This is sooooo good. I wish someone had shared this earlier. I hope many eyeballs will eventually get a view of this video. Just b/c a pre-ordered video is polished and succinct and free of flaws, it doesn't mean that you are trying to bamboozle audience. If you feel that a critical part of your audience wishes to see authentic errors, you can always show a QR code to an additional recording that authentically record issues that previous demos came across. Like say you are trying to get exposure to a mobile app, and one of the super powers is that the app does really really well even in poor networking (like doing really well even if a user is driving through mountains without any cellular signals)--a skeptical audience would expect that your demo to smoothly sail through the worst convention hall public wi-fi--b/c after all--that's one of its super powers. So be sincere and show an additional QR code on one of the first slides and insist everyone keep a snapshot. Don't single out a skeptic, everyone should take a photo of the QR code. Now, you can do as Sensei Tattooed Nerd suggests: focus on the audience. Make their time worth it.
This is sooooo good. I wish someone had shared this earlier. I hope many eyeballs will eventually get a view of this video.
Just b/c a pre-ordered video is polished and succinct and free of flaws, it doesn't mean that you are trying to bamboozle audience. If you feel that a critical part of your audience wishes to see authentic errors, you can always show a QR code to an additional recording that authentically record issues that previous demos came across. Like say you are trying to get exposure to a mobile app, and one of the super powers is that the app does really really well even in poor networking (like doing really well even if a user is driving through mountains without any cellular signals)--a skeptical audience would expect that your demo to smoothly sail through the worst convention hall public wi-fi--b/c after all--that's one of its super powers. So be sincere and show an additional QR code on one of the first slides and insist everyone keep a snapshot. Don't single out a skeptic, everyone should take a photo of the QR code. Now, you can do as Sensei Tattooed Nerd suggests: focus on the audience. Make their time worth it.
Well thought out reply and great advice!