Often, potential customers come to RiskLens disenchanted by their experience with other security and technology vendors. They’re disillusioned with salespeople using fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD) to over-promise and over-price their solution. Post-purchase, they may be left with empty pockets and a solution that doesn’t really fit their needs.
At RiskLens, we understand these very real concerns and recognize the importance of evaluating a technology purchase from the onset. We offer a gradual, step-by-step process for customers to test our solution so they don’t end up as just another disappointed buyer. In this post, I’ll guide you through the progressive steps we take to help interested parties assess RiskLens and our cyber risk management offerings.
Sample Reports to Determine Relevance
Our first touch point with interested parties is an informative session where we review product outputs, sample reports, high level workflows, and walk through applicable use cases. Through this process, potential customers understand and can visualize how information risk can be reflected in quantified, financial terms. We’ve found:
As an interesting side note, when there is a fit in moving the organization's information security program to a risk-based approach like RiskLens, we've found that a successful implementation is highly correlated to the level of executive support much more so than the organization's level of maturity. This is why it is helpful to have all the decision makers involved early on in the evaluation process. More on this topic in a blog here: On the Maturity of an Information Risk Management Practice and RiskLens.
In-Depth Product Demo
After seeing the reporting capabilities of the RiskLens solutions, many of our prospects want to gain a deeper understanding of how we arrived at the results. It's at this time that we offer a more in-depth product demo. Prospects gain the next best thing to a hands on experience by viewing a live product demo that walks them through scoping an analysis, the structure and inputs to workshop questions; which ultimately leads to a detailed report expressing the asset's annualized loss exposure in dollars and cents.
Basically, a product demo aims to answer the question of, “How?”
At this stage, prospects typically tell us, “This is too good to be true. I need to see your solution in my own environment before I can make a decision.” It just so happens that we've developed a way to meet this request.
Pilot Implementation of Application
RiskLens offers an opportunity for prospects to test our product's risk analysis capabilities through a pilot. A pilot is a billable, consulting engagement where a member of the RiskLens Customer Success team comes on-site to conduct 1-2 risk analyses with your analysts, using the RiskLens platform, on a meaningful and mutually scoped risk scenario over 3-4 days. In other words, a pilot is a mini-implementation of the RiskLens software in your own environment. For examples of some of the risk analyses that we have completed recently, please see our Case Studies page.
Scoping a risk scenario for the pilot on an initiative or risk area that matters to your organization is critical to getting the most value out of this exercise. During a pilot, a prospect can: