Article
|
9
 minutes
It’s time for the other CEO: Chief Ecosystem Officer
Article
|
6
 minutes
How Bombora discovered hidden pipeline and closed $100K in 2 months with Crossbeam
Article
|
5
 minutes
Build Affective and Cognitive Trust to Bond With Your Remote Team. Here’s How.
Article
|
12
 minutes
Account mapping. How to (finally) do it without giant, cumbersome spreadsheets
Article
|
10
 minutes
A Fill-in-the-Blanks Exercise for Evaluating Your Partner Program
Article
|
5
 minutes
7 Questions to Ask Before Starting a B2B Partnership Program
Article
|
6
 minutes
6 Questions to Answer Before Launching Your Channel Partner Program
Article
|
10
 minutes
5 Tactics You Can Use Right Now to Show the Real-Time Impact of Partnerships
Article
|
11
 minutes
5 Partnership Challenges Agencies Face (And How to Tackle Them Head-On)
Article
|
9
 minutes
2 Attribution Challenges for Partnership Professionals (and How to Get Ahead of Them)
Case Study
|
 minutes
How Sendoso Doubled Their Partner-Influenced Pipeline In Just 3 Months with Crossbeam
Case Study
|
 minutes
How LeanData Makes it Easy for Reps to Close Partner-Sourced Revenue
Video
|
 minutes
The Problem is Access
Video
|
 minutes
The Nearbound Mindset: Part One
Video
|
37
 minutes
The 2023 'Boundie Awards - LIVE
Video
|
 minutes
SPECIAL RELEASE: Harry Mack Freestyles Nearbound Anthem: Nearbound Podcast #134
Video
|
27
 minutes
Session three. The Journey to Chief Marketing and Ecosystem Officer by Allison Munro and Jill Rowley
Video
|
 minutes
Session three. How PRMs Have Been Doing Things Wrong by Pete Rawlinson and Ornella Nardi
Video
|
30
 minutes
Session six. Biggest Problem in GTM: Lack of a Unified Operating Model by Sam Jacobs and Kathleen Booth
Video
|
 minutes
Session six: The 7 Deadly Sins of Customer Success in the Nearbound Era
Video
|
 minutes
Session seven. Partnerships as a Path to Acquisition by Andrew Gazdecki
Video
|
 minutes
Session seven. Gain Grow Retain LIVE at the Nearbound Summit by Jay Nathan and Jeff Breunsbach
Video
|
17
 minutes
Session one. Nearbound and the Rise of the 'Who' Economy by Jared Fuller
Video
|
 minutes
Session five. Why You Must Integrate to Differentiate your Product (And How) by Alexis Petrichos
Video
|
 minutes
Session five. How to Align Your Success Team with Your Partners by Bruno Yoffe and Sunir Shah
Video
|
 minutes
Session eight. Nearbound Ecosystem Strategy and Orchestration by Allan Adler
Video
|
52
 minutes
Sam Jacobs & Bob Moore: The Future of an Ecosystem-Led World | Supernode 2023
Video
|
57
 minutes
Partnerships and Contracts: Navigating the Legal Jungle
Video
|
31
 minutes
Nick Gray: Closing Keynote | Supernode 2023
Video
|
38
 minutes
New Video
Video
|
 minutes
NEARBOUND.COM Announcement
Video
|
32
 minutes
Nearbound Sales #19: Email Template — Use This To Get Account Intel
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Sales #2: You Might Need to Rethink Your Sales Quota Says McKinsey
Video
|
27
 minutes
Nearbound Sales #16: Buyers Want Nearbound
Video
|
35
 minutes
Nearbound Sales #12: Why Sellers Don't Use Partner Leads
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #164: Why Your SaaS Partnerships Aren't Delivering Scott Wueschinski's Solution
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #98: Thinking Like a CEO as a Partnerships Professional with Kim Walsh
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #163: How to Go All In on an Ecosystem, with Daniel Zarick
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #157: The GTM Revolution and How AI Will Influence Sales
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #156: The End of Silos and the Need for Collaboration with Lizzie Chapman
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #152: Shifting From the How Economy to the Who Economy with Chris Walker
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #149: Evolving Partnerships in Business with Pete Rawlinson
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #147: Unlock the Power of Strategic Partnerships by TK Kader
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #139: Unleashing the Power of Nearbound Strategies to Close More Deals
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #138: Insights in Building Customer Success and Partnerships for 2024
Video
|
 minutes
NearBound Podcast #137: Marketing Against the Grain LIVE at the Nearbound Summit
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #136: SPECIAL RELEASE LIVE from the Nearbound Summit House
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #135: The Power of Owned Media with Anthony Kennada
Video
|
129
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #127: The Nearbound Moment is Here
Video
|
46
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #118: Insights From Over 100+ Conversations With Partner Pros
Video
|
44
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #116: The Future of AI, Agents, and Agencies
Video
|
53
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #110: HubSpot is Coming for Salesforce —The 4 Epochs of the Ecosystem
