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Ecosystem-Led Growth with Microsoft: Why Most ISVs Fail to Activate Hyperscaler Marketplaces

by
Johan Aussenac
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Learn how SaaS companies use ecosystem-led growth with Microsoft and other hyperscalers to drive co-selling, marketplace revenue, and enterprise pipeline growth. Insights from WeTransact CEO Johan Aussenac on activating Microsoft Marketplace successfully.

by
Johan Aussenac
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For companies pursuing Ecosystem-Led Growth (ELG), getting listed on Microsoft Marketplace can feel like crossing the finish line.

In reality, it’s the starting line.

According to Johan Aussenac, Co-Founder and CEO of WeTransact, one of the biggest misconceptions in the Microsoft ecosystem is that marketplace presence alone creates pipeline.

“Marketplace is just a means to an end,” Johan explains. “You cannot partner in a meaningful fashion with Microsoft if you’re not listed on the marketplace, but listing alone doesn’t create growth.”

He adds:

“Marketplace is a way to build an ecosystem that grows alongside Microsoft as a trusted presence around your buyers in corporate and enterprise.”

The companies winning with ELG inside the Microsoft ecosystem — and across hyperscaler ecosystems more broadly — are not treating Marketplace as a passive acquisition channel. They are building intentional co-selling motions, activating reseller networks, and creating value for Microsoft before expecting value in return.

In this article, Johan breaks down what modern ISVs can learn from companies successfully turning hyperscaler ecosystems into repeatable growth engines.

Why is trust transfer the core of ELG in hyperscaler ecosystems?

Johan defines ELG simply:

“When you look at Ecosystem-Led Growth, it all comes down to surrounding your buyer with people they already trust.”

For enterprise software companies, hyperscalers like Microsoft already hold trusted relationships with thousands of target accounts, making ELG dramatically more scalable than standalone outbound motions.

Microsoft alone actively engages with more than 90,000 enterprise and corporate accounts globally. As Johan explains:

“If you are a SaaS company looking to surround your buyer with people they trust, Microsoft is very likely the right company to partner with. That makes the ecosystem uniquely powerful for SaaS companies targeting enterprise buyers.”

Instead of approaching prospects alone, ISVs can leverage Microsoft’s credibility, relationships, and distribution network to accelerate deals.

But there’s a catch: Microsoft only meaningfully engages with partners that participate in the ecosystem the way Microsoft expects them to.

That means:

  • Listing on Microsoft Marketplace
  • Sharing opportunities through Microsoft referrals
  • Building joint value propositions
  • Creating revenue opportunities for Microsoft sellers and partners
  • Enabling reseller channels to package and resell solutions

Without those elements, marketplace participation remains largely invisible.

Why is Passive Participation the biggest hyperscaler marketplace mistake? 

One of the most striking realities is how many ISVs still misunderstand the role of Microsoft Marketplace. Johan estimates that roughly 60% of SaaS companies on the Marketplace remain passive participants.

“They have a strong misconception that Marketplace will give them leads,” he says. “They don’t understand that it’s a channel they need to animate and be proactive about.”

This misconception creates a dangerous entitlement mindset:

  • Companies expect inbound leads from Microsoft
  • They assume listing equals visibility
  • They wait for sellers to discover them organically
  • They never operationalize co-selling

In practice, Microsoft sellers are incentivized to work with partners that actively contribute to ecosystem revenue. If an ISV does not proactively engage sellers, share opportunities, and demonstrate customer value, very little happens.

That distinction matters.

Marketplace is not a growth engine by itself, it’s infrastructure for Ecosystem-Led Growth.

ELG is just the operating model built on top of it.

What are the two distribution channels inside Microsoft’s hyperscaler ecosystem?

Many companies think of Microsoft Marketplace as a single channel. In reality, Johan describes two distinct distribution motions.

1. Microsoft sellers

This is the direct co-selling relationship with Microsoft account teams. ISVs collaborate with Microsoft sellers to jointly pursue customer opportunities.

