Article
|
5
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #440: All aboard the influence train 🚂
Video
|
23
 minutes
Howdy partners #56: Unleashing partner tech- Greg Portnoy
Article
|
3
 minutes
The Official 2023 ‘Boundie Award Nominees!
Video
|
18
 minutes
You've Got a Friend in Crossbeam: Tips for Finding Your Next Best Partner
Video
|
22
 minutes
The Perfect Storm: The Demise of “Growth At All Cost” & The Rise Of Ecosystem-Led Growth
Video
|
23
 minutes
Roadmap Review: See What's New and Upcoming at Crossbeam
Video
|
25
 minutes
Playbook: How Twilio 8x’d Partner-Sourced Pipeline with a Single Partner
Video
|
19
 minutes
Playbook: How Everflow’s Ecosystem-Led Referral Marketing Wins 37% More Customers in 2023
Article
|
19
 minutes
Capture every dollar: Strategies to optimize partner-influenced revenue
Article
|
19
 minutes
Attn Ex-Salespeople: Here Are Four Ways to Change From a Sales to Partnerships Mindset
eBook
Before you build: The Crossbeam guide to launching integrations people want
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #437: Be a partner-worthy company 👊
Video
|
60
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #20: The Power of Networks and Relationships - Justin Gray
Article
|
12
 minutes
How to reference your prospects' tech stacks in your outbound sales emails
Article
|
4
 minutes
How to Properly Leverage a Rebrand To Expand Your Ecosystem
Video
|
44
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #133: Navigating Strategic Alliances - Xiaofei Zhang
Video
|
40
 minutes
Howdy Partners #55: Taking an Entrepreneurial Approach to Partnerships - Dorian Kominek
Video
|
67
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #18: Scaling Partnerships - Jill Dignan
Article
|
5
 minutes
The ultimate KPI smackdown: Partner-sourced vs. partner-attached
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #428: Always factor in the humanity 💞
Video
|
51
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #132: Making Outbound and Nearbound Work Together - Leslie Venetz
eBook
The future of revenue preliminary findings | Crossbeam x Pavilion
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #427: Products & platforms in the nearbound era 👨‍💻
Article
|
12
 minutes
The State of Sales
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #426: The state of startups is grim ☠️
Video
|
35
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #34: Building Trust in the Age of Data Overload - Dan Sanchez
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #425: Mathematician or not, nearbound math is easy 🔢
Video
|
27
 minutes
Howdy Partners #52: Building a Program with No Budget or Tools
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #424: Beyoncé, the platform genius? 🤔
Video
|
45
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #131: Navigating the Changing SaaS Landscape - Alexandra Zagury
Article
|
4
 minutes
This CRO uses ELG to increase ARPU by 23% and reduce churn to nearly zero
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #421: Grow better, together 💪
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 09/30: How to use nearbound to position your company in market
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #420: Sangram Vajre on the undeniable shift in GTM
Video
|
54
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #17: Relationships Over Revenue
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #419: What got you here won't get you there
Article
|
4
 minutes
Need a steady momentum of high-quality leads? Look no further than your partner ecosystem
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #418: Study shows trust in influencers has grown
Article
|
4
 minutes
How to Be the Perfect Partner: An Agency Perspective
Video
|
46
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #130 - Strategy and Evangelism - Jill Rowley
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #417: This company killed its website
Article
|
2
 minutes
The Nearbound Summit is Near - Four Days You Don't Want to Miss
Article
|
7
 minutes
Nailing your Nearbound Sales Math
Video
|
25
 minutes
The Nearbound Mindset: Part Two
Video
|
34
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #32: Two Ways to Drive Intros with New Partners - Sam Dunning
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #415: Microsoft and Facebook +$100M alliance
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #414: Build a more competitive GTM
Article
|
6
 minutes
Why every partnership leader should care about Net Revenue Retention
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #413: Rand Fishkin and nearbound
Video
|
56
 minutes
Partner Attach: The great debate
Video
|
48
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #129: Unlocking Sales Success with a Nearbound Mindset - Matt Cameron
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #411: WARNING this email contains trigger words for partner pros
Video
|
15
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #31: Three Nearbound Marketing Tactics to Start Using Now
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #149: AI just killed SEO
Video
|
53
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #16: How to do Dreamforce Right
Video
|
7
 minutes
Welcome to Supernode
Video
|
23
 minutes
Tobin Bennion: How Snowflake Does Customer Centered Partnerships | Supernode 2023
Video
|
47
 minutes
The state of the partner ecosystem 2023
Video
|
37
 minutes
Tech ecosystem maturity: How to co-sell like a supernode
Video
|
21
 minutes
The 15+ questions that accelerate co-selling
Video
|
12
 minutes
Sara Du: How I Built a Partner Program With No Experience | Supernode 2022
Video
|
18
 minutes
Sara Du: How Top Partnership Leaders Get Integrations Built 2x Faster | Supernode 2023
Video
|
9
 minutes
Quick Tips for Crossbeam Account Management and Data Hygiene | Connector Summit 2022
Video
|
32
 minutes
Polina Marinova Pompliano: Taking Risks in Times of Uncertainty | Supernode 2023
Video
|
20
 minutes
Pamela Slim: Build Ecosystems, Not Empires | Supernode 2022
Video
|
16
 minutes
Michelle Geltman: Ways to Shift Your Sales Team’s Mindset | Supernode 2023
Video
|
11
 minutes
How to Forecast and Manage Sourced and Influenced Pipeline in Crossbeam | Connector Summit 2022
Video
|
3
 minutes
Crossbeam Explains: What are System Integrators?
Video
|
2
 minutes
Crossbeam explains: How Oyster grew its partner ecosystem and team in one year
Video
|
2
 minutes
Crossbeam Explains: Goodbye Cold Outreach, Hello Ecosystem-Led Sales
Video
|
19
 minutes
Crossbeam and Reveal are Joining Forces to Disrupt Go-To-Market Strategy As We Know It
Video
|
23
 minutes
Braydan Young: How to Get Your C-Suite to Care | Supernode 2023
Video
|
24
 minutes
Bob Moore, Lindsey DeFalco, Adam Michalski, Amanda Groves: Unleashing ELG with Crossbeam: Attribution, Revenue, Education | Supernode 2023
Video
|
0
 minutes
Ben Warshaw: RevOps to the Rescue: The Secret Ingredient to Scaling Your ELG Motion | Supernode 2023
Video
|
31
 minutes
Ask Me Anything with Crossbeam Experts
Video
|
29
 minutes
Andrew Lindsay and Bob Moore: AI, The Market, & How to Thrive | Supernode 2023
Video
|
60
 minutes
Alyshah Walji: It’s Time To Develop An Ecosystem Ideal Customer Profile | Supernode 2022
Video
|
60
 minutes
Allan Adler: Aligning your organization for ecosystem success | Supernode Conference 2022
Video
|
30
 minutes
Allan Adler: Aligning Your Organization for Ecosystem Success | Supernode 2022
Video
|
25
 minutes
Allan Adler, Jill Rowley, Kevin Kriebel: ELG and the C-Suite | Supernode 2023
eBook
The 2023 state of the partner ecosystem report
eBook
No opportunities lost: The Crossbeam guide to co-selling with tech partners
eBook
How to Buy a Partner Ecosystem Platform
eBook
4 easy wins: The Crossbeam guide to account mapping
Article
|
4
 minutes
Whale Watching: The Inside Story of the +$100M Microsoft and Facebook Alliance
Article
|
29
 minutes
Map your partner’s org chart & boost partner-sourced revenue by 40%
Article
|
15
 minutes
How to Find the Right Integration Partnerships
Article
|
12
 minutes
How this PM used nearbound GTM and Reveal to revamp Reachdesk's partner program
Article
|
14
 minutes
Getting Partnership Reporting Right
Article
|
2
 minutes
Crossbeam has acquired partnered: Co-selling will never be the same
Article
|
26
 minutes
Democratize Partner Insights with Crossbeam’s Chrome Extension
Article
|
27
 minutes
Celebrating Excellence: Announcing the 'Boundies Awards Winners 2023
Article
|
16
 minutes
Co-Sell Orchestration: The New Imperative for Every Partner Team
Article
|
14
 minutes
Breaking Down Silos and Getting a Seat at the Table
Article
|
19
 minutes
Bridging the Gap Between Insights to Outcomes Requires Playbooks + Training
Article
|
24
 minutes
Box’s Partnership Journey: Nearbound, Allbound, Glory-bound
Article
|
12
 minutes
Best Practices in B2B SaaS Tech Partnership Monetization Models - Part 3
Article
|
25
 minutes
Best practices for co-selling with partners using nearbound
Article
|
15
 minutes
Be a modern Partner Manager and empower your sales teams to co-sell
Video
|
49
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #128 - Be a Beacon of Customer-Centricity
Ecosystem-Led Sales: Deals and Revenue
3 steps to ensure partnerships outperforms outbound sales
by
Zoe Kelly
SHARE THIS

