Howdy Partners #15: Your Partner Team Tech Stack
Five Soft Skills You Need as a Partnerships Leader
Nearbound Podcast #091: Going-To-Market through Community with Kathleen Booth
The Four Main Sales Pain Points From 2022 and How To Beat Them
Meet the Startup Choosing Ecosystem-Led Growth Over Direct Sales
Partnership Success Checklist: How to Start the Year Strong
Sunday Stories: The Unseen Cost of Not Integrating
Howdy Partners #11: Revenue Generating Activities
Nearbound Podcast #088: Building Partner Relationships, A CrossPod Takeover with Ecosystem Aces
Nearbound Podcast #087: Ecosystems Expansion and Enablement: The How Behind Growth and Partner Engagement
Driving Deals Faster: A Nearbound GTM Strategy Amplifies Revenue
Andreessen Horowitz’s Sarah Wang: The best performing companies are prioritizing partnerships | Supernode 2022
IRL Partnerships and Ecosystem Conferences to Attend in 2023
Introduction to Partner Manager
The Secret to Partner Retention: Treating your Partners Like Customers
Nearbound Podcast #085: Integrating Partnerships Into Products: A Crosspod Takeover with Mark Brigman
Partners Contribute to 58% of the Revenue of Top Performers (And 5 Other Sales Stats)
Foreword of the Nearbound and the Rise of the Who Economy Book
Getting Your Frogs Out of the Pot to Incubate Packaged Ecosystem IP
4 Parts of the Sales Cycle Where Partnerships Can Help
Building Your Dream ELG Tech Stack
ELG Insider Daily #695: Connected selling = connected customers
Nearbound Podcast #083: Building Partnerships from the Ground-up
Four Tips for Launching a 30-60-90 Day Enablement Program for Your New Sales Hires
The Secret to a Successful Second Sales Call: Involving a Partner
How Sales Teams Leverage Their Ecosystems to Enter Every Deal With Confidence
First Friday: Partner Success Maturity Model
Hunting for Leverage Points in Partnerships
Howdy Partners #75: Prioritizing Operations or Relationships? Striking the Balance in Partnerships with Coriena Hipple Merejo
The Direct vs Partner-Led Dilemma
How to Win Over Your Strategic Partner’s Customer Success Team Right Away
How to Build a Partner Program From the Ground Up
Want To Up Your Integration Game? Adopt A Product Mindset.
Building a Partnership Program That Works - with Donagh Kiernan
The Inside Track: Top Partnership Plays from Chris Lavoie at Gorgias
Your Services Partners Can Help Close the “Impossible” Deal (And Make Your Customers Happier)
Why Co-innovation Between Tech Partners Is So Hard
Sharing Partner Data Used To Be Scary. These New Best Practices Can Help
WorkSpan Raises $30M Series C
School of Partnerships - Recordings
Using Composable Ecosystem Management To Break Down Market Silos
Nearbound Daily #010: Creator economy in B2B
3 Companies on Building Their First Partnerships Team (And Hiring From Within)
Howdy Partners #37: Conference Strategy
Howdy Partners #28: Positioning With Your Partners is More Important Than Working On Your Co-Sell Pitch
The 5 Phases of Co-selling for Rolling Out Your New Tech Partnership
18 Partnerships People You Should Follow On LinkedIn In 2022
The Power In GoToEco Bundles
Tech Ecosystem Maturity: Are You Influencing Your Company’s Product/Feature Roadmap?
Overcoming the Homelessness Problem in Tech Partnerships
Nearbound Podcast #072: F*ck the Funnel - The Beginning of the End, with Allan Adler
Email Service Providers
Why is GoToEcosystem Necessary for B2B SaaS, Part II
Every Stat We Have That Proves The Value Of Partnerships
Why is GoToEcosystem Necessary for B2B SaaS?
How Box Uses Reveal Everyday to Power Their Nearbound GTM
Nearbound Podcast #070: Xero to Hero — Building a World-Class Platform Ecosystem
Partnerships 101: Sandboxes (And Why You Should Consider Building One)
Strategic partnerships create competitive advantages and accelerate growth
Howdy Partners #9: Tiering Your Partnership Programs
Size Isn't Everything: How Small Programs Win Big Partners
Everything You Should Know About Launching a Startup Partner Program
Nearbound Podcast #122: Category Design and Trust
The Era of Second-Party Data is Here. Are You Ready?
Nearbound Podcast #067: Be a Gardener, not a Builder - Platforms, Ecosystems, and Complexity
Your Vision, Mission and Core Values Are Foundational to a Successful Partnership Organization
The Relationship-First Engagement Model, Part II
Get Your Sales Team Excited About Co-Selling With a 50% Faster Time to Close
Nearbound Podcast #066: What Complex B2B Marketing Can Learn from Simple B2C Partnerships
The Community Mindset: How Building a Customer Community Empowers Partnerships
Crossbeam Explains: The Three Partnership Types
What Symbiotic Relationships In Nature Teach Us About Partnerships
Two Ways Partner Data Can Inform Your Product Strategy and Improve Retention
Partnership Manager or Master Politician?
Nearbound Weekend 07/02: Driving the bus
Everything You Didn't Know You Could Do With Partner Data
Nearbound Daily #005: Dear reader
A Hiring Manager’s Guide to Partnerships Roles and Job Titles
How VC Firms Are Using Crossbeam to Grow Their Portfolio Companies at Scale
Six Partnerships Team Org Charts (So You Can Plan Ahead for Your Team’s Growth)
How to Source and Convert Pipeline in HubSpot | Connector Summit 2022
Confessions of a GSI: Here's What GSIs Look for in an ISV Partner
Confessions of an ISV: How to Be a Good Channel Partner
Sales Leadership and Partner Enablement: Part 3
The Partner Tiers Cheat Sheet: Benefits, Drawbacks, and Checklists
Reflections on 'The Age of Connected Work'
Is ELG Right For Me? Find Out With the ELG Readiness Matrix
Sales Leadership and Partner Enablement: Part 1
The growing importance of partner attach across the buying cycle
Getting Primed for Account Mapping with Partners in Crossbeam | Connector Summit 2022
Crossbeam Product Drop Webinar: New Features Worth Buzzing About
How to Become the Beyoncé of Your Ecosystem
Nearbound Podcast #057: What Your Agency Partners Won't Tell You
How to be a customer-obsessed partner manager
Six Tips for Strengthening the Bond Between Your CSMs and Partners
SAS Gets IPO Ready via Partnerships
Nearbound Podcast #055: The Partner Manager Playbook — Managing the Front Lines
Partnerships 101: What Is Partner Marketing
Partnership Secrets: Enable Sales Teams and Hit Revenue Goals
SaaS Reseller Partnerships: What they Are & How They Work
Partnerships and Ecosystems Hub

5 Partnership Challenges Agencies Face (And How to Tackle Them Head-On)
by
Olivia Ramirez
SHARE THIS

Agencies Hero Digital, Americaneagle.com, and SmartBug Media share how they solve everyday partnership challenges.

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.

As an agency partner manager, you’ve got a lot of relationships to support.

On one hand, you’ve got partners like Adobe, HubSpot, or Contentsquare looking to your team to be their biggest advocates. On the other, you’re providing clients with top solutions and services for their custom projects. And then there’s managing your internal team’s relationships between the two — your clients and your partners.

As your partner ecosystem and employee count grows, you’ll need to invest in scalable practices that keep your internal and external communications running smoothly (also known as Ecosystem Ops). After all, you’ve seen what happens when there’s no longer a healthy balance between corresponding with partners and consulting with clients — nobody ends up happy!

We gathered insights from digital marketing agencies SmartBug Media®, Hero Digital, and Americaneagle.com to hear how they tackle common partnership challenges, so you can adopt their best practices in your everyday operations.

(Psst! We noticed something interesting: Agency partner managers assume various roles to fuel their team’s success. See if you can spot “the gatekeeper,” “the advocate,” “the agnostic,” “the thought leader,” “the intermediary,” and “the coach” in the sections that follow.)

Challenge #1: Protecting your team’s time 

You’ve launched five new partnerships, and your client services (CS) reps are excited to put your partners’ solutions to work for their clients. But then, your partners start piling on more enablement tasks, like webinars, certification programs, and one-on-one trainings. Your CS team’s calendar is looking busier than yours, and your clients aren’t happy with your team’s lack of availability. Some enablement resources are critical, while others really shouldn’t be getting into the hands of your team.

