Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #485: How Zapier Scales Partner Success
Video
|
43
 minutes
Howdy Partners #63 - Unveiling the playbook for GTM success - Matt Dornfeld
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #484: Enhance Your 2024 Events Strategy
Article
|
8
 minutes
5 Ways to Align Customer Success Teams with Your Nearbound Strategy
Video
|
46
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #145 - From the Vault:The Art of Channel Partnerships with Bobby Napiltonia
Video
|
5
 minutes
Building in an Ecosystem: Why Hapily is Shipping Products Entirely on HubSpot by Scott Brinker and Connor Jeffers
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #481: 'Twas the Night Before a Partner Deal
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 12/23: It's a wonderful partner pro life
Video
|
30
 minutes
Howdy Partners #62 - The Nearbound Playbook: Proven Strategies for Success - Will Taylor & Isaac Morehouse
Video
|
58
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #27 - Building Trust and Adding Value in Partnership Programs - Bryan Williams
Article
|
10
 minutes
The nearbound email template hub
Video
|
48
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #144 - The rise of the chief partner officer - Asher Mathew
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound #477: Don't Get Blinded By The Shine 😵
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #476: How to Find the Right Rumble 👂
Article
|
5
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 12/16: Do We Have A New Funnel? 🎀
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #475: Co-sell, Co-keep, Co-grow
Video
|
54
 minutes
Howdy Partners #61: How Partnerships Can Drive Customer Advocacy - Will Taylor
Video
|
9
 minutes
How to Measure Partnerships ROI
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #474: Nearbound, Allbound, Glory-bound 🙌
Video
|
49
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #25 - Building Exceptional Relationships - Matt Quirie
Video
|
10
 minutes
Brandon Balan and McKenzie Jerman: We replaced our mid-market sales with Ecosystem-Led Growth. This is what happened. | Supernode 2023
Video
|
55
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #143 - Cracking the Nearbound Code: Secrets to Successful Nearbound Plays - Isaac Morehouse and Will Taylor
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #471: Uncover Your Shadow Partner Program
Article
|
5
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 12/09: Fruit Ninja Influencer Drives 600k in Revenue
Video
|
57
 minutes
The Future of Revenue: What you need to know
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #470: Yes, It Really Is That Easy
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #469: No BS Guide to Revenue 💰
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #468: Some triggering advice from Jason Lemkin 🤐
Article
|
10
 minutes
Key takeaways: The 2023 state of partner-led growth report
Video
|
44
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #142 - The Kobe Bryant Approach to Partnerships: A Conversation with Rohan Batra
Article
|
180
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #467: Overcome partnerships negativity
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #466: Ecosystem revenue times infinite 💰
Article
|
1
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 12/02: Nearbound synergy 👩‍🔬
Video
|
30
 minutes
Howdy Partners #59: The Secret to Building a Successful Partnership Strategy - Katie Landaal
Video
|
54
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #23: The Power of Storytelling - Priya Sam
Article
|
23
 minutes
Does Partnerships Have a Boredom Problem?
Video
|
44
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #141 - Unleashing the Nearbound Mindset - Jared Fuller
Article
|
4
 minutes
Getting to "All In": Achieving Cross-Functional Buy-In for Your Ecosystem Strategy and Plan
Video
|
44
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #140- - Revenue Over Relationships: How to Make Money in Every Partnership - Rasheité Calhoun
Article
|
5
 minutes
With ELG, your sales team will need fewer opportunities to hit quota
eBook
The Future of Revenue 2023
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #454: Why your GTM determines co-sell strategy 💪
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #453: TrustRadius on how buyers think and purchase 💰
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 11/11: Good language produces results
Video
|
59
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #21: A Masterclass in Purposeful Networking - Scott Leese
Video
|
26
 minutes
Session two. Why Sales Teams Need Nearbound by Bobby Napiltonia and Jared Fuller
Video
|
25
 minutes
Session twelve. Phone a Friend: How Nearbound Social Warms Up Cold Calls by Daisy Chung, Avi Mesh, and Adam Sockel
Video
|
28
 minutes
Session three. When the Buzzword Meets the Road: Does Co-Selling Have to be So Hard? by Sam Yarborough, Stephanie Pennell, Xiaofei Zhang, and Rasheité Calhoun
Video
|
28
 minutes
Session thirteen. Beyond the Data: Henry Schuck’s Journey from Bootstrapped to Billions by Henry Schuck and Simon Bouchez
Video
|
26
 minutes
Session ten. Public Ecosystems and Private Ecosystems by Harbinder Khera, Theresa Caragol, and Kevin Linehan
Video
|
28
 minutes
Session six. Level Up Your 2024 Results: The Big Partner Bet by Judd Borakove
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session seven. Go To Network & The 3 Nearbound Sales Plays by Scott Leese
Video
|
26
 minutes
Session one. The Challenge for CROs Thinking Nearbound by Mark Roberge and Jill Rowley
