Article
|
14
 minutes
Crawl, walk, run: The co-marketing framework that will keep you sane
Article
|
10
 minutes
How to Approach an Unequal SaaS Partnership (Without Being a Jerk or a Pushover)
Article
|
9
 minutes
Partnerships 101: How to Organize and Execute An Online Event with Your Partners
Article
|
8
 minutes
Your SaaS Partnership Has Stalled. Now What?
Article
|
2
 minutes
How to Contribute Millions in Sales Pipeline via Warm Intros and the "Fast Follow"
Article
|
2
 minutes
4 Leadership Lessons We Learned at Our First Happy Hour
Article
|
5
 minutes
Okay, So It’s a Down Market. Now What?
eBook
2020 State of the Partner Ecosystem Report
Article
|
7
 minutes
5 Lessons on Hyper-Growth Partnerships We Can Learn From Slack
Article
|
15
 minutes
Partnerships 101: How to Launch a Tech Partnership Program
Article
|
6
 minutes
6 Questions to Answer Before Launching Your Channel Partner Program
Article
|
5
 minutes
There are 270+ job titles in partnerships. Why?
Article
|
5
 minutes
My $2.6 Billion Ecosystem Fail
Article
|
3
 minutes
Your Brain on Story
Article
|
2
 minutes
Why Identifying Ideal Partners is Key for Partner Program Success
Article
|
3
 minutes
When to Hire Your First Partnerships or BD Leader
Article
|
2
 minutes
What's in a Vibe?
Article
|
5
 minutes
Want to Meet Quota? Befriend Your Partner Team
Article
|
8
 minutes
Using Nearbound Data to Expand Into New Markets
Article
|
6
 minutes
Turning Online Events Into a Business Machine
Article
|
7
 minutes
The Subtle Art of a Warm Intro: How to Set Your Sales Team Up For Success
Article
|
3
 minutes
The Three Pillars of Partnership Success
Article
|
1
 minutes
The PartnerHacker Handbook
Article
|
9
 minutes
The Partner Experience Weekly: Partner Experience is Shifting
Article
|
9
 minutes
The Partner Experience Weekly: My Dream State - Partner Tech
Article
|
5
 minutes
The Next Bestselling GTM Book Has Arrived
Article
|
8
 minutes
The Nearbound Marketing Blueprint: Key Plays
Article
|
1
 minutes
The Crawl, Walk, Run Strategy
Article
|
11
 minutes
The Case for Investing in Partner Operations
Article
|
5
 minutes
The Anatomy of a Partnership: Partner Leads Versus Cold Leads
Article
|
8
 minutes
Sunday Stories: Trust at Scale — Bringing Influence to the B2B Journey
Article
|
9
 minutes
Target the Right Leads at the Right Time: A Recap of the Happy Customers Festival
Article
|
5
 minutes
Sunday Stories: Turning Support Request Lead into Service Partner Gold
Article
|
6
 minutes
Sunday Stories: Empowering Agencies to Sell SaaS
Article
|
2
 minutes
Stand Up Your Co-Sell Orchestration Playbook
Article
|
9
 minutes
Sales Leadership and Partner Enablement: Part 2
Article
|
9
 minutes
Partnerships and Contracts: How to Navigate the Legal Jungle
Article
|
2
 minutes
PartnerHacker Merges with Reveal to Bring Nearbound to the Market
Article
|
2
 minutes
One major lesson in building partnerships from zero to $150M+ ARR
Article
|
10
 minutes
Oneflow Sees a 190% Surge in Created Opportunities After Beginning Two-Way Data Sharing with HubSpot
Article
|
6
 minutes
nearbound.com Editorial Guidelines
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 11/25: Matthew McConaughey's nearbound advice
Article
|
1
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 07/15: Insights from 100+ conversations with partner
Article
|
1
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 11/18: A BIG thank you 🙏
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 06/10: Great GTM never beats a great ecosystem
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 05/25: Network Effects are Everywhere in the Nearbound Era
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 05/20: A tectonic shift is upon us
Article
|
1
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 04/29: Retention is the new acquisition
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 05/11: What Prisoner's Dilemma Teaches Us About Partnerships
Article
|
7
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 04/20: How Commsor Took Over LinkedIn With 1.2 Million Impressions In Less Than 48 Hours (A Masterclass In Nearbound Marketing)
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 04/15: Partner Up With A Partner Pro
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 04/08: Nearbound Isn't Just For Partner People
Article
|
7
 minutes
Nearbound Trends for 2024
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 01/27: Finally Explaining The Difference: Nearbound VS. Partnerships
Article
|
14
