The Most Common Partnership KPIs (According to Company Size and Maturity)
State of the Partner Ecosystem 2021
Your Slack Connect Channels: Now Powered by Crossbeam
Demystifying Partnership KPIs: Know What to Measure & When
Democratize Partner Insights with Crossbeam’s Chrome Extension
The Partner Playbook
10 Facts You Oughta Know if You Work in B2B Partnerships
20 Integrations and Chrome Extensions for Partner Managers
An Inside Look Into Google and HubSpot’s GTM Strategy for Their Ads Integration
5 Partnership Challenges Agencies Face (And How to Tackle Them Head-On)
Two Attribution Challenges for Partnership Professionals (and How to Get Ahead of Them)
We Mapped the Career Paths of 6 Women in Partnerships
Five Tactics You Can Use Right Now to Show the Real-Time Impact of Partnerships
How Sendcloud Achieved an 80% Increase in New Leads Sourced from Partners Using Reveal
WP Engine Used This 7-Stage “Bow-Tie” Funnel to Increase Agency Partners by 50%
Nearbound Podcast #013: David and Goliath — Partnering Up With the Big CO's
Nine Micro Co-Marketing Motions for Warming Up a Partnership
ELG and the revenue team: How to break down silos so every GTM function wins
Ecosystem Ops 101: Six Ways to Drive Efficiency and Maximize the ROI of Your Partner Program
30+ Integration Listing Page Examples for Designing Your Tech Marketplace
Your Partner Vetting Checklist: 7 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Signing an Agreement
Standout Traits for a Great Partner Case Study (with Examples)
The Seven Filters You Need for Your Agency Partner Directory
Growth Hack: Where to Find your First Partner
The Enablement Program That Can Help You Boost Agency Partner Retention by 70%
ActiveCampaign’s Co-Marketing Playbook for Getting the #1 Spot in Salesforce’s AppExchange
Your Partnerships Team Should Report to Marketing
The Co-Marketing Flip: Get Strategic with Your Partner Marketing Six Months into the Partnership
Friends With Benefits #8: Good Things Come to Good People
Get Off the Partner Enablement Treadmill
How alliances can leverage their channel partners to go to market with their integrated solution
The Anatomy of a Killer SaaS Partner Newsletter (Plus Examples)
Nearbound Podcast #010: Creating Categories and Partner Ecosystems
You Should Train Your Sales Team to be Tech Stack Experts
Your Product-First Partnerships Team Should Report Directly to the CEO
How to Activate Ecosystem Insights with Reports and Dashboards in Salesforce | Connector Summit 2022
Your B2B SaaS Partner Page Checklist (with 50 Examples)
Your Partnerships Team Should Report to Sales (At First)
Nearbound Podcast #004: Secrets of Partner Enablement & Marketing
Nearbound Podcast #001: Landing your first Sumo
Nearbound Podcast #003: Building API ecosystems, Stripe & Notion
Advanced Crossbeam: Too Many CRMs? Here’s How to Sort it All Out
AEs are Leveraging Ecosystem-Led Sales to Close Deals 46% Faster
The 12 Best Partnership and Business Development Podcasts (So Far)
Monetize Your Technology Partnerships With These 8 Tactics
Source, Decide, Execute: Your Framework For a Successful Partner Program
4 Easy Account Mapping Wins
Cristina Flaschen: Proving the ROI of partnerships | Supernode Conference 2022
Crawl, walk, run: The co-marketing framework that will keep you sane
How to Approach an Unequal SaaS Partnership (Without Being a Jerk or a Pushover)
Partnerships 101: How to Organize and Execute An Online Event with Your Partners
Your SaaS Partnership Has Stalled. Now What?
How to Contribute Millions in Sales Pipeline via Warm Intros and the "Fast Follow"
4 Leadership Lessons We Learned at Our First Happy Hour
Okay, So It’s a Down Market. Now What?
2020 State of the Partner Ecosystem Report
5 Lessons on Hyper-Growth Partnerships We Can Learn From Slack
Partnerships 101: How to Launch a Tech Partnership Program
6 Questions to Answer Before Launching Your Channel Partner Program
There are 270+ job titles in partnerships. Why?
My $2.6 Billion Ecosystem Fail
Your Brain on Story
Why Identifying Ideal Partners is Key for Partner Program Success
When to Hire Your First Partnerships or BD Leader
What's in a Vibe?
Want to Meet Quota? Befriend Your Partner Team
Using Nearbound Data to Expand Into New Markets
Turning Online Events Into a Business Machine
The Subtle Art of a Warm Intro: How to Set Your Sales Team Up For Success
The Three Pillars of Partnership Success
The PartnerHacker Handbook
The Partner Experience Weekly: Partner Experience is Shifting
The Partner Experience Weekly: My Dream State - Partner Tech
The Next Bestselling GTM Book Has Arrived
The Nearbound Marketing Blueprint: Key Plays
The Crawl, Walk, Run Strategy
The Case for Investing in Partner Operations
The Anatomy of a Partnership: Partner Leads Versus Cold Leads
Sunday Stories: Trust at Scale — Bringing Influence to the B2B Journey
Target the Right Leads at the Right Time: A Recap of the Happy Customers Festival
Sunday Stories: Turning Support Request Lead into Service Partner Gold
Sunday Stories: Empowering Agencies to Sell SaaS
Stand Up Your Co-Sell Orchestration Playbook
Sales Leadership and Partner Enablement: Part 2
Partnerships and Contracts: How to Navigate the Legal Jungle
PartnerHacker Merges with Reveal to Bring Nearbound to the Market
One major lesson in building partnerships from zero to $150M+ ARR
Oneflow Sees a 190% Surge in Created Opportunities After Beginning Two-Way Data Sharing with HubSpot
nearbound.com Editorial Guidelines
Nearbound Weekend 11/25: Matthew McConaughey's nearbound advice
Nearbound Weekend 07/15: Insights from 100+ conversations with partner
Nearbound Weekend 11/18: A BIG thank you 🙏
Nearbound Weekend 06/10: Great GTM never beats a great ecosystem
Nearbound Weekend 05/25: Network Effects are Everywhere in the Nearbound Era
Nearbound Weekend 05/20: A tectonic shift is upon us
Nearbound Weekend 04/29: Retention is the new acquisition
Nearbound Weekend 05/11: What Prisoner's Dilemma Teaches Us About Partnerships
Nearbound Weekend 04/20: How Commsor Took Over LinkedIn With 1.2 Million Impressions In Less Than 48 Hours (A Masterclass In Nearbound Marketing)
Nearbound Weekend 04/15: Partner Up With A Partner Pro
Nearbound Weekend 04/08: Nearbound Isn't Just For Partner People
Ecosystem-Led Sales: Deals and Revenue

5 Ways to Incentivize Your Sales Team to Live, Eat, and Breathe Partnerships

by
Olivia Ramirez
SHARE THIS

Get your sales team excited about co-selling with partners by offering monetary rewards and giving them partnership-related goals.

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.

If partnerships can lead to a 50% faster time to close, a 232% increase in feature adoption, or a #1 ranking in an app marketplace, why is managing the sales team’s execution of partnership strategies a top challenge for partnership leaders? The metrics are there, but the morale oftentimes isn’t.

 

 

Sometimes you need to offer a little sumpin’ to get the ball rolling (remember that $5 you got for doing chores around the house?) and incentivize your sales reps to co-sell with partners. Once they see how partners can shorten their time to close and increase deal sizes — there’s no lookin’ back!

Keep in mind: As your partner program matures, resources like headcount and budget will change. What you can offer to your sales team at a given point in time may not be as efficient as your company enters into its next phase of growth. That’s why we’ve tied each incentive to a corresponding level of partner program maturity

Check out these five incentives for getting your sales team in the co-selling mindset — and discuss the pros and cons with your sales leadership team. 

1. Establish partnerships-focused OKRs for your sales team (and include sales accelerators) 

Tying partnerships to your sales team’s objectives and key results (OKRs) is a great way to ensure your team is co-selling.

Start at the leadership level. It’s likely that you as a partner manager have goals that are tied to sales. Along those same lines, your sales leader should have goals tied to partnerships. Your sales leader could be held accountable for ensuring your company engages partners to:

  • Qualify opportunities 
  • Close deals
  • Increase deal sizes 
  • Shorten the time to close for opportunities won 

Then, your sales leader should assign OKRs to each of their sales reps to ensure they: 

  • Hold calls or meetings with their counterparts at your partner companies each week
  • Close a specified number of partner-sourced or partner-influenced deals 

Use sales accelerators to your advantage. Sales accelerators are put in place to encourage sales reps to close deals after they’ve hit their quota for the quarter. For example, if the sales rep has already closed 100% of their $500K annual recurring revenue (ARR) quota, they may feel inclined to wait on closing more deals that could help them meet their quota in the following quarter. 

This is where sales accelerators come in — providing your sales rep with a greater commission on opportunities closed after they hit their quota. So, rather than offering their standard 10% commission, for example, the sales rep can earn 12% commission on deals closed after they’ve hit their quota. Why not offer the same incentive for partner-sourced and partner-influenced deals?

Bonus: At the end of each quarter, measure your sales team’s partner engagement and raise the bar for them to hit bigger goals in the quarters to come. 

Great for: All partner program maturity levels

You’re just as likely at the 50-100 employee mark as the 1,000+ employee mark to rely on OKRs for growth. Building partnerships-focused OKRs into your sales team’s goals each quarter can set a standard bare minimum for partner engagement from your sales reps and establish stretch goals to fuel more engagement. 

Furthermore, establishing partnership-related goals at the leadership level will help the partnerships responsibility cascade down through the entire sales team.

 

Companies using OKRs with logos including facebook and google.
See? Even supernodes like Accenture and Amazon use OKRs.Image source: Employment Hero

2. Offer a SPIF as an immediately redeemable reward

Allocate some of your sales budget towards offering sales program incentive funds (SPIFs), or immediate cash incentives, to your sales reps (think: a reloadable debit card or gift card). You can reward your sales rep with a SPIF for:

  • Closing a deal with a partner
  • Increasing the deal size by a certain percentage through partner engagement 
  • Shortening their time to close on a given deal with a partner 

If you find yourself offering bonuses every week, great (that means your sales reps are getting better at working with partners!). But we know this isn’t for everyone given the incentive’s budgetary needs.

Great for partner program maturity level #3 “connector

At the 100-employee mark (and upwards of 999 employees), you’re likely held accountable for partner-sourced and partner-influenced revenue. Also at this stage, your partner program is mature and you’re able to get the resources you need to drive repeatable results. Allocate some of your budget or the budget of your sales team towards cash SPIFs for closing opportunities with partners. It’s a win-win. 

3. Provide your sales reps with MBO bonuses early on to drive behavioral adjustments 

Offer management by objectives (MBO) bonuses in the beginning to set expectations and influence a behavioral adjustment. As a partnerships team of one, Shipware’s Director of Partner Strategy and Channel Sales Greg Unruh relies on his outbound sales reps to drive channel sales. 

Unruh has adopted role-based partner pairing for matching his sales reps with their counterparts at various partner companies. This pairing process encourages his sales reps to co-sell with partners while maximizing the digital shipping company’s partnership resources. 

To calculate MBOs for his sales reps, Unruh uses actions precedes results (APR) scoring. He:

  1. Assigns a set of predetermined numbers to corresponding partnerships-related activities (including meetings his sales reps host, webinars and demos they attend, phone calls they make, etc.)
  2. Records each sales rep’s partnership-related activities for the quarter
  3. Tallies the corresponding scores associated with each activity to calculate a sum 

 

The APR score helps Unruh determine which sales reps are meeting their quotas for partnership-related activities and which aren’t. Unruh offers MBO bonuses to the sales reps who meet their quotas to fuel their adoption of channel sales tactics. Then, he phases the bonuses out.

Great for: Partner program maturity level #1 “explorer

Use MBO bonuses early on to drive a behavioral change among your sales reps. When your partnerships team is small (hey, you), you need all the help you can get. Your sales reps can serve as your channel managers in disguise. Once your sales reps see just how much partners can help them accelerate opportunities and increase deal sizes, they’ll be hooked!  

4. Compensate your sales reps for meeting with their counterparts 

In our Partner Playbook, CM Group’s Director of Partnerships Mike Barnes says he offers payments to his sales reps for meeting with their counterparts at a partner company. For example, if one of Barnes’s reps is responsible for the U.S. Southeast, that rep would receive a one-time payment to meet with their partner’s rep covering the same territory.

Face-to-face (or Zoom-to-Zoom) engagement can make a huge difference in feeling confident enough to engage their counterparts regularly — versus letting their GCal reminder to reach out go stale.

“I didn’t care if they talked about their accounts, just that they spoke,” says Barnes. “That’s going to build the frontline thinking so when a partner’s customer has a requirement that our product helps with, they will turn to a friendly face.”

Great for: Partner program maturity level #2 “producer

You know the power of meeting people in person. After all, the partnerships role is also a “people” role. Create space each week for your sales rep to engage with your partners. You’ll be helping them hone their people skills, open a dialogue with the partner, and develop an ongoing relationship (and cadence for check-ins). Train your team to meet with partners early on so it’s a no-brainer for them to engage partners in opportunities as your partner program matures. 

 

5. Give your sales reps quota relief for the opportunities they help your partners close 

For your most strategic partners that you know increase your bottom line with the more deals they close — give your sales reps 100% quota relief. 

For example, if data shows that your prospects are more likely to become your customers after becoming a customer of your partner, it only benefits your company if your sales reps help your partner close more deals. If the deal is for $100K, let your sales rep retire $100K against their own quota. This gives your sales reps just as much incentive to close a deal for your partner as they have to close a deal for your company. 

Great for: Partner program maturity level #4 “supernode

You’ve proven the revenue your partners contribute through your partner program — through channel sales, renewals from integration adoption, and so on. Your leadership team is so bought in that they want their sales reps to help their partners close deals just as much as they want to close their own — because it in effect helps your company as well.

Take this incentives list to your sales leader to come up with a game plan for getting your sales reps on board with partnerships. And let us know how it goes at marketing@crossbeam.com

 

You’ll also be interested in these

How Amir Karmali Resurrected 40 Partners to Rebuild Marketcircle’s Partnerships Program
ELG Attribution in Crossbeam: Measuring What Matters
Co-Selling for Success: How Chili Piper and Gong are Generating Millions in Revenue by Partnering Up