Globally, Microsoft has approximately 35,000 sellers.

These sellers already manage relationships with enterprise customers and can become powerful advocates when aligned around customer value.

2. Microsoft’s partner ecosystem

The second layer is even larger.

Microsoft’s ecosystem includes more than 500,000 partners, resellers, and service providers building businesses on top of Microsoft technology.

These companies:

  • Resell Microsoft products
  • Deliver implementation services
  • Build managed offerings
  • Package third-party solutions

Marketplace allows these partners to resell SaaS applications alongside Microsoft technologies.

This transforms Marketplace from a listing platform into a scalable distribution engine for ELG across hyperscaler networks.

“The beauty is that the same partners reselling Microsoft technology can now resell Marketplace solutions alongside it,” Johan says.

That dynamic is one of the biggest reasons hyperscaler ecosystems are becoming central to modern ecosystem-led growth strategies. For ISVs, this creates an opportunity to build both direct hyperscaler relationships and indirect channel leverage at the same time.

What does a healthy Ecosystem-Led Growth motion actually look like?

Johan has one central principle to build a healthy ELG motion:

Successful Ecosystem-Led Growth starts by creating value for the ecosystem first.

“You need to be sharing deals with Microsoft before you get positioned on net-new deals,” he explains. He describes this as one of the foundational behaviors of ELG inside Microsoft’s hyperscaler ecosystem.

This is where many companies fail. Instead of contributing opportunities to the ecosystem, they wait for referrals.

The stronger playbook looks like this:

Step 1: Share existing opportunities

Microsoft’s referral system allows partners to connect CRM opportunities directly with Microsoft account teams. When ISVs proactively share qualified opportunities:

  • Microsoft sees the company as credible
  • Sellers gain visibility into customer demand
  • Joint account planning becomes possible
  • Trust begins to form

“Having Microsoft engaging with you on your existing deals shows that you're a serious and mature company,” Johan says. He emphasizes that the relationship only develops when partners actively contribute value to the ecosystem first.

Step 2: Build a business case together

Over time, successful co-selling creates evidence. If Microsoft sees real pipeline, real wins, and meaningful collaboration, sellers become more willing to bring partners into net-new accounts.

At that point, the relationship shifts from transactional to strategic.

Step 3: Expand into proactive co-selling

Once trust exists, ISVs can begin collaborating on broader account penetration strategies. Johan describes the flywheel this way: “I bring opportunities into the ecosystem in order to receive opportunities back.”

That’s the core mechanic behind ELG inside hyperscaler ecosystems like Microsoft: Reciprocity.

Why do joint value propositions matter in Ecosystem-Led Growth?

One overlooked challenge in hyperscaler ecosystems is enablement. Microsoft sellers are not automatically prepared to position every partner solution. 

If sellers do not understand:

  • The product
  • The customer problem
  • The economic value
  • The Microsoft alignment

…then co-selling stalls.

“If you don’t do that, then nothing is going to happen,” Johan says. “They won’t see the point, and the customer isn’t going to see the point either.”

This is why WeTransact focuses heavily on helping ISVs build joint value propositions.

The goal is not merely technical marketplace activation. The goal is to make Microsoft sellers confident enough to carry the solution into customer conversations.

That operational layer is where many marketplace strategies either succeed or fail.

How do you measure Ecosystem-Led Growth in a hyperscaler environment?

Companies should separate hyperscaler-sourced pipeline from broader ecosystem-sourced pipeline. 

The volume expectations are fundamentally different, and lumping them together distorts targets and reporting. The activation motions are different too. Companies need separate monitoring frameworks depending on whether they are working directly with hyperscaler sellers or through reseller ecosystems.

Instead, teams should track:

Hyperscaler metrics

  • Opportunities shared with Microsoft
  • Opportunity acceptance rate
  • Co-sell win and loss rate
  • Revenue influenced by Microsoft sellers
  • Marketplace transaction volume
  • Opportunity verification rate

“The higher your metrics are in terms of quality, the higher attention and collaboration you’ll receive from Microsoft,” Johan says.

