Video
|
36
 minutes
Nearbound Sales #7: They Win, You Win
Article
|
3
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #024: Partnerships are your greatest resource
Video
|
43
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #103: Think Customer Outcomes or Die - Raja Nucho on Surrounding the Sale with Partners
Article
|
7
 minutes
You Only Get One Shot At A First Impression: How To Ace Partner Onboarding
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #023: Don't swim against the current
Video
|
23
 minutes
Howdy Partners #25: What is the 'SaaS Buying River'
Article
|
5
 minutes
What are ecosystem leads and how to find them
Video
|
22
 minutes
Nearbound Sales#6: Sell Together, Sell More
Article
|
6
 minutes
The partner experience weekly: Should partnerops role up to revops?
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #020: GTM is about to get wild
Video
|
54
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #102: War Stories with Legends
Video
|
31
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #20: Creators Are Your Cheat Code
Article
|
3
 minutes
Women in SaaS Partnerships Are (Probably) Underpaid
Video
|
27
 minutes
Nearbound Sales #5: Unlock Unstoppable Momentum and Build a Flywheel
Article
|
11
 minutes
The Partner Experience Weekly: Account Mapping - 9-Box Strategic Plan
Video
|
42
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #101: From Seller to VP Sales to CEO — How to Partner Pill Your Sales Org
Article
|
16
 minutes
How to earn the respect of your sales team in 60 Days
Article
|
12
 minutes
Building an Ecosystem Cluster Strategic Co-Sell Program
Article
|
2
 minutes
Nearbound Weekend 03/04: How can we save B2B?
Video
|
46
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #4: Evangelism Leads Where?
Article
|
5
 minutes
The Ecosystem-Led Growth Race Between the US and Europe: Who’s Winning?
Video
|
23
 minutes
Howdy Partners #24: How to Make Partner Enablement Actually Engaging
Video
|
25
 minutes
Nearbound Sales #4: The Dark Side of Working with Partners
Article
|
8
 minutes
The Partner Experience Weekly: Building CRM for Partnerships
Video
|
150
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #100: From Scorpions and Casinos to Hubspot and PartnerHacker
Article
|
6
 minutes
8 SaaS Leaders You Should Follow: Partnerships Edition
Video
|
41
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #3: How to Use Events to Drive Your Marketing
Article
|
16
 minutes
Unlocking the Power of Partnerships with Martin Scholz of PartnerXperience
Article
|
27
 minutes
Howdy Partners #22: Developing Your Ideal Partner Profile
Article
|
7
 minutes
Getting Started with Ecosystem-Led Growth: Your First 3 Plays
Article
|
8
 minutes
The Partner Experience Weekly: Salesforce List Views for Partnerships
Video
|
40
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #2: Building a Brand with Zero Network
Video
|
3
 minutes
Leveraging Nearbound Data in HubSpot
Article
|
11
 minutes
Your 2023 Interview Kit For Landing Your Next Partnerships Role
Article
|
1
 minutes
Filling the Critical Gap: How to Become Every Technology Platform's Favorite Partner
Article
|
9
 minutes
The Partner Experience Weekly: Building a Partnership App in Salesforce CRM
Video
|
42
 minutes
Nearbound Marketing #1: Market Like a Journalist
Article
|
5
 minutes
5 Reasons to Attend Supernode 2023
Article
|
27
 minutes
Howdy Partners #19: Approaching Agency Partnerships
Video
|
38
 minutes
Nearbound Sales #1: 1 + 1 = 1
Article
|
8
 minutes
The Partner Experience Weekly: Partner Recruitment in Salesforce (with screenshots)
Article
|
6
 minutes
The Most Common Partnership KPIs and Quarterly Targets for 2023
Article
|
6
 minutes
7 Ways to Sabotage Your Partner Ecosystem: A Guide for Partner Managers
Article
|
7
 minutes
How to build a B2B affiliate program in seven steps
Article
|
5
 minutes
Top tips for managing a successful B2B partnership
Article
|
1
 minutes
nearbound.com CEO Jared Fuller Wins 2023 SaaSy Sales Leadership Award
Article
|
8
 minutes
A Career in Partnerships Could Help You Make More Money Faster
Article
|
32
 minutes
Howdy Partners #17: Living in the Ecosystem
Article
|
5
 minutes
HubSpot Ecosystem Set to Reach $17.9 Billion in Revenue by 2025
Article
|
12
 minutes
nearbound.com principles: show me you know me — Samantha McKenna
Article
|
12
 minutes
Partnerships 101: What Is Ecosystem-Led Growth?
Article
|
25
 minutes
Howdy Partners #15: Your Partner Team Tech Stack
Article
|
2
 minutes
Five Soft Skills You Need as a Partnerships Leader
Video
|
48
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #091: Going-To-Market through Community with Kathleen Booth
Article
|
7
 minutes
The Four Main Sales Pain Points From 2022 and How To Beat Them
Article
|
8
 minutes
Meet the Startup Choosing Ecosystem-Led Growth Over Direct Sales
Article
|
10
 minutes
Partnership Success Checklist: How to Start the Year Strong
Article
|
