Article
|
7
 minutes
How CoPort Launched their PLM Platform with the Help of ELG
Article
|
6
 minutes
Accelerate innovation and market reach: Why data sharing is a game-changer for ISVs
Article
|
4
 minutes
Your GTM motion isn’t dead — it’s just not partner-led
Article
|
6
 minutes
Let's save your deal, one intro at a time
Article
|
6
 minutes
How Document Crunch used ELG and Crossbeam to achieve 85% of their pipeline goal — and stay on track for 100%
Video
|
28
 minutes
Maximizing Crossbeam: Master Salesforce Reports & Dashboards
Article
|
5
 minutes
How BEMO boosted meetings by 900% using Clay, Crossbeam, HubSpot, and Ecosystem-Led Growth
Article
|
7
 minutes
Turning Clojure code into Temporal gold: Crossbeam’s data pipeline transformation
Article
|
4
 minutes
5 ways to leverage the your partner’s influence and trust
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #694: Ditch drag for drive
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #693: Turn data into dollars
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #692: ELG isn’t just B2B
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #691: Stop chasing revenue alone
Article
|
4
 minutes
New data: Involving partners in deals increases win rate for nearly every ecosystem size and type
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #689: Lean into your winning niche
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #687: The email inbox that ate my productivity 🎃
eBook
Template: Impact of integration tracker
eBook
Template: Tracking your tech ecosystem's impact on churn
eBook
Template: Warm intro emails
eBook
Template: Tech integrations by partner
eBook
Template: Partner tiering checklist
eBook
Template: Partner onboarding workbook template
eBook
Template: Integration questionnaire
eBook
Template: Integration announcement
eBook
Template: Co-marketing checklist
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #686: AI is a partner’s partner
Video
|
50
 minutes
Uncovering the Crossbeam Ecosystem Revenue Platform
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #685: 43% of buyers don’t want a rep…
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #683: How to put your buyer in the driver’s seat
Article
|
4
 minutes
Follow the network: Your path to market expansion
Article
|
4
 minutes
Following to lead: How to win buyer-driven deals
Video
|
 minutes
ARReasons to pay for Crossbeam
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #681: The 5S framework is not just for marketing
Article
|
3
 minutes
Incentives: The Key to Activating Your Partner Ecosystem
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #680: A lush forest of opportunity
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #676: What it really means to scale
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider #678: The 4 +1 pillars that hold up your partner ecosystem
Article
|
6
 minutes
5 ways to leverage ecosystem data
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider #677: In business, context is everything
Article
|
1
 minutes
What's better than an open opportunity? 1.6 million of them
Article
|
5
 minutes
ELG Insider #661: Step aside, spreadsheets
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #674: Help write the new GTM playbook
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #673: I just want to sell, sell, sell
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #671: 7 tactics to turn partnerships into pipeline
Article
|
4
 minutes
How to scale your reselling program
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #670: Trust the process
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #669: The foundation of a $1B partnership program
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #668: This is what great sales leaders are made of
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #667: When less is more in your partner ecosystem
Article
|
3
 minutes
Good partner managers/ bad partner managers
Article
|
3
 minutes
Good sales leader / bad sales leader
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #666: How much power do numbers really have?
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #665: Fix your GTM problem
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #664: Meet the fresh new ELG Insider
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #663: Every GTM motion is a fact-finding mission
Article
|
5
 minutes
How I Present Partner Strategy to CxOs & the Board for Decacorns ($10B+) and a Unicorn ($3.8B)
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #662: When your own GTM team is your ICP
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #660: Decode your deal
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider #658: The new high-performing seller
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #651: Use this easy account mapping win for customer retention
Article
|
6
 minutes
Maximize your existing accounts: 3 proven ways to boost revenue
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider #657: Who is the MVP of your GTM motion?
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider #656: Money, money, money, must be funny
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider #655: How to develop a top skill of the best sellers
Article
|
6
 minutes
How FullStory increased client retention using Ecosystem-Led Growth tactics
Article
|
5
 minutes
ELG Insider #654: What sets high-performing sales teams apart
Article
|
6
 minutes
ELG Insider #653: Curiosity killed the cat?
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider #652: Cheers to outreach success
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Idols: Meet the enterprise sales veteran who turned commercetools’ ecosystem into a revenue machine
Article
|
7
 minutes
How to Win with Partner Marketing
Article
|
1
 minutes
Nearbound.com is now ELG Insider!
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #650: How to boost your Ecosystem-Led Customer Success wins
Article
|
5
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #649: ELG for and by marketers
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #648: The Google + HubSpot story
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #646: EQLs, the gifts that keep on giving
Article
|
5
 minutes
What can B2B SaaS companies learn about Ecosystem-Led Growth from a solo entrepreneur?
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #645: Where is the AI in ELG?
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #644: Three easy ELG plays
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #642: Make the money follow you
Article
|
5
 minutes
When sales and partnerships partner up
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #640: Do not let anybody ghost you
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #639: Do not be an ordinary seller, instead do this!
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #638: The secret to customer retention
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #636: Speed up deals with this warm intro email template
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #635: How to Make the Right Noise at INBOUND
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #632: To win in sales, Always Be Collaborating
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #631: How to turn frenemies into power partners
Article
|
8
 minutes
Everything you need to know to build a reseller program
Article
|
6
 minutes
Every Stat We Have That Proves The Value Of Partnerships
Article
|
5
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #630: Give your prospects the gift of time
Article
|
5
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #628: Boost integration adoption by knowing your customers tech stack
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #627: 3 tips to master co-selling with partners
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #623: Cold email is not dead, it is just not partner-led
Article
|
4
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #626: Shorten your enterprise sales cycles by 44%
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #625: The sales vet who turned an ecosystem into a revenue machine
Video
|
50
 minutes
The Crossbeam x Reveal merger: Watch Bob Moore and Simon Bouchez give the inside scoop
Article
|
5
 minutes
The story behind the merger: A recap from ELG Con London
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #622: To the infinity and beyond of channel partners
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #621: Focus on market trends, not just on product demand
Article
|
3
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #620: How Cloud GTM is Transforming Legacy Partnerships
Best of Nearbound
The partner experience weekly: Should partnerops role up to revops?
by
Aaron Howerton
SHARE THIS