In this article, we cover three steps for scoring quick wins that you can take when building a new partner program.

by
Zoe Kelly
SHARE THIS

In this article

Join the movement

Subscribe to ELG Insider to get the latest content delivered to your inbox weekly.

By Zoe Kelly

September 22, 2022

Being tasked with building a partner program can be a daunting task; you need to determine your partner strategy, and figure out how to get scrappy with the limited resources that you have, all while building internal bridges with your new colleagues. Coupled with economically tumultuous times where proving value as quickly as possible is a necessity for fledgling partnerships programs, knowing which steps to take first is crucial. 

Will Taylor, now the Head of Partnerships at the partnerships media company PartnerHacker, knows what it’s like to be responsible for building a partnerships program or motion from scratch. In June 2020, he was hired by video hosting and analytics software Vidyard as their first-ever partner enablement manager. After just six months in his role, Taylor increased Vidyard’s agency partner retention by 70%, increased the number of agency partners by 75%, and doubled the agency program revenue. His four-step partner enablement process resulted in the partner program bringing in the same amount of revenue as the Vidyard sales team with only one-third of the headcount. 

 

 

After his time at Vidyard, Taylor was the first and only partnerships hire at sales automation and engagement software company Mailshake. At the same time, Taylor was hired to start the partnerships program, Mailshake hired an outbound sales team. In eight months, Taylor had brought in more revenue than the outbound team, despite him being a team of one versus their team of five. Both were net new functions and the partnerships team achieved 135% of partner sourced revenue quota for Q1 2022 while the outbound team produced $0 in closed-won revenue. This proved to the company that partnerships was more effective than outbound sales. 

So how did Taylor manage to make such a big impact, two times over, as a one-man team? He says there are three steps folks looking to build a partner program and drive results quickly should prioritize: 

Step #1: Build internal champions

As anyone who’s been the new kid in school can tell you, cementing positive relationships early on can help ensure you’re not the only person without a lab partner (or in this case, help get the support you need to execute partnerships motions). Building internal bridges and turning your colleagues into partnerships champions expands the people power behind your partnerships motions, without needing to hire any extra headcount. 

“Any team that I approached when I needed [help with a partnerships motion] prioritized it. That’s extremely powerful, especially as a one-person team. If I go to sales and they have ten people, I now have the power of 10 people on my side,” he shared. “As a partner person, that is a very common pain. So finding an internal champion is step number one because regardless of anything else that you do, you are going to need resources from them down the line.”

First, make sure the rest of the company knows who you are. As Taylor notes, the human-to-human connection is important; partnerships are about relationships and that starts internally.

Taylor recommends recording a video and sharing it with the rest of the company to personalize yourself to them. Be sure to include:

A little bit of background on you and your interests. Make it fun! Include your favorite partnership (peanut butter and jelly, John Lennon and Paul McCartney, George R. R. Martin and not finishing a book series), and ask your new colleagues to drop theirs in the comments.

A quick primer on partnerships. If you are building from the ground up, there is a chance folks don’t know what partnerships are. (Our Partner Playbook is a good source for this)

Then, book intro meetings with your company’s heads of departments and at least one person from each GTM department (typically sales, marketing, and customer success). 

“What you need to do to build internal champions is you need to understand what that person cares about, what the number they need to hit is, and what they are responsible for? You should really actually get to know the people,” Taylor says. “You don’t need to learn about all the details about their life, but you should be personal and develop a genuine relationship with them.”

Your meeting agenda should include: 

  • Figuring out what their existing understanding of partnerships is. “Ask them about how they have engaged with partnerships in the past,” Taylor recommends. “And from there, you can understand the gaps within the organization’s knowledge and what you can educate them on. 
  • Learning they care about personally and how it impacts their day-to-day. The more you can connect partnerships to something they truly care about, the better. “You should really actually get to know the people,” Taylor says. “If you know that a salesperson is trying to buy a house then you could say, ‘Well, salesperson, I would love to help you hit your numbers so you can buy that house.’ And if you can align the programs that you run to really making that person successful, then they will be your champion forever.”
  • Defining professional responsibilities (such as KPIs). “Learn what they are held accountable for. You need to be able to say, ‘Hey, I need something, and here is the path from you dedicating your time to the resulting effect it will have on your KPIs.’ If that path is not clear, then they won’t take action.” 

Build and maintain these relationships early on, Taylor says, and you will have a much easier time down the road. 