Ecosystem partner metrics

  • Reseller-sourced opportunities
  • System integrator influence
  • Partner activation rates
  • Partner pipeline contribution
  • Partner expansion revenue

Treating these motions separately helps companies better understand which ecosystem levers are actually working.

What is the minimal viable Ecosystem-Led Growth setup?

Not every company is ready for hyperscaler ecosystem motions. Johan believes companies first need:

  • Clear product-market fit
  • A repeatable revenue motion
  • Internal alignment around partnerships

“Microsoft Marketplace and hyperscaler ecosystems are multipliers,” he says. “If you haven’t found product-market fit, it’s not going to do the trick for you.”

From an organizational perspective, readiness depends heavily on the company’s existing go-to-market motion, for example:

Sales-Led Growth (SLG) companies often transition into ELG more naturally because:

  • They already have sales teams
  • Existing account ownership exists
  • Revenue leaders can initially manage partnerships
  • Sellers can collaborate directly with Microsoft account teams

However, Product-Led Growth (PLG) companies face a different challenge. They often lack structured sales rhythms early on and typically need dedicated partnership leadership sooner.

That distinction is becoming increasingly important as more PLG SaaS companies attempt to operationalize ecosystem motions at scale.

How is the future of Ecosystem-Led Growth operational?

Simply being “partnered with Microsoft” means very little. What matters is operational execution:

  • Sharing qualified opportunities
  • Enabling sellers
  • Activating resellers
  • Creating mutual value
  • Building measurable co-sell motions
  • Maintaining high-quality pipeline contribution

The companies succeeding with Ecosystem-Led Growth inside hyperscaler ecosystems are not waiting for ecosystems to generate growth automatically. They are actively participating in the ecosystem economy.

And as marketplace ecosystems mature, that operational sophistication may become one of the biggest competitive advantages in enterprise SaaS.

Learn how to turn hyperscalers into an ELG growth channel

Microsoft Marketplace is only one piece of the Ecosystem-Led Growth equation.

To turn hyperscalers like Microsoft into a repeatable revenue channel, SaaS companies need the right co-sell motion, partner activation strategy, opportunity-sharing process, and marketplace execution.

Want to learn how your team can use hyperscalers to accelerate ecosystem-led growth?

Book a demo to learn how Crossbeam and WeTransact help SaaS companies operationalize co-selling, activate reseller ecosystems, and scale Ecosystem-Led Growth inside hyperscaler marketplaces.

Frequently asked questions

What is Ecosystem-Led Growth?

Ecosystem-Led Growth is a go-to-market strategy where companies grow revenue by partnering with trusted ecosystem players, such as hyperscalers, cloud marketplaces, resellers, system integrators, and technology partners. Instead of selling alone, companies surround buyers with partners they already trust.

Why are hyperscalers important for Ecosystem-Led Growth?

Hyperscalers like Microsoft, AWS, and Google Cloud already have deep relationships with enterprise customers. For SaaS companies, partnering with hyperscalers can create co-selling opportunities, accelerate trust, expand distribution, and make it easier to reach large enterprise accounts.

How does Microsoft Marketplace support Ecosystem-Led Growth?

Microsoft Marketplace gives ISVs a foundation for co-selling with Microsoft sellers and activating Microsoft’s partner ecosystem. But marketplace listing alone is not enough. Companies need to proactively share opportunities, enable sellers, build joint value propositions, and engage the broader Microsoft ecosystem.

What is the biggest mistake companies make with Microsoft Marketplace?

The biggest mistake is assuming that a marketplace listing will automatically generate leads. As Johan explains, Microsoft Marketplace is a channel that needs to be actively managed, enabled, and connected to a broader ecosystem-led growth strategy.

What metrics should companies track for hyperscaler ELG?

Companies should track opportunity sharing, opportunity acceptance rate, co-sell win rate, marketplace transaction volume, reseller-sourced pipeline, partner activation, and revenue influenced by hyperscaler relationships.

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