PartnerOps is a role with many potential functions. Where it 'lives' in the organization can have an impact on success.

by
Aaron Howerton
SHARE THIS

In this article

Join the movement

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

I’m fortunate to be part of a community where ideas for content just fly through Slack on a weekly basis. Seriously, I could probably write a daily article from the conversations and the value driven by the questions and answers that come through the #OpsandPrograms channel alone at Partnership Leaders.

 

Last week one topic stood out when my new friend Jason Lawson asked a really fantastic, seemingly simple question about PartnerOps reporting lines: How does shifting PartnerOps into RevOps impact role alignment and responsibilities? (PS - You’ll need a membership to access that link... sorry!)

 

Guessing you can already sense why this one hits home for me but if not... I host weekly Partner Ops office hours at Partnership Leaders, talk a lot about Partner Operations, and currently work for Atlassian as a Channel Operations Architect. So this chat was 100% my ’jam.’

 

Jason’s question was great for a number of reasons.

  1. It’s a program lead showing interest and concern for the impact of role alignment on his team. PartnerOps or not, this is a great sign of a solid people manager. #Leadership
  2. It recognized the often nebulous and murky water that ParnterOps works from and attempted to get ahead of the impact for both his team and his operational efforts. #Strategy
  3. It spurred a lot of great conversation from several of our PartnerOps professionals in the community. #Engagement

 

This week is pretty straightforward because I’m pulling that question and responses into view for everyone else to see. A big thanks to Jason Lawson for getting us talking and to the following PartnerOps professionals that jumped in to discuss: Jason Ng, Meredith Hayward, Katrina Penny, Jason Breed, and Darren Bibby.

 

Side note: that’s a lot of Jasons.

 

Here are their responses, slightly edited for formatting but otherwise as stated.

 

Jason Ng, Senior Mgr, Partner Operations & Strategy, Deel

 

Overall, I think it is a benefit to be under rev ops. I would say that ensuring alignment on roles and responsibilities is key with the rev ops leader managing the partner ops person."

 

I am directly plugged into other rev ops functions and overall strategic operational projects that I can flag up to Tai (Head of Partnerships) for overall awareness, especially if partnerships may not initially be captured in the initial impact scope. I am sure we all have experienced where partnerships get forgotten during roll-outs."

 

Switzerland- in Rev ops, you become the neutral Switzerland of the company. In previous roles where I lived in partner ops under partnerships, my requests to IT or process/systems came with an "of course you think you need that, you are only looking our for partnerships." In rev ops, I feel I have more authority/leverage/influence in these areas to get my business partner what they need coming from a naturally neutralized position."

 

Depending on how small the company or rev ops org is, you may be tasked own non-partnerships rev ops tasks/projects that may take you away from being 100% partnerships.

 

Meredith Hayward GTM Partnerships Strategy & Operations Manager, Recharge

 

A lot depends on what you want your Partner Ops to be, the size of your company, and what the person’s career aspirations are. For example, I specifically didn’t want to move into the RevOps org so I could work on more strategic projects on GTM strategy that I wouldn’t have time for if I was in RevOps.

 

I run Partner Ops & Strategy and report to our VP of Partnerships, but I have a Partner Ops RevOps analyst in the RevOps org that dotted lines to me. This allows someone to be embedded in RevOps to be our champion, while also allowing us to work on all the areas of PartnerOps that aren’t really revenue-related, like program management, partner strategy, etc. This works well for us, but we are a smaller team compared to other companies.

