Most enterprise demo pages ask you to do the same thing: pick a slot, hand over your details, and hope the half hour is worth it. You arrive not knowing whether you'll see a working product or a polished pitch, whether your real questions will get answered, or whether the person presenting understands how your stores, website and app actually fit together. For a buying committee juggling competing priorities, that is a gamble most won't take twice — and it's why so many booked demos quietly never happen.
We built the Awayco cart demo to remove the guesswork. Before you book, you already know what the next 30 minutes covers, who each part is pitched at, and what you'll be able to evaluate by the end. No slideware dressed up as a product tour, and no discovery call wearing a demo's name tag.
The session is structured, time-boxed and built around your stack rather than a generic feature reel. We share the agenda before you book, and we hold to it on the day:
Minutes 0–5 — Your stack on the table. We map what you run today: POS, ecommerce platform, mobile app, payment providers and order management. The integration conversation is rarely theoretical — over 70% of retailers are still running POS software and hardware more than two years old, and 40% are on systems older than five years, so this is where realism starts.
Minutes 5–20 — The unified cart, live. The core of the session. We show a single cart state moving across web, mobile and in-store: a shopper adds an item online, an associate retrieves that exact cart on the shop floor, and checkout completes at the POS without re-keying anything. This is the segment most "omnichannel" demos skip or rush, because their cart isn't truly unified — it's three separate carts stitched together and hoped to stay in sync.
Minutes 20–27 — Your edge cases, not ours. Returns, partial fulfilment, split payments, click-and-collect, and local payment methods such as Afterpay and PayID. Bring the scenarios that break your current setup and we'll run them live, rather than steering you down a happy path we've rehearsed in advance.
Minutes 27–30 — Rollout and integration path. What a phased deployment looks like against your architecture, and a realistic view of the effort to get the in-store checkout layer live — not a vague promise to scope it later once contracts are signed.
We configure the walkthrough around the systems you name when you book, so what you see maps to what you'd actually run rather than an idealised environment. The in-store checkout layer is the part we treat as non-negotiable, because it's where most platforms quietly fall short and where the cost of getting it wrong is measurable: when the queue becomes the friction, 40% of shoppers abandon the purchase and complete it with a competitor instead. A demo that ignores the physical floor is only showing you half the problem you're trying to solve.
Bring your digital, retail and IT or engineering leads. Each segment of the agenda is pitched so no one sits through 20 minutes that isn't meant for them — your ecommerce lead sees the unified cart in action, your store operations lead sees the associate-assisted flow, and your engineering lead sees the integration path and rollout shape. A structured walkthrough respects the committee's time, which is usually the scarcest resource in any enterprise evaluation, and it's the difference between a demo that moves a decision forward and one that simply fills a calendar slot.
You'll get a focused 30-minute session, run to the agenda above and built around the stack you describe when you book. No generic sandbox, no slides standing in for a product. Choose a time that suits your committee, tell us what you currently run, and we'll confirm exactly what we'll show you before the call begins.
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