Video
|
22
 minutes
Session nine. The Antidote to More: How Nearbound Rewrites the Better Together Story by Latané Conant
Video
|
32
 minutes
Session fourteen. 30 Minutes to President's Club LIVE at the Nearbound Summit by Nick Cegelski and Armand Farrokh
Video
|
25
 minutes
Session four. Operational Rigor in the Nearbound Era by Cindy Zu and Graham Younger
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session five. When Partner Attach Goes Wrong and How to Coach Your Way Out of It by Aaron McGarry and Cory Bray
Video
|
25
 minutes
Session eleven. Turning Your Company’s Network Into Pipeline by Joshua Perk
Video
|
38
 minutes
Session eight. Real Templates You Can Use to Run Nearbound Sales Today by Will Allred and Jared Fuller
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #448: 👊 A never-before-seen lineup of top marketers
Video
|
26
 minutes
Session two. Nearbound Surround: How to Reach Buyers in the 'Who' Economy by Isaac Morehouse
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session twelve. The 3 Best Event Types for Driving Revenue by Kate Hammitt and Emily Wilkes
Video
|
26
 minutes
Session thirteen. The Future of ABM: How to Elevate Your GTM Strategy with Intent Data & AI by Deeksha Taneja and Yiz Segall
Video
|
26
 minutes
Session ten. How People-First GTM and Nearbound Will Forever Change How You Grow Pipeline and Revenue by Mark Kilens and Nick Bennett
Video
|
26
 minutes
Session seven. Event Led Growth: Partner Events at Scale by Justin Zimmerman
Video
|
30
 minutes
Session one. The End of the Demand Waterfall bySidney Waterfall
Video
|
28
 minutes
Session nine. The Data is In: It's About 'Who' not 'How' by Vinay Bhagat
Video
|
20
 minutes
Session fourteen. LIVE Freestyle Performance by Harry Mack
Video
|
26
 minutes
Session four. People Trust People: How to Drive Pipeline with Personalities by Adam Ryan and Daniel Murray
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session five. How To Scale Revenue Through Pay-For-Performance Partnerships by Michael Cole and Adam Glazer
Video
|
30
 minutes
Session eleven. What is Nearbound Social? by Logan Lyles
Video
|
44
 minutes
Session fifteen. Marketing Against the Grain LIVE at the Nearbound Summit by Kipp Bodnar and Kieran Flanagan
Video
|
4
 minutes
Session eight. Revenue Renaissance: Why Marketing & Partnerships Will Lead Revenue in 2024 by Tyler Calder
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session two. How Our Product Team Is Thinking About Partnerships in 2024 by Simon Bouchez
Video
|
29
 minutes
Session two. Bringing Champions Into Your Nearbound GTM by Jeff Reekers
Video
|
30
 minutes
Session three. Empty Platform Promises: Delivering on 1+1 = 3 by Chris Trudeau and Russell Dwyer
Video
|
28
 minutes
Session seven. An Ecosystem Strategy to Evolve from a Product to a Platform by Kenny Browne and Cody Sunkel
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session one. Unleashing the Power of Partnerships: Driving Product Innovation and Performance by Katie Landaal and Sophie Cheng
Video
|
28
 minutes
Session one. You Work for the Customer: Remembering the 'Why' of Partnerships by Jill Rowley and Jared Fuller
Video
|
31
 minutes
Session four. Partner Led Product Strategy by Bryan Williams and Ben Wright
Video
|
26
 minutes
Session four. How to Attach Partners to Customers so Everyone Wins by Jen Spencer and Rich Gardner
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session eight. Platform Vs. Product: How Product and Partner Teams Can Shape the Future of an Ecosystem by Karen Ng and Kelly Sarabyn
Video
|
32
 minutes
Building Successful Partnerships with Phil McKennan from Qualtrics
eBook
Chapter 2: Nearbound Defined
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session two. GTM Unplugged: 5 Easy-to-Use Frameworks That Make GTM Simple by Sangram Vajre and Lindsay Cordell
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session twelve. The Top 10 Biggest Mistakes I See Revenue Leaders Making in 2023/2024 by Jason Lemkin
Video
|
31
 minutes
Session three. Alliances: Becoming a Number 1 App Partner as a Startup by Mike Stocker, Marc Ginsberg, and Madelyn Wing
Video
|
28
 minutes
Session ten. Play Bigger with Nearbound: A Conversation with the Best Selling Author of "Play Bigger" by Kevin Maney and Isaac Morehouse
Video
|
30
 minutes
Session six. Venture Capital Through the Nearbound Lens by Justin Gray, Josh Wagner, and Sean kester
Video
|
31
 minutes
Session nine. Collaborative Growth: Building a Fast-Growth, High Margin Business Through Partnerships by Peter Caputa
Video
|
23
 minutes
Session four. Nearbound Starts with You: Why Personal Networks are the Backbone of the 'Who' Economy by Mac Reddin
Video
|
25
 minutes
Session five. Build, Buy, or Partner: How to Navigate Strategic Growth Decisions by Laura Padilla, R.J. Filipski, and Iris Ng
Video
|
28
 minutes
Session eleven. How Far are We into the 'Decade of Ecosystems'? by Jay McBain
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #445: The Summit keynote breakdown 😎
Video
|
29
 minutes
Howdy Partners #58: Navigating Big-Fish Small-Fish Partnerships - Juraj Pal
Article
|
3
 minutes
Leverage AI to Build Your Partner Program
eBook
Download the PartnerHacker Handbook
Article
|
3
 minutes
Don’t waste your prospect’s time on discovery. Speed up the sales qualification process with partners
Article
|
5
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #440: All aboard the influence train 🚂
Video
|
23
 minutes
Howdy partners #56: Unleashing partner tech- Greg Portnoy
Career
20+ Interview Questions for Hiring Your First Tech Partner Manager
by
Olivia Ramirez
SHARE THIS

