Let's look at the real example demo of the company SentinelOne.
SentinelOne used Storylane to create its interactive demos, which are featured in a demo library organized by product features. SentinelOne provides advanced cybersecurity solutions using AI to detect, respond to, and prevent cyber threats in real time. A main customer concern is cloud data security, so SentinelOne built a specific product tour for this problem. The demo immediately showcases how secure the platform is, specifically regarding a customer's Amazon s three bucket from malware.
Drilling down into this specific use case means that the demo only shows customers those areas of the SentinelOne product that will solve their security concerns. This keeps the demo short and focused and has a quick customer time to value. They include hotspots to explain unique features and include color callouts to emphasize specific features. By walking viewers through a specific example, they focus on the customer pain points with phrases such as, while interesting, we bet you were more interested in what CDS is actually protecting.
SentinelOne shows users what they're most concerned about, protected information, and the unique feature of their product, which identifies unprotected cloud resources, helping users find weak points in their security.
Storylane allows you to include many features to make it even easier to support customers through the demo. For example, call out text boxes or hotspots so users know where to click to find features, or have a static button to book a demo or get in touch that sits in the lower right of the demo.
SentinelOne leverages all of these features to make their eight step demo engaging throughout.
The number of steps in your interactive demo will depend on the complexity of your product, but as a general rule, keeping your demo less than 10 steps will mean that it has enough information for viewers to understand your value without being overloaded with features and other non-essential information.
SentinelOne's demo concludes with a simple call to action to continue tour, encouraging users to explore even more features after filling in their details. Now that you've seen a great example of a product tour, it's your turn.
Let's look at the real example demo of the company SentinelOne.
SentinelOne used Storylane to create its interactive demos, which are featured in a demo library organized by product features. SentinelOne provides advanced cybersecurity solutions using AI to detect, respond to, and prevent cyber threats in real time. A main customer concern is cloud data security, so SentinelOne built a specific product tour for this problem. The demo immediately showcases how secure the platform is, specifically regarding a customer's Amazon s three bucket from malware.
Drilling down into this specific use case means that the demo only shows customers those areas of the SentinelOne product that will solve their security concerns. This keeps the demo short and focused and has a quick customer time to value. They include hotspots to explain unique features and include color callouts to emphasize specific features. By walking viewers through a specific example, they focus on the customer pain points with phrases such as, while interesting, we bet you were more interested in what CDS is actually protecting.
SentinelOne shows users what they're most concerned about, protected information, and the unique feature of their product, which identifies unprotected cloud resources, helping users find weak points in their security.
Storylane allows you to include many features to make it even easier to support customers through the demo. For example, call out text boxes or hotspots so users know where to click to find features, or have a static button to book a demo or get in touch that sits in the lower right of the demo.
SentinelOne leverages all of these features to make their eight step demo engaging throughout.
The number of steps in your interactive demo will depend on the complexity of your product, but as a general rule, keeping your demo less than 10 steps will mean that it has enough information for viewers to understand your value without being overloaded with features and other non-essential information.
SentinelOne's demo concludes with a simple call to action to continue tour, encouraging users to explore even more features after filling in their details. Now that you've seen a great example of a product tour, it's your turn.
Let's look at the real example demo of the company SentinelOne.
SentinelOne used Storylane to create its interactive demos, which are featured in a demo library organized by product features. SentinelOne provides advanced cybersecurity solutions using AI to detect, respond to, and prevent cyber threats in real time. A main customer concern is cloud data security, so SentinelOne built a specific product tour for this problem. The demo immediately showcases how secure the platform is, specifically regarding a customer's Amazon s three bucket from malware.
Drilling down into this specific use case means that the demo only shows customers those areas of the SentinelOne product that will solve their security concerns. This keeps the demo short and focused and has a quick customer time to value. They include hotspots to explain unique features and include color callouts to emphasize specific features. By walking viewers through a specific example, they focus on the customer pain points with phrases such as, while interesting, we bet you were more interested in what CDS is actually protecting.
SentinelOne shows users what they're most concerned about, protected information, and the unique feature of their product, which identifies unprotected cloud resources, helping users find weak points in their security.
Storylane allows you to include many features to make it even easier to support customers through the demo. For example, call out text boxes or hotspots so users know where to click to find features, or have a static button to book a demo or get in touch that sits in the lower right of the demo.
SentinelOne leverages all of these features to make their eight step demo engaging throughout.
The number of steps in your interactive demo will depend on the complexity of your product, but as a general rule, keeping your demo less than 10 steps will mean that it has enough information for viewers to understand your value without being overloaded with features and other non-essential information.
SentinelOne's demo concludes with a simple call to action to continue tour, encouraging users to explore even more features after filling in their details. Now that you've seen a great example of a product tour, it's your turn.
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