CO/AI Subscribe
Wednesday · June 17, 2026 · Issue No. 898
Video

Good Demos Are Important

Watch on YouTube

Why good demos make or break your product

In the relentless pursuit of product excellence, founders often overlook a critical component that can determine success or failure: the product demo. Sharif Shameem, founder of Lexica, makes a compelling case for why demos deserve significantly more attention than they typically receive. His insights challenge the conventional wisdom that great products simply speak for themselves.

Key Points

  • Demos are marketing artifacts – They're not just functional demonstrations but carefully crafted narratives that should be repeatedly refined and tested against user reactions.

  • The greatest products aren't always obvious – History shows that revolutionary products like the iPhone required masterful demos to showcase their value, as their benefits weren't immediately apparent.

  • Good demos require strategic design decisions – Products should be built with "demo-ability" in mind, potentially influencing core architecture and feature prioritization.

  • Reactions tell you everything – Real-time user reactions during demos provide invaluable feedback that should drive product iterations.

  • Demo-first development can be transformative – Designing backward from the ideal demo experience can focus development on what truly matters.

The Hidden Power of Product Narratives

The most profound takeaway from Shameem's perspective is how dramatically we underestimate the relationship between product design and narrative. While Silicon Valley culture has long celebrated the mantra "build something people want," Shameem reveals a more nuanced reality: even the most revolutionary products fail without an equally revolutionary way to demonstrate their value.

This insight matters tremendously in today's attention-scarce ecosystem. As product categories become increasingly crowded and complex (particularly in AI and emerging tech), the ability to quickly communicate value becomes as important as the value itself. The iPhone wasn't just revolutionary because of its technology—it was revolutionary because Steve Jobs knew exactly how to make people understand why it mattered.

Beyond the Demo: Creating Memorable Product Experiences

What Shameem doesn't fully explore is how this demo-centric philosophy extends beyond formal presentations. Every user touchpoint functions as a kind of demo. Consider Superhuman, the email client that transformed onboarding into a high-touch demo experience. Their mandatory onboarding calls seemed counterintuitive in a self-serve SaaS world, but they ensured every user understood the product's value proposition perfectly

Share: X LinkedIn Email
Video Feed

More videos

All videos →
Claude Fable 5: When Capability Meets Economics
Video

Claude Fable 5: When Capability Meets Economics

Anthropic released Cloud Fable 5 with a paradox built in: safeguards sophisticated enough to let a mythosclass model...

Run Agentic AI Entirely on Your Mac—No Cloud, No Latency, No Privacy Tradeoffs
Video

Run Agentic AI Entirely on Your Mac—No Cloud, No Latency, No Privacy Tradeoffs

Apple’s MLX framework is mature enough now that you can run serious agentic AI workflows locally on Silicon...

Hermes Agent Master Class
Video

Hermes Agent Master Class

Welcome to the Hermes Agent Master Class — an 11-episode series taking you from zero to fully leveraging...

CONSULTING

Outsider
Labs.

A management consulting team focused on AI transformations for executives and business owners.

Work with us →