 minutes
Nearbound Ops: Leveraging Nearbound Data and Operations to Optimize Revenue
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #588: 💰 High Versus Low ROI Partnering
Article
|
6
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #567: How Partner Pros Can Help Marketing Close the Content Gap
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #558: How Apollo's Affiliate Program Saw A 576% Jump In Revenue
Article
|
6
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #552: Good Morning, Ecosystem ☀️
Article
|
5
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #547: 6 Ways AI Can Help You Keep Up
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #551: Why Workday Is Expanding Its Partner Ecosystem
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #542: 🤐 Nelson Wang's Tested Method For Presenting to CxOs
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #540: $54 Billion In Revenue Analyzed 😱
Article
|
5
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #539: Your Secret Weapon 🤐
Article
|
5
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #530: What's the Big Deal with Nearbound Sales?
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #519: A Sneak Peek Into The FIRST Ever Nearbound Book
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #492: 3 Tips to Make Nearbound Work Internally
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #483: The Art of Permissionless Partnering
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #482: Your Path to Chief Partner Officer?!
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #473: How To Do Integrations Right
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #478: How Splash got 3x pipeline from events
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #480: Unleash the Power of Your Ecosystem
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #479: Pigment's Kobe Bryant Approach to Partnerships 🏀
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #464: Pitch nearbound on easy-mode 🎮
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #463: ⚡ Dave Gerhardt's nearbound marketing strategy
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #461: The CRO: B2B's master code breaker 🕵️
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #457: How this HubSpot partner taps into intel at scale 🏗️
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #456: Why the outreach memo matters
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #444: Nearbounders, mount up! 🤠
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #455: Why "happy" customers aren't enough 👀
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #451: How Databox builds faster, with higher margins 📈
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #442: From spooky to inspiring 👻
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #429: Weaving a nearbound fabric 🌐
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #423: Siri, play "Wide Awake" by Katy Perry 🎶
Article
|
1
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #132: The first giver wins
Article
|
1
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #107: Help partners solve problems
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #087: You've got to find the right fit
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #080: Master the 4 stages of partnerships
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #086: Partnerships takes a bit of string theory
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #074: A one pager won't cut it
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #062: Partner program Y1 = foundation, Y2 = victory
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #050: Trust is the new data
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #054: Crack the code
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #042: Ask the Right Questions
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #040: Play the Long Game
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #039: Focus on What Matters
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #035: An Excuse to Get Wild
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #031: Partnerships Start with the Customer
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #027: Don't hold back
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #021: Will AI takeover partnerships?
ELG Success Stories
How Typeform Went from 30 Integrations to 100+ in Just One Year
by
Olivia Ramirez
SHARE THIS

The benefits of adopting iPaaS, according to Typeform, and other considerations for scaling your tech partner program.

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.

There’s a reason that the most common KPI for new partnership managers is the number of new partnerships created. More integrations means your product can fit into more workflows and thus, be appealing to an ever-growing number of customers.

More sounds nice, but your product and engineering team can only manage so much on top of its typical product roadmap. If your goal is to multiply the number of integrations in your tech ecosystem year over year, you’re going to need to invest in a solution that can help you manage the extra work. And really, you have three options:

  • Hire more internal developers, and split your team’s time between the product roadmap and the integration roadmap, ultimately with dedicated roles for each
  • Hire an external agency or contractors to help build your integrations, which may still require internal engineering resources in some capacity
  • Utilize a tool to help you build and manage your integrations and/or integration infrastructure, like an integration platform as a service (iPaaS) or a universal integration framework provider 

(Keep in mind: you can use a combination of #1-3 above to build and manage your integrations, integration infrastructure, and marketplace UI. We talk all about this in our article on how we launched our tech ecosystem.)

This post is about option #3. iPaaS vendors can help SaaS companies go to market with new integrations quickly by providing the building blocks that help a company’s internal or external developers build integrations quickly through connections, recipes, and templates. Some examples of iPaaS vendors include: Tray.io, Workato, Zapier, and Automate.io

Survey-building platform Typeform went from 30 integrations to more than 100 integrations in one year by adopting an iPaaS solution. Take a look at Typeform’s 2019-2021 integration timeline to get an idea of the scale:

  • In 2019, Typeform developed just a few integrations and had a backlog of integration requests from customers 
  • In 2020, Typeform adopted iPaaS solution Tray.io and developed 20 integrations
  • By 2021, Typeform developed 70 more integrations with the help of its partners and by using Tray.io, bringing its tech ecosystem to more than 100 integrations in total!

We spoke with Kabir Mathur, Head of Product Partnerships at Typeform, to hear why his team chose to adopt an iPaaS solution and to discuss some considerations you should make when scaling your own tech ecosystem.

The benefits Typeform observed by adopting an iPaaS solution

1. Develop integrations within a diverse range of use cases and categories, at speed 

Mathur says that by adopting Tray.io as Typeform’s iPaaS vendor, Typeform’s engineering team could create the first integration in a particular category (for example: an integration with a project management tool) and then replicate some of the work to create another in the same category.

“The diversity in the type of partners we work with is key to fulfilling the workflows that our diverse customer base has. That’s why we decided to invest in an iPaaS platform, because it allows a certain level of abstraction where you don’t have to get into the weeds of every single API and the very specific requirements each partner might have.” 

Mathur says this helps to level the playing field for developing different types of integrations with differing complexities. There’s a heavier lift in the beginning to develop the first of a kind, and then the rest is templatized. 

The speed at which Typeform is now able to go-to-market with its integrations doesn’t rely solely on iPaaS. Typeform has an integrations team in Barcelona, Spain that manages the integration infrastructure side of things. This team was responsible for integrating the iPaaS solution with Typeform, essentially laying the foundation for building integrations through Tray.io. Then, Typeform’s integrations team in the US, which is responsible for the integration development, builds the individual integrations.

“Once we built the first one, it was almost like a template we could use to recreate the additional integrations.”

For example: Typeform launched integrations with email service providers (ESPs) like Constant Contact, ConvertKit, and Mailerlite — all in a single quarter. 

2. Avoid the awkward dance of who’s going to build the integration — you or your partner — and just start building 

In many cases, if you’re trying to partner with a company that’s much larger than yours, the responsibility of building the integration is likely to fall on your team. After all, the integration will benefit your company the most, since your partner’s positioning in the ecosystem can help elevate your brand and give you access to a larger customer base. Alternatively, if you’re partnering with a company that’s much smaller than yours, they should build the integration. 

If you’re partnering with a company that’s a similar size to yours, the answer isn’t quite as obvious. 

Pictured: A partner meeting

There could be a high level of demand from customers on both sides of the partnership to develop the integration, but sometimes the odds just aren’t in your favor. 

“You always have to do this awkward dance with partners where you try to figure out who’s going to build the integration, and that could take ages.That conversation could delay the whole integration by months. We just decided we would invest [in iPaaS] and do it ourselves.”

If you decide to invest in an iPaaS solution, it could help you alleviate some of the pressure from your partner to build it for you and get the integration into the ecosystem faster. 

3. It’s white-labeled

A user who adopts one of Typeform’s integrations built with Tray.io has no feasible interaction with the iPaaS vendor at all — all thanks to a configuration wizard for customization. The iPaaS’s mechanisms exist behind the scenes, but as a Typeform user, you’d never know it.

The user experience of finding an integration on Typeform’s site and getting started happens exclusively in-app. Take a look at the user experience for adopting Typeform’s integration with project management tool Asana below.  

The integrations page on Typeform’s site

The next page (below) is powered by Tray.io, but it’s customized to match Typeform’s branding and provides a seamless experience without requiring the user to leave Typeform’s site.

Things to keep in mind if you’re considering adopting an iPaaS solution

How many integrations do you need to develop over time? 

If the success of your product relies on many integrations, you’ll need a solution that can help you develop a large number of integrations quickly. That solution could be working with an iPaaS vendor. If you only need to develop a handful of strategic integrations each year, your internal or external developers may not need the repeatable mechanics that an iPaaS solution affords. 

In Typeform’s case, the more tools Typeform integrates with, the more value it can deliver to its customers. That may not be the case with your product.

How complex are the integrations you need to develop? 

Determine the use cases your customers need for the integrations to be successful. Bring those use cases to your conversations with iPaaS vendors you’re considering. Some iPaaS vendors might not be able to satisfy all of the use cases, and that’s something you should know from the start.

How much flexibility does your dev team have right now to build and manage your integrations?

The success of your integrations relies on the efforts of integration developers and integration infrastructure developers. On top of that, they’ll need to put in work to ensure your APIs are functioning in a way that meets the needs of each integration’s use case. All of that, and you’ve got your product roadmap to account for.

If you have a small product and engineering team and their time is split between product development and integration development, an iPaaS solution can help you alleviate some of the pressure from your team so your team can prioritize building the most strategic integrations or other product features. As Mathur mentioned, adopting Tray.io has helped Typeform build integrations that fit into a specific category (like ESPs) at scale. 

Once Typeform’s developers who manage the integration infrastructure side of things have established the foundation for building out integrations through iPaaS, they can move on to other things (like supporting external developers building on top of Typeform’s product). Meanwhile, the developers who manage each individual integration’s development can roll with the “templatized” style of building integrations through iPaaS to accelerate the growth of Typeform’s tech partner program.

Mathur says they would have needed to hire an additional 5-6 full-time developers to achieve the same time to market they had with the iPaaS solution. 

Is your leadership team bought into your tech partner program? 

Whether you’re growing your product and engineering team to establish roles dedicated to integration development, you’re adopting an iPaaS solution, or going with another option entirely, each scenario requires buy-in from your leadership team

If your leadership team doesn’t see the value in developing integrations at scale with iPaaS, they likely won’t approve of the upfront costs to the business or to your customers. Alternatively, if your leadership team is not ready to invest in a dedicated internal engineering team, an iPaaS solution might be a more financially feasible route for growing your tech partner program. 

Some iPaaS solutions require your company to take on the cost of using their platform, while others require your customers to take on the cost. You’ll need to determine how these costs will impact your revenue, retention, and integration adoption rates. 

Mathur suggests conducting a cost-benefit analysis to see which option is best-suited for your team, and present your findings to your leadership team to determine the best course of action. Some iPaaS vendors have a platform fee, cost per integration, cost for customer usage of each integration, and so on. 

HubSpot has a list of the top 22 iPaaS vendors so you can compare the features of each one and determine the best fit for your tech ecosystem. From there, you can research your favorite iPaaS vendors to learn more about the benefits and pricing.

If you’re researching options for scaling your tech ecosystem, check out our article on how we launched our tech ecosystem with more than 30 integrations in just six months in 2021. We did a ton of the research for you, like determining: 

You’ll also be interested in these

Article
|
4
 minutes
Partnerships 101: Sandboxes (And Why You Should Consider Building One)
Article
|
4
 minutes
Article
|
4
 minutes