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Nearbound Weekend 05/25: Network Effects are Everywhere in the Nearbound Era
by
Ella Richmond
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In the Nearbound Era, network effects are all around us—even as they remain understudied and are barely talked about in most MBA programs, much less company Zoom calls.

by
Ella Richmond
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Welcome to the Nearbound Daily Newsletter—the #1 partnerships newsletter in the world keeping thousands of partner professionals on top of the latest industry principles, tactics, and trends. nearbound.com is a project of Reveal. Join the movement here. And ask NearBOT a question here.

 

RECAP OF THE NEARBOUND DAILIES LAST WEEK

 

RECENTLY PUBLISHED ON NEARBOUND.COM

 

REFLECTION ON THE NEARBOUND ERA

Where network effects meet nearbound

Network effects and nearbound are closely related concepts. In many ways, nearbound is the ideal GTM strategy for a world where network effects dominate.

 

Once you grasp the meaning and functioning of network effects you realize the importance of engaging and partnering with the nodes connected to your target audience, rather than relying on inbound and outbound approaches to reach buyers directly.

 

In the Nearbound Era, network effects are everywhere—even as they remain understudied and are barely talked about in most MBA programs, much less company Zoom calls. 

 

Their power stems not from scale but from intentional ecosystem design built into the company's GTM strategy from the outset. Scale is an output of network effects, not an input.

 

Merely having many users or partners does not guarantee compounding gains. This is the pitfall of siloing partnerships into a single department rather than baking it into your organization's DNA across every team.

 

Siloed partnership programs end up wasting precious time and resources on low-value, one-off motions that never compound or generate flywheel effects. Why? Because these disjointed efforts aren't linked and leveraged within a diverse, self-perpetuating ecosystem and network.

 

Effective ecosystems cannot be constructed through top-down decrees, outdated operating models, or a perfect org chart. They are intentionally orchestrated, but their effects emerge probabilistically when network incentives align between internal teams, external partnerships, and relationships that surround the customer. Value accrues across varied, symbiotic relationships that reinforce one another. 

 

That's why pioneering nearbound companies architect partnerships into the nervous system of the entire organization. They play long-term games focused on cultivating gravity through open ecosystems that attract partners into their flywheel.

 

Rather than optimize isolated metrics, they take a systems view. They recognize network incentives must be self-reinforcing: progress along one dimension enhances progress along others.

 

—Jared Fuller (Chief Ecosystems Officer, nearbound.com and Reveal)

 

See you tomorrow

 

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