8
 minutes
Sunday Stories: The Unseen Cost of Not Integrating
Article
|
29
 minutes
Howdy Partners #11: Revenue Generating Activities
Video
|
43
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #088: Building Partner Relationships, A CrossPod Takeover with Ecosystem Aces
Video
|
47
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #087: Ecosystems Expansion and Enablement: The How Behind Growth and Partner Engagement
Article
|
2
 minutes
Driving Deals Faster: A Nearbound GTM Strategy Amplifies Revenue
Video
|
3
 minutes
Andreessen Horowitz’s Sarah Wang: The best performing companies are prioritizing partnerships | Supernode 2022
Article
|
5
 minutes
IRL Partnerships and Ecosystem Conferences to Attend in 2023
Article
|
7
 minutes
Introduction to Partner Manager
Article
|
2
 minutes
The Secret to Partner Retention: Treating your Partners Like Customers
Video
|
47
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #085: Integrating Partnerships Into Products: A Crosspod Takeover with Mark Brigman
Article
|
10
 minutes
Partners Contribute to 58% of the Revenue of Top Performers (And 5 Other Sales Stats)
eBook
Foreword of the Nearbound and the Rise of the Who Economy Book
Article
|
3
 minutes
Getting Your Frogs Out of the Pot to Incubate Packaged Ecosystem IP
Article
|
5
 minutes
4 Parts of the Sales Cycle Where Partnerships Can Help
Video
|
5
 minutes
Building Your Dream ELG Tech Stack
Article
|
 minutes
ELG Insider Daily #695: Connected selling = connected customers
Video
|
40
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #083: Building Partnerships from the Ground-up
Article
|
18
 minutes
Four Tips for Launching a 30-60-90 Day Enablement Program for Your New Sales Hires
Article
|
4
 minutes
The Secret to a Successful Second Sales Call: Involving a Partner
Article
|
5
 minutes
How Sales Teams Leverage Their Ecosystems to Enter Every Deal With Confidence
Article
|
4
 minutes
First Friday: Partner Success Maturity Model
Article
|
4
 minutes
Hunting for Leverage Points in Partnerships
Video
|
27
 minutes
Howdy Partners #75: Prioritizing Operations or Relationships? Striking the Balance in Partnerships with Coriena Hipple Merejo
Article
|
4
 minutes
The Direct vs Partner-Led Dilemma
Article
|
7
 minutes
How to Win Over Your Strategic Partner’s Customer Success Team Right Away
Article
|
 minutes
How to Build a Partner Program From the Ground Up
Article
|
9
 minutes
Want To Up Your Integration Game? Adopt A Product Mindset.
Article
|
6
 minutes
Building a Partnership Program That Works - with Donagh Kiernan
Video
|
20
 minutes
The Inside Track: Top Partnership Plays from Chris Lavoie at Gorgias
Article
|
5
 minutes
Your Services Partners Can Help Close the “Impossible” Deal (And Make Your Customers Happier)
Article
|
8
 minutes
Why Co-innovation Between Tech Partners Is So Hard
Article
|
6
 minutes
Sharing Partner Data Used To Be Scary. These New Best Practices Can Help
Article
|
1
 minutes
WorkSpan Raises $30M Series C
Video
|
22
 minutes
School of Partnerships - Recordings
Article
|
5
 minutes
Using Composable Ecosystem Management To Break Down Market Silos
Article
|
1
 minutes
Nearbound Daily #010: Creator economy in B2B
Article
|
24
 minutes
3 Companies on Building Their First Partnerships Team (And Hiring From Within)
Video
|
25
 minutes
Howdy Partners #37: Conference Strategy
Video
|
18
 minutes
Howdy Partners #28: Positioning With Your Partners is More Important Than Working On Your Co-Sell Pitch
Article
|
11
 minutes
The 5 Phases of Co-selling for Rolling Out Your New Tech Partnership
Article
|
6
 minutes
18 Partnerships People You Should Follow On LinkedIn In 2022
Article
|
4
 minutes
The Power In GoToEco Bundles
Article
|
15
 minutes
Tech Ecosystem Maturity: Are You Influencing Your Company’s Product/Feature Roadmap?
Getting Buy-In
Your SaaS Partnership Has Stalled. Now What?
by
Emily Schwartz
SHARE THIS

5 email templates to get you through the most sticky partnership situations.

by
Emily Schwartz
SHARE THIS

In this article

Join the movement

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

By Emily K. Schwartz

June 2, 2020

We’ve all been there: you had a great call with a partner, you follow-up, and… crickets. A week goes by. More crickets. Uh, was there a miscommunication somewhere along the line? 

I’ve been working with external and internal partners for over ten years in a variety of business development, partnerships, and product management roles across startups, small businesses, and large enterprises.

From direct product integrations to service and marketing partnerships, I won’t claim to have seen it all, but I’ve seen a lot. And fortunately, I’ve even learned a few things along the way—like how to be a squeaky wheel when you really need a response from a partner. Before we get to common scenarios below, a few general words of advice when it comes to partner communication:

  • Shorter is better. