demo deck that wasn't built from this client's actual workflow
  • Leading with capability statements ("Claude can analyse documents, generate text, search the web…")
  • Treating the demo as the centrepiece — it is the closing artifact, not the opening move
  • Skipping the listening because the AI tools "are already impressive enough"

Recognise this shape
in a situation you're facing?

The practice fits some discovery contexts and not others. The conversation tells you.

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