Tip: Filter enablement requests so your team focuses only on what’s important

Drew Cohen, Senior Director, Revenue Operations and MarTech at SmartBug Media®, says you should filter incoming communications and requests from your partners so that your CS team receives only what’s critical. Would a particular group training help your CS team overcome roadblocks in their current projects? If not, protect your team from unnecessary meetings that could take time away from clients. 

In other words, be the gatekeeper

Tip: Ensure your partner’s enablement requests align with your partnership strategy

Defining a clear partnership strategy will help you determine which of your partners’ products or features your CS team should know and which enablement requests to filter through. 

“’Well, this use case wouldn’t be a great fit, this may not resonate with our strategist, but, oh, this might,’” says Cohen. “We have to constantly understand what’s going on in every department so that when we bring new technologies or partners into the fold either for our internal use or for our potential client use, there has to be a really good reason.” 

For example, inbound marketing agency SmartBug Media analyzes its clients’ tech stacks to identify gaps in communication from one system to another (think: if a client’s CRM tool doesn’t send data to their customer success tool). When filtering enablement requests from existing partners, SmartBug Media determines if the partner’s product or feature already integrates with or can connect with existing tools in their clients’ tech stacks.

Develop a baseline for determining which partner communications should go to your team (or not) by:

  • Defining the strategy your team is prioritizing for your existing and upcoming client projects; then, identify if your partner’s products align with that particular strategy (and if those extra enablement processes are necessary). 
  • Defining which leadership roles should prioritize maintaining the overall partner strategy (thus, serving as the gatekeepers) versus which leadership roles should prioritize implementing that strategy (and feed project-based information to and from the gatekeepers)

Challenge #2: Knowing when your partner’s product isn’t the right fit for the client 

The client’s needs always come first. 

Tip: Pass on the referral

Whenever possible, identify if the partner’s product solves the client’s use case before engaging the partner with the client. Alternatively, if the partner refers the lead to you, but you know the partner isn’t a good fit for the potential client’s use case — simply pass on the referral. 

Be the advocate.

“At the end of the day, we’re always focusing on the client,” says Jerry Boduch, VP of Strategic Alliances at digital agency Americaneagle.com. “If we need to deliver bad news to a partner, we will always deliver it from the lens of the client.” In fact, explaining how your client’s needs don’t match up with your partner’s solution could help them understand existing product gaps and inform the partner’s product roadmap. 

Challenge #3: Navigating when competing partners’ products are a good fit for the client 

If your client is interested in multiple products in a competing space, should you or should you not play favorites among your partners?

Tip: Give the client all the information they need to make a decision, without getting subjective

The team at Americaneagle.com maintains an agnostic stance if their clients are shopping around for a product. It’s a balancing act of making sure the client has all of the information they need to make a thoughtful decision and not playing favorites. 

Be the agnostic.

Tip: Share research-based insights with potential clients through content marketing 

Educating potential clients about partners in the same competitive space also has its advantages. Your client will become better equipped to make a decision, and you’ll be leveling the playing field for multiple partners. 

Be the thought leader. 

George Haenisch, VP of Alliances at Hero Digital, says his team creates research-based content to generate ecosystem qualified leads (EQLs) for multiple partners. The customer experience and digital agency targets prospective clients by industry, by geographic location, and by those who fit multiple partners’ ideal client profiles. 

The Hero Digital team sprinkles their partners’ products into relevant research papers. 

From Hero Digital’s research paper on “loyalty in healthcare”. Images courtesy of Hero Digital.

“It’s authentic, primary research, but now we take the technology and say, ‘Here’s how we implement the trend and the tactic that we just told you about in this partner’s technology,’” says Haenisch. “Additionally, we can amplify this content through our partners’ networks.” 

During the discovery conversation, Hero Digital’s CS team uncovers the client’s needs and recommends the best products for their specific use cases.

Challenge #4: Getting your client’s product requests into your partner’s product roadmap 

Your partner’s product roadmap and what you wish you could solve for your client may not always align. 

Tip: Feed product requests to your partners, and gather information for the client 

In some cases, the most you can do is feed the client’s requests or feedback to your partner. Let’s say you’re using an SEO platform for a particular client project. The client inquires about additional functionality around tracking revenue attribution, but that capability doesn’t exist in the application (yet). Relay the request to your partner. 

Be the intermediary.

The more requests your partner receives for a particular product update, the more likely the partner is to build that feature into their product roadmap. 

If your client’s dream feature is already in development, the partner may invite the client to participate in a pilot program. Your client will get a first look and may even get to contribute vital feedback to inform the final iteration of the feature.

Tip: Engage your partner’s professional services team in the project

There may also be cases when you decide to actively engage your partner’s professional services (PS) team to support specific requirements for a client project.

“We’ve had situations where we bring in the professional services arm of the software vendor to the deal,” says Jerry Boduch at Americaneagle.com. “Not only are they selling the software, but they’re staying involved. If there needs to be changes to the product or roadmap, they’re part of that conversation, too.”

For instance, Americaneagle.com engaged a partner’s PS team in a particular project when a client expressed interest in piloting the partner’s beta feature. Since the beta feature wasn’t live in the platform, Americaneagle.com’s CS team leaned on the partner’s PS team for their expertise in the feature’s capabilities. 

Additionally, Americaneagle.com knew that some of the capabilities in the platform would change with the feature’s public launch. Americaneagle.com collaborated with the partner’s PS team to make sure the solution they were providing for the client would work well with the current and future states of the platform. The partner’s PS team reviewed and validated Americaneagle.com’s proposed solution to make sure it would provide value to the client in the long run. 

Challenge #5: Keeping your team up to date on your partner’s solutions

Your CS team needs to stay up to date on your partners’ products so they can provide the best consultative practices and implementation for your clients. But with a growing number of partners in your repertoire and an even longer list of client projects, how do you maintain your team’s level of expertise?

Tip: Develop partner enablement resources for your sales and client services teams 

Agencies often have to know why a client should adopt a particular product and how to implement that product strategically. 

Drew Cohen says the CS team at SmartBug Media prioritizes understanding the use cases for their partners’ products rather than all the functionalities and features of those products.

“The difficult part is knowing what to recommend and why. I’m focused on educating them on use cases and what to look for, and what to trigger in their minds when these things happen. Identify exactly which features to leverage with the product later,” says Cohen.

Be the coach.

For example, SmartBug Media looks to its video platform partner, Vidyard, to engage many of its clients’ prospects in post-webinar follow-up communications.

“If my client in SaaS is running a lot of demos, and if they could track engagement with those on-demand webinars and send that data back to the CRM to trigger an email, that’s a really powerful use case for Vidyard,” says Cohen. 

Meanwhile, the partnerships team at Americaneagle.com enables its CS reps through: 

  • An intranet, which sorts Americaneagle.com’s partners by category and helps their team identify relevant partner contacts, partnership descriptions, and other details 
  • Confluence (think: a team workspace meets wiki) 
  • And other materials, like sales enablement decks and one-sheets 
Americaneagle.com’s intranet. Image courtesy of Americaneagle.com.

Tip: Use your knowledge base tool to share client successes 

SmartBug Media links cards within their project management tool to pages in their knowledge base tool. As a CS rep builds out a project for a client, that rep can get context about solutions that have worked for similar use cases in the past and can access frequently asked questions.

Templatize the instructions in your project management tool to guide your CS team through best practices, new features, and use case examples existing in your knowledge base. 

Meanwhile, the team at Hero Digital is developing a research hub to help its team with deal forecasting and solution selling. The hub serves as a reference point for east and west-coast CS reps to learn about Hero Digital’s partnerships and use cases in real time. 

“We’re training those front-facing folks to come to us to get enabled on the technology we’re using and also to get examples of where we’ve done it before,” says George Haenisch at Hero Digital. 

Tip: Use your client case studies as internal enablement resources 

SmartBug Media also looks to its client case studies with partners as an enablement resource for the CS team.

“People can get educated on what other marketers in our business have successfully done for clients in our industry,” says Cohen. “People put a lot of focus on case studies for new business and sales growth, but we look at it as a big internal tool as well.”

Excerpt from SmartBug Media’s case study with CallRail.

Cohen adds that SmartBug Media’s CS reps use their partners’ tools as part of their daily workflows. “If we’re going to promote a partner, we have to use their tools,” says Cohen.

— 

So, yeah, there’s a lot going on. But these roles, they become you. If you need any help tackling these challenges, book a free ELG strategy call with our team.

You’ll also be interested in these

Agencies and Tech Partnerships with Alex Glenn
How to make agencies and tech partnerships work
Sunday Stories: Empowering Agencies to Sell SaaS