What we looked at
We spent three weeks auditing how mid-market B2B SaaS companies present their product to prospects. Not enterprise companies with dedicated demo teams, and not early-stage startups with a Loom link on their homepage. The middle: companies with 50 to 500 employees, selling software that costs enough to require a sales conversation but not so much that every deal gets a custom POC.
We looked at pricing pages, product pages, sales collateral, help centers, and onboarding flows. The question was simple: when a prospect wants to understand what your product does, what do they actually see?
Three patterns emerging
The first pattern is the rise of interactive content on marketing sites. Static screenshots are being replaced by clickable walkthroughs embedded directly on product and pricing pages. Companies that do this report higher time-on-page and more qualified inbound leads because prospects self-educate before filling out a form.
The second pattern is the death of the single product video. The companies seeing higher engagement are creating short, specific demos for individual features, use cases, and personas rather than one long overview video that tries to cover everything.
The third pattern is the use of product replicas (sandboxes) as top-of-funnel content. Instead of gating access behind signup, some companies publish a fully interactive version of their product that anyone can try. This is still rare, but the companies doing it are seeing significantly higher conversion from visitor to qualified lead.
The gap nobody is filling
The biggest gap is not in the quality of demos but in the frequency. Most companies have one or two polished demos and nothing else. They have no demo for the specific feature a prospect asked about on a call. They have no walkthrough for the integration their champion needs to pitch internally. They have no onboarding guide for the workflow that drives retention.
The bottleneck is production cost. When every demo requires a designer, a storyboard, and a revision cycle, you only make the demos that justify the investment. Everything else gets a screenshot or a paragraph of text.
Where this goes next
The direction is clear: demo content needs to move at the speed the product moves. Every feature release gets a walkthrough. Every sales conversation gets a personalized leave-behind. Every support article gets an interactive guide instead of a bulleted list.
That requires a fundamentally different workflow: capture-based rather than production-based, AI-assisted rather than designer-dependent, and measured by engagement rather than polish.