Your tech partner manager should know how to work with relevant stakeholders and which integration use cases would be most successful for your business.

by
Olivia Ramirez
SHARE THIS

In this article

Join the movement

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

By Olivia Ramirez

November 25, 2021

Hiring your first tech partner manager isn’t easy. There’s no special certification program one can take to prove their partnerships potential, and your tech ecosystem is pretty darn unique. Finding the right person for the role is kind of like finding a two-bedroom apartment in New York City with a balcony, a dishwasher, and laundry in-unit — 100% possible if you have the right approach and you’re very, very patient. 

You’re in luck. At Crossbeam, we’ve been building out our own partnerships team and thought it only appropriate to share our hiring questions with you. We’ve included more than 20 questions below to help you find talent with the right partnerships mindset, skills, and technical knowledge.

For your reference, the questions below follow this general order: 

  1. General questions to gauge the candidate’s experience working in partnerships and with relevant stakeholders
  1. Questions specific to the ins and outs of the “tech partnerships” role 
  1. Questions relevant to working with teams like “Product” and “Sales” 

#1 How have you been measured in previous roles?

Get the candidate talking about whether they were managed by objectives (MBOs), what their key performance indicators (KPIs) were (e.g. partner-influenced revenue, net new partnerships created), and how they achieved their goals. If the candidate worked in sales previously but was held accountable for or even led a team of sales reps in meeting their partnership-related objectives and key results (OKRs), that’s a win.

(Tip: how the partnerships team is managed is a contributor to the maturity of its tech ecosystem. The hiring manager can initiate a dialogue about the growth of the candidate’s partner program, if applicable, through this question.)

#2 Which internal teams have you worked with?

The partnerships function should have a direct impact on every other business function — from marketing to sales. Additionally, those business functions play a direct role in a partner program’s success. This is an opportunity to get real stories about wins the candidate has influenced by collaborating with marketing, sales, customer success, product, and so on. 

On top of that, partnerships is all about community! If they haven’t worked in a true partnerships role previously, they should have transferable people skills and sales, product, and/or marketing knowledge to do the job well if given the chance. 

#3 Why would an account executive (AE) on the sales team want to co-sell with a partner? How does a successful co-selling motion help the sales cycle? 

It will be impossible to get buy-in from your sales team (an ongoing challenge for partnership professionals according to our State of the Partner Ecosystem Report) if your candidate can’t communicate the value your tech partnerships will have for your sales reps. Your candidate must be able to show that they understand the benefit of co-selling — the fastest go-to-market tactic for partnership professionals. 

They should be able to speak effectively on the potential outcomes of co-selling, such as accelerating a deal and shortening the sales cycle, improving the individual rep’s close rate, reviving an opportunity gone dark, increasing an opportunity’s deal size, and other sales wins.

Bonus: This question can also give you insight into the candidate’s knowledge about the sales org and its typical structure and challenges. 

(Sign up for the 2022 State of the Partner Ecosystem Report here, and get the report as soon as it’s published.)

#4 What would you do if an AE doesn’t want to collaborate with a partner, even if the particular integration would create strong value for the prospect in your eyes? What would your approach be to remedy this? 

It’s buy-in 101. Your candidate should have an idea of how to get buy-in from the sales team — whether they’ve done it successfully in the past or they’re able to think of creative ways to show the value of co-selling with partners in innovative ways. 

Some examples of potential answers: 

  • Celebrate co-selling wins initiated by individual sales reps at the top of meetings and/or in your team collaboration tool like Slack.
  • Make it easy for the sales reps to co-sell with partners by providing pre-written email templates for partner outreach and prospect outreach, integration one-sheets, slide decks with metrics proving the integration’s impact on the sales cycle for the sales reps, slide decks with metrics proving the integration’s impact on the prospect’s use cases, etc. 

#5 Imagine you’re now in the tech partner manager role and have a dozen existing tech partners you can co-sell with. How do you go about determining the prioritization of which ones to lean into the most?

Not all overlaps are created equal! You could be wasting your partners’ time and your sales reps’ time by enlisting them for co-selling motions without thoughtful consideration. For example: Your hypothetical partner Hextall & Co. could carry a lot more weight with a particular prospect than your hypothetical partner KSaaS. Hextall & Co. has an existing relationship built on trust with the top stakeholder from the prospect account, while KSaaS simply has their eye on the prospect. 

Your candidate should understand the value of not only enlisting the right partners for the right opportunities but also of maintaining their relationship with partners by respecting their time and resources.

Potential answers: 

  • Use a partner ecosystem platform like Crossbeam to map accounts and discover overlapping prospects between you and your partners. Then, filter the overlaps according to a set of criteria, like customer size, gross merchandise value (GMV), those who use a particular tool in their tech stack, and by region (like Gorgias does). You can pull some of this data from your customer relationship management (CRM) system and/or map accounts with your partners to identify your customers’ tech stacks and create custom Populations for those accounts.
  • Sync up with your sales reps to determine exactly how they need help with the account. Then discuss a handful of their accounts with the partner to determine their relationship with the account, if they know relevant stakeholders, what stage of the sales cycle the account is in (or if the account is a customer). If they have the right kind of in with the account, initiate the co-selling motion.

The account mapping matrix in Crossbeam

#6 What do you believe are the most important things to validate from a go-to-market (GTM) perspective before kicking off a co-selling partnership with a new tech partner that has a functioning integration with your company?

Typically, tech partnerships aren’t a build it and forget it kind of relationship. Leading up to your integration launch, your team and your partner’s team will need to collaborate on a number of moving parts. In addition to building the integration (and ensuring your APIs function as you anticipated), your product, engineering, solutions engineering, and product marketing teams (think: your “Ecosystems Team“) will need to align on their efforts months leading up to your launch to prepare for rolling out the integration and spreading the word effectively post-launch. This requires a high level of buy-in from your internal team and from your partner’s team. 

Your candidate should have an understanding of how many players contribute to a successful integration launch and how the GTM strategy would unfold in a hypothetical or lived experience (e.g. creating the foundational co-marketing materials like integration listing pages and also creative content that engages your target market and existing customers to drive integration adoption). 

(Mike Stocker’s partnership maturity curve for integration adoption is just one example of how to approach a strategic partnership’s GTM strategy.)

#7 What does an ideal working relationship look like with marketing, product, and sales? What are a few attributes of what successful collaboration looks like for each team?

Building from question #6, this is an opportunity to dig into the relationship-building skills of your candidate as well as their knowledge of project management with multiple stakeholders. 

A couple of ideas for what your candidate could mention: 

  • Syncing up with each team for regular meetings leading up to an integration’s launch to ensure that each team’s projects are on track. Your product marketing team is aligning with partners to create co-marketing collateral, your product and engineering teams may be managing the product roadmap and the integration roadmap while smoothing out potential hiccups with API functionalities — there’s a lot that could change from week to week, and it’s important to communicate effectively. 
  • Defining responsibilities for each team up front so everyone knows what they’re accountable for at the team and individual level. It’s possible marketing is splitting its time between developing co-marketing for the integration and more traditional marketing projects. Being considerate of each team’s quarterly goals is critical to successful cross-functional collaboration.

#8 Who or what sources have you learned from to gain experience about partnerships as a career?

This question can provide insight into the candidate’s knowledge of the industry. Additionally, your network plays an important role in your ability to build a partnerships program. Your candidate should have an understanding of who some of the players are who have influence in the markets you’re targeting and of some of the challenges and solutions prevalent in the industry. They can speak about what they’ve learned from others while also showing that they’re confident speaking with external stakeholders.

#9 Which areas of partnerships do you wish you were stronger at and why?

The best partnership managers are innovative. The partnerships function differs from one company to the next, and that means the partnerships manager needs to continuously experiment, iterate, and establish the Ecosystem Ops (think: a set of repeatable processes for partnerships) that work. 

Just think about how Forest Yule developed the Partner Impact Score Methodology to identify the most strategic overlaps with his partners. Give your potential tech partner manager the chance to show their creative side. 

#10 Which two or three of our existing integrations have you the most excited and why?

By asking about the integrations in your tech ecosystem, the candidate will be able to share their knowledge about your integration use cases, your “better together” stories, and general core product value. 

For us, we ask candidates about their favorite Partner Cloud integrations.

#11 How do you approach working with a partner you find tough to work with? 

Partnering with another company is like adopting a whole new set of teammates – not just your partner but also their marketing, sales, and customer success teams. In some cases, your partner’s company will be at a different stage than yours (think: mid-size vs. enterprise), their partner program may be at a different level of maturity, and, well, their personalities might not jive with yours. 

Your candidate should not only talk about their ability to work with a mix of characters but also how to get things done. How would your candidate ensure your partner does the work? 

Potential answers: 

  • Vet the partner beforehand to make sure they have the resources, headcount, and buy-in to deliver on the project. 
  • Create a term sheet to define expectations from both partners, schedule recurring check-ins, and set a date for a partnership reevaluation to decide whether or not to continue the partnership.
  • Know that in some cases the most strategic partnerships will involve your team building the integration, creating the co-marketing collateral, and completing other projects with little help from your partner. In this case, you’ll need to set expectations for individual and team responsibilities internally.

#12 Define [our company] and the problems we’re trying to solve.

Identifying the best integrations to build will be pretty difficult if the candidate doesn’t understand the value of your product and how your data could improve your customers’ business goals by connecting with the tools they’re using. What are some ways that your data could power your customers’ businesses? 

For example: if you’re a CRM tool, you could integrate with an account-based marketing (ABM) tool to create highly targeted campaigns for strategic accounts.

Bonus questions to throw in the mix: 

  • Can you share an example of your best wins as a partnership professional?
  • What are some tech partnerships you see [our company’s] data enabling? 
  • How do you prioritize which integrations to build?
  • Can you describe how a technical integration works between two products?
  • Have you worked with a product team in the past to launch integrations?
  • Talk through a successful partnership you’ve cultivated. 
  • Can you describe what an API is and how they work to the best of your ability?
  • How do you approach calls and sales cycles with AEs?
  • If a prospective partner were to come to you wanting to build an integration, what would be some concerns that you’d be on the lookout for to make sure it’s a good fit?
  • Who was your favorite and least favorite AE to work with, and why?
  • What’s your approach to preparation prior to a prospect call?

Ready to hire your first tech partner manager? Get our “Tech Partner Manager Interview Kit” by filling out the form below.

Additional Considerations: 

Create a take home test. For our take home test, we asked candidates to create a presentation explaining how they would build a partnership with a high-priority tech partner. This gave us the opportunity to hear how the candidate would approach the partnership from the beginning stages of setting expectations, establishing relationships across teams, and defining the joint value proposition to the latter stages of launching a GTM strategy with the partner.

Your take home test could give you a window into how the candidate will get buy-in from relevant stakeholders, their relationship building skills, their technical knowledge, and more.

What we looked for in the candidate’s answers to the take home assignment: 

  • The candidate spoke about the correct use case.
  • The candidate was able to explain why the partner and the integration was a good fit. 
  • The candidate expressed relevant knowledge of our partnership strategy. 
  • The candidate sounded knowledgeable and natural. 
  • The candidate had internalized their answers, rather than reading from the page. 

Arrange interviews with relevant stakeholders. We asked candidates to speak with stakeholders from our partnerships, sales, and product teams. Think about the teams your tech partner manager will work most closely with, and set up interviews accordingly. 

Weight your questions according to importance. Some questions should be worth more than others. Perhaps you’ll weight the more general questions in the beginning stages of the interview process less than some of the questions your partnerships leader or product teams ask. Establish a weighting system to score the questions that matter most more heavily than the questions that simply give you a baseline understanding of the candidate’s background in the early stages of the interview process.

You’ll also be interested in these

Article
|
14
 minutes
Article
|
14
 minutes
How We Foster Collaboration Remotely at Crossbeam
Article
|
14
 minutes