Video
|
33
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #109: 6 Do's & Don'ts of Partner Marketing You Can't Ignore
Video
|
45
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #107: How Nearbound is Different From Channel
Video
|
51
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #081: Exploring the 16 Types of Network Effects with James Currier of NFX.com
Video
|
52
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #065: WTF Is An Ecosystem?! - Elevating Partnerships Out of the Shadows
Video
|
50
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #064: "The Challenger Sale" Author Takes the Partner Pill
Video
|
33
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #6: Not Your Grandma’s Co-Marketing Campaign
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #7: Understanding the Will of Your User s Existing Communities
Video
|
33
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #22: Trust + Scale — Where Partnerships & Marketing Come Together
Video
|
30
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #26: How to Identify the Nearbound Evangelists in Your Ecosystem
Video
|
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #13: The 3 Marketer Personas Of the Future
Video
|
29
 minutes
Maureen Little: Scaling ain’t easy | Supernode 2022
Video
|
26
 minutes
Mike Stocker: 10 Partner Metrics Every Executive Ought To Know | Supernode 2023
Video
|
29
 minutes
Maureen Little: Scaling ain’t easy | Supernode Conference 2022
Video
|
29
 minutes
MythBusters: The GTM Edition
Video
|
23
 minutes
Lizzie Chapman: How to Make Your Leadership Care About Ecosystem-Led Growth | Supernode 2023
Video
|
18
 minutes
Lisa Hopkins: Navigating The Messy Teenage Years Of Your Partner Program | Supernode 2022
Video
|
20
 minutes
Jared Fuller: Trust is the New Data | Supernode 2022
Video
|
 minutes
Marco De Paulis: Why You Should Always Give Value Before You Get It — Supernode 2023
Video
|
 minutes
Increase Partner Engagement & Grow Partner Pipeline by 26%
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #74: Reactive Partner Marketers Are Salary Wasted with Jessica Fewless
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #73: The Modern Interconnectedness of Brand, Employee Advocacy, and Ecosystems
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #72: Psychology of team wide buy in: The Answer to Partner Program Success
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #71: Natasha Walstra on Increasing Luck Surface Area in Business
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #69: Why Fractional Partner Management with Pat Ferdig
Video
|
22
 minutes
Howdy Partners #60: Navigating Partnerships in 2023 and Planning for 2024 - Will Taylor, Ben Wright
Video
|
22
 minutes
Howdy Partners #57: Managing Chaos in Partnership Programs - Negar Nikaeein
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #54: Using AI to Drive Partnerships with Jessica Baker
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #53: Getting Executive Buy in On Partnerships with Josh Baumrind
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #49: Placing Customers Front and Center Through a Partnerships Lens
Video
|
32
 minutes
Howdy Partners #46: Driving Revenue Together
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #38: The 80 20 Rule Balancing Revenue & Influence
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #36: Nearbound
Video
|
21
 minutes
Howdy Partners #33: How to Get the Most Out of Partnership Communities
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #35: Productive Partner Recruitment
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #31: The Salesforce Ecosystem: Tech vs. Service Partner Perspectives
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #29: Developing Examples to Foster Internal Buy In
Video
|
 minutes
Howdy Partners #26: What to Look for in Partnership Talent
Video
|
28
 minutes
How to Organize, Prioritize, and Expand Partnerships
Video
|
49
 minutes
How to Leverage Account Mapping for Revenue Growth
Video
|
18
 minutes
How to Ignite Co-Selling and Collaboration with Reps in Salesforce | Connector Summit 2022
Video
|
 minutes
From Recruitment to Revenue: How to Turn Your Ideal Partner Into ARR
Video
|
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #36: Operationalizing Partner Programs with Aaron Howerton
Video
|
61
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #26 - The Power of Small, Consistent Steps - Justin Zimmerman
Video
|
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #33: Valentine’s Day Special
Video
|
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #24: Building Tasty Partnerships with Grayson Hogard
Video
|
 minutes
Friends with Benefits #22: Building Revenue Generating Partnerships with Cody Sunkel
Video
|
29
 minutes
Foundations of Partner Ecosystems for Efficient Growth
Video
|
 minutes
Friends With Benefits #05: Be Like Messi
Why Co-innovation Between Tech Partners Is So Hard
by
Ryan Lunka
SHARE THIS