 

Step #2: Work from the customer backward to create ideal partner profiles

Taylor recommends creating ideal partner profiles for each of your target partner groups based on the value they bring to customers, not your company. “I’m specifically calling out the customer value first in this exercise, and then determine the partner’s value by their engagement with your company and that partner,” Taylor shared. “So how do they actually derive value? From there, you can articulate how your company gains value.” 

Taylor says to do this by bucketing the different types of partners that you will be targeting (tech, channel, and strategic partners). Then, write down all of the different ways your customer would gain unique, partnerships-specific value in an interaction with you and that specific type of partner. For example, what kinds of integrations via tech partners would solve a prominent pain point for your customers?

Then, find partners that can help your customers reach that value with the least amount of friction. 

Partner profiles are important because they: 

  • Facilitate an important perspective shift from KPIs to the unique value partnerships bring to a customer. KPIs can be changed around and adjusted; the needs of your customers are much more permanent. “If your thinking starts with your company, you’re probably always going to approach building your program in terms of establishing pipeline or revenue KPIs. If you work from the customer to your company, your focus becomes the different way that partnerships can provide value to the customer,” Taylor shared. Base your KPIs off of customer value, not the other way around. 
  • Give you a standardized method for prioritizing new partners (something that is crucial when you’re trying to make the most of your time.) There are 87,000+ individual companies registered on Crossbeam’s database of partner programs, Partnerbase. That number is much too high to sift through in its entirety, especially for a partner professional looking to score quick wins while building a program from the ground up. Partner profiles narrow down your search criteria.
  • Create a reference to articulate exactly how a partnership can bring new value to your customers and a jumping point for building a strategy based on this value. Once you are in a partnership with a company, your ideal partner profile can serve as an anchor for the customer value points you want to be highlighting. “[Partner profiles] not only guide which partners you should tap into first but also which strategy may be the lowest friction as well. So that ideal partner profile will help with everything else that you do thereafter. Do the categorization and then work through the value chain from the client to you. And then you can start brainstorming what kinds of programs would highlight these value adds and resonate with these kinds of customers.” 

 

Step #3: Play to the strengths of your company

Getting quick wins can be a great way to show value and give you the grounds to ask for additional resources or headcount that can then be used to hit more long-term, resource-intensive goals.

To do this, Taylor suggests playing to your company’s strengths. Is your marketing team renowned for its webinars? Tap into those existing templated slide decks and virtual event platform resources. Bribe a member of the marketing team with a fancy coffee to help you with the prepwork. Use your marketing team’s contact list to advertise your event. By tapping into a workflow that already works, you increase the likelihood that your webinar is a success.

This might seem counterintuitive; shouldn’t you want partnerships to provide value where it’s needed most (i.e., the weaker parts of your company strategy)?

Long-term, yes. But in order to get the resources you need to fill those gaps, you need to prove that partnerships do, in fact, drive value and are worth investing in. 

Partnerships are also a two-way street. Bringing new value that your company is lacking via partners requires those partners to want to work with you. Showing partners (and potential partners) that they should invest their time and resources into your partnership is crucial when building a partner program. 

“[By playing to our strengths],I was able to grab quick wins because I knew what are we already doing, what were we strong at, and what I could offer to partners. And I got partners in the door very easily through understanding what our power and give was,” Taylor shared. “Because we knew these strengths and because I could action these strengths, I could gather internal resources to help push these actions forward and I had that initial traction with the partners. This resulted in a quicker time to understanding the levers to pull and quicker time to new pipeline, and quicker deals to close.” 

Taylor recommends asking:

  • What kinds of resources and existing motions are at your disposal to offer new partners? This is what Taylor calls “your give”. Does your company have marketing resources that could support co-marketing initiatives? Do you have access to a software engineering team that could shoulder the lift of building an integration? 
  • What are the current programs that are going on at your company? Bringing partners on to piggyback off of company initiatives can be a great way to offer value to potential partners while also tapping into existing momentum.
  • Is your company a sales, product, or marketing lead organization? “When I was going through this process, the company that I was at was marketing lead,” Taylor says. “So that informed the strategy of which partners should I reach out to and what kind of programs should we run. I looked for partners that were best at running events, doing blog posts, and so on.” 

Each step that Taylor lays out plays an important role in generating quick partnerships wins and each plays off of the other two. Without strong internal connections, tapping into your company’s existing strengths will be a challenge. Why would your engineers prioritize working on an integration if they don’t already have an understanding of the value it will bring? Creating an ideal partner profile is great, but if you don’t have something of value to offer those partners in return, they will most likely not want to move forward with you. 

 

You’ll also be interested in these

Article
|
7
 minutes
Article
|
7
 minutes
Article
|
7
 minutes