The State of Sales
Nearbound Daily #426: The state of startups is grim ☠️
Nearbound Marketing #34: Building Trust in the Age of Data Overload - Dan Sanchez
Nearbound Daily #425: Mathematician or not, nearbound math is easy 🔢
Howdy Partners #52: Building a Program with No Budget or Tools
Nearbound Daily #424: Beyoncé, the platform genius? 🤔
Nearbound Podcast #131: Navigating the Changing SaaS Landscape - Alexandra Zagury
This CRO Uses ELG to Increase ARPU by 23% and Reduce Churn to Nearly Zero
Nearbound Daily #421: Grow better, together 💪
Nearbound Weekend 09/30: How to use nearbound to position your company in market
Nearbound Daily #420: Sangram Vajre on the undeniable shift in GTM
Friends with Benefits #17: Relationships Over Revenue
Nearbound Daily #419: What got you here won't get you there
Need a Steady Momentum of High-Quality Leads? Look No Further Than Your Partner Ecosystem
Nearbound Daily #418: Study shows trust in influencers has grown
How to Be the Perfect Partner: An Agency Perspective
Nearbound Podcast #130 - Strategy and Evangelism - Jill Rowley
Nearbound Daily #417: This company killed its website
The Nearbound Summit is Near - Four Days You Don't Want to Miss
Nailing your Nearbound Sales Math
The Nearbound Mindset: Part Two
Nearbound Marketing #32: Two Ways to Drive Intros with New Partners - Sam Dunning
Nearbound Daily #415: Microsoft and Facebook +$100M alliance
Nearbound Daily #414: Build a more competitive GTM
Why Every Partnership Leader Should Care About Net Revenue Retention
Nearbound Daily #413: Rand Fishkin and nearbound
Partner Attach: The great debate
Nearbound Podcast #129: Unlocking Sales Success with a Nearbound Mindset - Matt Cameron
Nearbound Daily #411: WARNING this email contains trigger words for partner pros
Nearbound Marketing #31: Three Nearbound Marketing Tactics to Start Using Now
Nearbound Daily #149: AI just killed SEO
Friends with Benefits #16: How to do Dreamforce Right
Welcome to Supernode
Tobin Bennion: How Snowflake Does Customer Centered Partnerships | Supernode 2023
The State of the Partner Ecosystem 2023
Tech Ecosystem Maturity: How to Co-Sell Like a Supernode
The 15+ Questions That Accelerate Co-Selling
Sara Du: How I Built a Partner Program With No Experience | Supernode 2022
Sara Du: How Top Partnership Leaders Get Integrations Built 2x Faster | Supernode 2023
Quick Tips for Crossbeam Account Management and Data Hygiene | Connector Summit 2022
Polina Marinova Pompliano: Taking Risks in Times of Uncertainty | Supernode 2023
Pamela Slim: Build Ecosystems, Not Empires | Supernode 2022
Michelle Geltman: Ways to Shift Your Sales Team’s Mindset | Supernode 2023
How to Forecast and Manage Sourced and Influenced Pipeline in Crossbeam | Connector Summit 2022
Crossbeam explains: How Oyster grew its partner ecosystem and team in one year
Crossbeam Explains: Goodbye Cold Outreach, Hello Ecosystem-Led Sales
Crossbeam and Reveal are Joining Forces to Disrupt Go-To-Market Strategy As We Know It
Braydan Young: How to Get Your C-Suite to Care | Supernode 2023
Bob Moore, Lindsey DeFalco, Adam Michalski, Amanda Groves: Unleashing ELG with Crossbeam: Attribution, Revenue, Education | Supernode 2023
Ben Warshaw: RevOps to the Rescue: The Secret Ingredient to Scaling Your ELG Motion | Supernode 2023
Ask Me Anything with Crossbeam Experts
Andrew Lindsay and Bob Moore: AI, The Market, & How to Thrive | Supernode 2023
Alyshah Walji: It’s Time To Develop An Ecosystem Ideal Customer Profile | Supernode 2022
Allan Adler: Aligning your organization for ecosystem success | Supernode Conference 2022
Allan Adler: Aligning Your Organization for Ecosystem Success | Supernode 2022
Allan Adler, Jill Rowley, Kevin Kriebel: ELG and the C-Suite | Supernode 2023
The 2023 State of the Partner Ecosystem Report
No Opportunities Lost: The Crossbeam Guide to Co-Selling With Tech Partners
How to Buy a Partner Ecosystem Platform
4 Easy Wins: The Crossbeam Guide to Account Mapping
Whale Watching: The Inside Story of the +$100M Microsoft and Facebook Alliance
Map Your Partner’s Org Chart & Boost Partner-Sourced Revenue by 40%
How to Find the Right Integration Partnerships
How This PM Used Nearbound GTM and Reveal to Revamp Reachdesk's Partner Program
Getting Partnership Reporting Right
Crossbeam Has Acquired Partnered: Co-selling Will Never Be the Same
Celebrating Excellence: Announcing the 'Boundies Awards Winners 2023
Co-Sell Orchestration: The New Imperative for Every Partner Team
Breaking Down Silos and Getting a Seat at the Table
Bridging the Gap Between Insights to Outcomes Requires Playbooks + Training
Box’s Partnership Journey: Nearbound, Allbound, Glory-bound
Best Practices in B2B SaaS Tech Partnership Monetization Models - Part 3
Best practices for co-selling with partners using nearbound
Be a Modern Partner Manager and Empower Your Sales Teams to Co-Sell
Nearbound Podcast #128 - Be a Beacon of Customer-Centricity
Nearbound Daily #144: Jill Rowley becomes nearbound.com Chief Evangelist
Diving Into the Co-Sell Orchestration Playbook
Howdy Partners #50: Nearbound Motions for Strategic Tech Partners
Friends With Benefits #13: Being Intentional in Work and Life
The 3 I’s of ELG in action
Partner Ecosystem Can Help You Close Millions in End-of-Quarter Opportunities
The Ultimate Partner Program Guide
The Nearbound Guide
The Nearbound Sales Blueprint
Drive Tech Partner Attribution through Productization
Nearbound Podcast #126: Having the Right Conversations with the Right People
Nearbound Marketing #29: 3 Ways to Market with Your Community Members
Howdy Partners #48: First 8 Months as a Channel Account Manager
Nearbound Daily #136: How to get intel from partners
Nearbound Podcast #125: How Partnerships Build Unshakable Brands
How to Talk to Your CEO About the Ecosystem
Nearbound Daily #133: The long way home
Nearbound Marketing #28: 4 Steps to Execute Survey Co-Marketing
Friends With Benefits #12: Leading with Empathy
EcoOps Framework–Understanding the Partner Operations Big Picture
Do You Know Your Public and Private Ecosystems?
Maureen Little: Building Influence to Drive Impact | Supernode 2023
Nearbound Marketing #27: Activating the Hidden Evangelists Within Your Company
Howdy Partners #47: How to Use Intel, Intro, and Influence to Grow Your Pipeline
Friends With Benefits #11: The Benefits of Community
Partnerships and Ecosystems Hub