Building software products is hard. Building cross-product user experiences, where two otherwise separate software products combine to provide a joint solution, is really hard.

by
Ryan Lunka
SHARE THIS

In this article

Join the movement

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

Building software products is hard. Building cross-product user experiences, where two otherwise separate software products combine to provide a joint solution, is really hard.


Yet, this is what’s required in the era of ecosystems.


You do need to build an exceptional software product to be successful. That’s always been a minimum requirement, but the minimum is no longer sufficient.


There’s massive potential for co-innovating with technology partners to jointly solve really hard problems for users. Doing this hasn’t always been “a given,” and now it’s one of your biggest opportunities for growth.


But, this opportunity does not come without challenges. This is an unfamiliar motion for most software teams. Even among those who have been successful with co-innovation, it’s rare to have scaled that success.


In this post, I want to talk about why and what can be done about it.



Reason one: Software products tend to be built behind closed doors

You raise some money. You hire a few developers. They set up a private Git repository, and they start coding.

From day one, most software teams build in private.


There are many valid reasons for this. Most products aren’t open source, nor does open source fit their business model. Building in private protects intellectual property, which can easily be ripped off, even with proper documentation in place. See Silicon Valley for details.


Plus, if you’re building SaaS, who outside cares what the code looks like?


Yet this perfectly reasonable idea behind building in private is exactly what causes friction when you try to build some parts of the product (e.g. integrations) with someone else.


Product and engineering teams who operate as a black box, often leaving the partnership teams on both sides to be the messengers, put themselves at a disadvantage. They don’t allow some of the smartest people in their respective rooms to come together and co-create, which is exactly what’s required to build truly innovative joint solutions.



What to do about it

Your product may not be open source nor may the concept play any part in your overall business strategy. However, your team (partners, product, and engineering) should learn open-source principles. You should be intentional about where you can include the OS operating model in your tech partnership program.


The tools and workflows your product and engineering teams already use are likely already derived from open-source motions. This philosophy is built into the DNA of the web, and its best practices tend to work their way into the DNA of commercial companies, especially those who aren’t big legacy enterprises.


It’s because building software in public with people from all over the world who rarely if ever actually meet one another is a challenging governance problem. Thus, really good software development practices have emerged that now get used even when the team sits in a room together. The best engineering teams adopt such practices.


Think about what parts of your product development process can be partially opened up to your partners’ product teams. Operate “kind of open source” to allow those teams to work more closely together.


This will help you to use the principles of open-source software and understand how it is built for joint solutions with tech partners.



Reason two: Separate fiduciary responsibilities

Tech partnerships are about two or more companies coming together to jointly solve a customer’s problems more effectively than they could do individually. But, the reality is that partnerships are made of separate companies, with separate investors, separate boards, and ideally somewhat aligned but ultimately separate goals.