 

Reporting into RevOps makes sense when:

 

  • The majority of the role is focused on RevOps tasks like CRM, workflow, reporting, ROE, etc.
  • There are more overall resources (i.e. larger companies), increasing the potential for PartnerOps to become isolated if not embedded in RevOps
  • You want to create more visibility and alignment for Partnership priority within RevOps

 

Reporting into Partnerships makes sense when:

 

  • The Partnership Leader wants more control over the projects PartnerOps will take on
  • The role is more focused on program management support and less on typical ’RevOps’ functions that might be already covered
  • The company is smaller and you need attention to specific projects within Partnerships

 

Overall, I think the best answer is based on how you envision the role of partner ops in your company and how many resources you have dedicated to partnerships.

 

Katrina Penny, Partner Operations & Experience Director

 

This seems to be a more common situation happening. We kept our partner ops team separate [from RevOps] but we were 100% aligned so we had a weekly joint call together to cross-share.

RevOps only dealt with sales-related tasks - CRM build and monitor, rev management, sales commissions, forecasting, QBRs, etc.

 

Partner Ops does the above and more - program build and management (including PRM), partner onboarding and queries, team support and so much more.

 

If Partner Ops is moved into RevOps I would look to ensure that there isn’t scope/time creep in the role where your individual is gradually pulled away from your team’s priorities. Create a clearly defined job description to ensure that you define your partner ops priorities.

 

Jason Breed, Global Lead, Strategic Initiatives - SIs, AWS

 

One thing I’ll put a highlight on is understanding the role of the Partner Ops person/team and the roles of the RevOps person teams. A lot of times, when combined, you get efficiencies as there are overlaps in needs (data analytics, CRM reporting, etc). The biggest thing to me is simply understanding AND agreeing ahead of time - what you need out of the role. Define the role and deliverables that either you take a KPI/s around it or require a RevOps leader to take a KPI/s around it to keep everyone accountable. The PartnerOps role will need more skills usually than a single person can have.

 

Darren Bibby, Owner, Aligned Partner

 

Partner Operations encapsulates many things. For me, Partner Ops was mainly the partner angle of Revenue and Sales Ops. It was said above that you want these people to be next to other Ops people, and have some sense of neutrality which brings credibility.

 

However, I think for this to work well, you need a Partner Programs and Strategy team sitting under Partnerships / BD, driving what exactly should be worked on in Partner Ops and what the partner programs and strategy need to function well. Partner Ops on their own without this partnership could become more tactical and transactional in nature. Similarly, the Partner Programs and Strategy team (sometimes AKA Partner Experience team) should be helping to drive what needs to be done from Accounting, Pro Serv, Sales, Legal, etc. etc. This is the team that drives and orchestrates. Not every Partnerships / BD team has this leader and team, but they should.

 

 

The wrap up

Having worked in both dedicated and embedded roles, I can personally attest to all of the advice above and need to highlight Jason Breed’s final thought as a critical element to understand.

 

The PartnerOps role will need more skills usually than a single person can have.

Regardless of where I have been embedded - Ops, Channel, RevOps - one thing is consistent. Partner Operations is as broad a role as any and one of my primary efforts has always been championing Channel/Partnership needs into the rest of the organization.

 

PartnerOps is a highly, if not critically, cross-functional role that will demand a variety of skills depending on how the role is shaped. I’ve talked about this before and will continue to champion a broader understanding of the role, it’s relationship to Partner Experience, and increased professional pathways for current practitioners.

 

 

Resources

This week, a couple of relevant links for this conversation and from last week.

 

The partner ecosystem roadmap

When Jared first released this I got a little concerned because the roles for Ops don’t just jump off the page. On further review, I did find them and wanted to call out the placement as it speaks to how PartnerOps as a function can exist in multiple layers. For my part, I believe Ops is a highly cross-functional position with the potential to carry significant influence on the growth and visibility of the Ecosystem throughout the organization. I also believe in early hiring, or at least fractional support, and would cite Marco De Paulis’ story as a highlight.

 

  • PartnerOps is listed as a ’future role’ in this map with dotted lines from Program Management. Lots of program managers do Ops inherently in their roles until Ops shows up, and that role is often a ’shared’ resource.
  • PartnerOps branches out into certain groups, like Tech and Solution Partner, which I believe is warranted as I continue to work with different programs and leaders. This will come at a certain size company or one that carries a heavy priority on Partnerships at a certain stage.

 

Update on 9-box plan: Avoid prospects!

Last week I posted about a 9-box Strategy and wanted to add this direct response from Blake Williams over at AmpFactor as a follow-up. I was focused on identifying the potential strategies for each box without consideration for prioritization. Blake helps recenter the conversation and it’s worth the addendum here. I still think Prospect-to-Prospect has a strategy, but it’s definitely worth pointing out that it’s not your most profitable area. Thanks, Blake!

 

Ampfactor... would avoid focusing on Prospect to prospect campaigns. We advise against it, until you’ve exhasted all other populations. - Blake Williams, CEO @ Ampfactor

 

You’ll also be interested in these

Article
|
6
 minutes
Article
|
6
 minutes
Article
|
6
 minutes