6 Questions to Answer Before Launching Your Channel Partner Program
by
Lisa Thoman Lawson
SHARE THIS

Looking for the magic milestone to launch your channel program? Real life is not that simple.

by
Lisa Thoman Lawson
SHARE THIS

In this article

Join the movement

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

When is the right time to invest in channel partnerships?

If you clicked on the headline of this article expecting a straightforward answer, I’m sorry to disappoint you. I’ve been building and advising channel programs for startups for 10 years and a convenient checklist of quantitative criteria needed to launch a channel program does not exist. It can’t exist. 

When to invest in building a partner or channel program varies based on your company’s market, product, resources available, product-market fit, the maturity of your go-to-market motions, and many other factors. Some SaaS startups find success selling exclusively through the channel from the start of their sales efforts, while other companies require a longer runway to successfully sell through partners. 

While there may not be quantitative benchmarks (e.g. specific revenue numbers) to tell you when it’s time to launch a channel program, there ARE a handful of qualitative benchmarks that are much more indicative of whether or not your company should invest in the resources and infrastructure to support a partner program.  

Here are six questions to ask yourself before investing in a channel program: 

Question #1: Is there organic momentum from potential partners (and how active are potential partners in your ecosystem)?

Are there system integrators (SI’s) or agencies actively servicing your target customers? Have you been approached by other companies who are eager to partner, resell, or white label your product? If so, it’s a good sign that there could be a lot of value in building out a strategy and program. 

If there hasn’t been any external interest, or obvious partnerships that would yield a symbiotic relationship, there may not be enough value for both parties. 

Likewise, if potential partners play a huge role with your customer’s buying process, are huge influencers, or are critical to your product and ecosystem, your partner strategy and channel programs should be an early focus.

Question #2: Are your preliminary TAM, CAC, and CRC metrics favorable? 

What is the projected Total Addressable Market (TAM) of your partner business? This number can be found through a mix of industry research, publications and reports, data from historical sales, market research, and educated hypotheses.  

Tools like Crossbeam can help you measure the TAM for a set of potential partners or specific partners. Once you’ve measured TAM, you will want to ask yourself if your TAM is big enough for your company to scale long term. If you complete the TAM and realize there isn’t a huge market or there are only a handful of potential partners, building out a channel function is probably not the best investment for your company right now. 

For some partner models, it makes sense to model out the projected Customer Acquisition Costs (CAC) or Customer Retention Costs (CRC) for the channel based on the market data available, comps, and projected costs. 

To do this, you should work with your Finance and Operations teams to understand CAC and CRC for direct sales, then forecast total expenses and sales for the channel. While some of these numbers will be conjecture and the calculations will not be exact, you should be able to make some directional decisions based on the estimates and comparisons to your direct CAC and CRC models. 

Question #3: Is my product ready?

A couple key questions to ask yourself:

  • “Where am I in the pursuit of product-market fit?” 
  • “Is my product ready for partners?”
  • “Is my product team still focused on fixing basic and fundamental bugs?”

Service partners and resellers will need to be able to use your product with minimal support across multiple clients. If your product team is still focused on fixing basic bugs, it’s likely your product isn’t ready for a massive reseller network. 

Likewise, technology partners will need to be able to seamlessly plug into your platform and vice versa, so you will need public and well-documented APIs. If your product isn’t ready, it may be better to either prioritize partnerships that make sense given product limitations (like an affiliate or referral network) or hold off on the investment in a partner program until your product is more mature.

Question #4: Can my sales, customer success, and support processes be replicated by a third party? 

To build a channel program or a network of resellers, you will need to have a replicable process that is straight forward enough to teach to a variety of external sales professionals. The more repeatable your sales cycle, the more it lends itself to a successful channel program. 

Another question to ask, especially if you’re considering a reseller model: Can a third party support the technology after the sale is done? Along with teaching partners how to sell your product, you will need to teach partners how to support, service, and manage your clients post-sale. 

Question #5: Do I have internal support and access to the cross-functional resources I need to make partners and a partner strategy successful?

Partner programs rely on almost every division of the company: marketing, sales, product, customer success, customer education, operations, and legal. Launching a program will require buy-in and resources from each of these teams. 

You also need the budget, infrastructure technology, and talent to manage the program. If your company is still building out these different functions or you don’t have buy-in across the board, it may be hard to get the support and resources you need to make your partners and partner strategy successful. 

Question #6: What else could my company invest in right now if they didn’t invest in a partner strategy?

It takes time, money, and energy from almost all the groups in your organization to get a partner channel program up and running. It’s critical you think through what else your company could invest in if they didn’t invest in the channel. 

This also means a thoughtful Buy vs Build vs Partner analysis should be completed. I use Buy vs Build vs Partner frameworks to help companies decide how to allocate resources and determine if it is best to build in house, buy, or partner to take advantage of strategic opportunities. 

If it’s better to buy or build (vs partnering), or there are other parts of the business that can yield results faster, it may be more beneficial to first make the investment internally. Building a partner program should never be thought of as a “test”— no matter how well suited your product is for partnering, it will take time to scale and see the benefits. 

It’s all about timing

There are massive benefits to investing in a successful partnership program, including but not limited to accelerated growth, higher brand awareness, increased revenue, scale, and access to new markets and verticals. 

I believe that every SaaS startup should embrace, invest in, and market to their ecosystem from the very beginning, and that they should have or be working toward an investment in a formal partner and channel strategy. The timing of investing in that ecosystem, however, requires some finesse. 

You’ll also be interested in these

Harness Your Sales Reps as Channel Managers
Everything You Need to Know to Build a Reseller Program
How Suppeco Built their Reseller Program with WeTransact, Crossbeam, and ELG