Best Questions to Ask in a Payroll Software Demo

Most payroll demos show you what the vendor wants you to see. Get a script of questions that uncover how the vendor actually handles your specific complexity.

The Demo is Where You Actually Learn How a Vendor Works

Vendor websites promise everything. RFP responses are crafted documents. But a demo is different. It's live, it's real, and it exposes gaps and complications the sales pitch glosses over. The trick is knowing what questions force the demo to be honest.

Most payroll demos start with the happy path: here's how you enter an employee, here's how you run payroll, here's the pay stub. But you don't need a vendor to show you the happy path. You need them to show you how they handle the messy parts of your actual payroll—multi-state withholding, wage garnishments, contractor management, integrations, edge cases.

The best demo questions steer the conversation away from the prepared narrative and toward what actually matters to your business.

Demo Strategy: Ask for Real Scenarios, Not Features

Don't ask "Do you support multi-state employees?" Ask "I have an employee moving from Texas to California mid-month. Walk me through exactly what changes and when." That's the difference between a yes and a real answer.

Good demo questions:

Key insight: Vendors are great at explaining features. You need them to show you the workflow. Ask them to walk you through it step-by-step.

Core Payroll Workflow Questions

Employee Setup and Data Entry

Multi-State and Complex Payroll

This is where most vendors reveal their limitations:

Contractor and 1099 Management

Integration and Automation

Support and Edge Cases

Implementation and Onboarding

Support Quality

Reporting and Compliance

Pricing and Cost Questions

How to Run the Demo for Maximum Clarity

Before the Demo

Send the vendor your demo questions 3–5 days in advance. This forces them to think about your specifics, not just their standard narrative. It also prevents them from hand-waving answers during the call.

During the Demo

Have two people on the call if possible. One asks questions, the other takes notes. That way you're not trying to listen and document at the same time. Also, have a shared document so you can take consistent notes across vendors.

Don't let them skip over your questions. If they say "most customers don't ask about this," tell them you need the answer. This is how you separate salesmanship from substance.

After the Demo

Follow up with any questions you didn't get through. Ask for a reference customer with similar complexity to yours. Call them and ask if the vendor actually handles what they demo'd.

Red Flags in Demo Answers

"That's not typical for our customers." Translation: we can probably do it, but you'd be an edge case. Dig deeper. If it's not typical but you need it, this is a risk.

"We'll have to follow up on that." Sometimes legitimate. But if they're following up on a lot of your questions, they're not as familiar with the product as they should be.

"We recommend you handle that differently." Translation: our system doesn't do it the way you want. This is often a sign they're trying to change your process to fit their software instead of the other way around.

"I haven't seen a customer ask that before." That doesn't mean it's not a valid need. It means you're uncovering something important.

Comparing Demo Answers Across Vendors

The real power emerges when you compare how different vendors answer the same question. Vendor A handles multi-state withholding automatically. Vendor B requires manual calculation. Vendor C doesn't support it at all. Same question, three very different answers. That's the information you need to make a smart comparison.

Generate Your Payroll Demo Script

Tell us about your payroll complexity, and we'll generate a structured demo script with the right questions for your specific business.

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