In more technical terms, each of those companies has separate fiduciary responsibilities to its shareholders and to its individual relationships with customers.


This immutable fact can cause friction between partners. Often it shows up when determining investments to be made by both or when navigating separate but connected relationships with customers.


Here’s a classic example: A small upstart forms a tech partnership with an established ecosystem hub product because they are able to expand that product’s capabilities in a specific way. After years of a solid partnership, the larger company decides to build its own feature that renders the smaller company’s solution mostly unnecessary.


Can you blame the bigger company? Strictly speaking, if they assessed that building it themselves was best for their business, they kind of have the right and responsibility to do it. It’s not an easy conversation, but it’s a common one.


The bottom line is, even in the most successful partnerships, separate companies will do what’s best for them. As long as the partnership aligns with those interests, it will continue successfully. If it no longer aligns, things will change.



What to do about it

You can’t change the fact that partnerships are fundamentally made up of separate companies, but you can acknowledge and plan for it.


When assessing a new tech partner opportunity, try to be as upfront as you can about your intentions. What do you hope the joint solution will do now? What about in the future? Do you plan to provide your own function that will replace it?


You may not be able to provide 100% transparency, but the more you can, the better. It’s not in either party’s favor to invest in a partnership that has an unexpectedly abrupt end.


That said, it’s quite alright to view a partnership as a temporary relationship. You aren’t fusing yourselves together for all time. If this is a “few years” thing, then be clear about it upfront.


Additionally, when you set up your partner agreement (formally or informally) try to design balanced incentives. Incorporate checks and balances with how you decide to operate together, so you’ve both got enough skin in the game.


Setting up a situation where you jointly invest time and resources in building the joint solution (my first point) is a good way to start. It prevents one side from putting too many eggs in the basket at the outset.



Reason three: Risk aversion

Tech partnerships, like all business decisions, are about balancing risk and potential reward. You can never know for sure that a partnership will work out.


You have finite time and finite resources. Your partnership, product, and engineering leaders must be discerning about where they make investments. Building a joint solution with a tech partner is no exception.


Making matters harder, despite today’s growing enthusiasm for partner-led strategies, many partnership teams are fighting for budget and are constantly required to prove their worth to the rest of the organization.


Building a deeply integrated joint solution with a tech partner has huge potential upside at the risk of a lot of downside.

We’ve all worked through those partnerships that took tons of time and money and ultimately failed. It’s really unfortunate for everyone. It can cost jobs.


All of these facts can encourage a tendency toward risk aversion. This can slow or even stop potentially valuable tech partnerships dead in their tracks. Risk management is important–no one should be reckless. Risk aversion can limit your opportunities.



What to do about it

The Lean Startup taught product teams how to build software iteratively. You start with small hypotheses and invest small amounts in products or product features in order to learn if those hypotheses are true. (The term, which is very often misunderstood, is the “minimum viable product.”)


This same philosophy should apply to tech partnerships. Think in terms of the minimum viable partnership, then grow from there.


Ideally, you have a big vision for the kinds of deeply integrated product experiences you want to create with a partner–even better if with many partners. However, if you and those partners try to boil the ocean, it’s almost certain to be a failure.

Instead, use the big vision for orientation but deliver small. Start with just enough of the partnership relationship and the cross-product experience required to support it.


See what customers think about it. See what feedback they have. Then, incorporate that feedback into the next batch of small iterations. Build partnerships and the integrated product experience piece by piece, even if that means that sometimes you have to throw away bad ideas (this is a good thing).


You can’t eliminate risk from the equation, but building a tech partnership and an integrated product experience iteratively will help to manage the risk. It helps to ensure you only spend big where the juice is worth the squeeze.


Prefer to listen? Subscribe to our nearbound.com Audio Articles Podcast. Text-to-speech provided by our partner Voicemaker.in.

You’ll also be interested in these

Article
|
8
 minutes
Driving Partner Activation with ABM
Article
|
8
 minutes
Using Composable Ecosystem Management To Break Down Market Silos
Article
|
8
 minutes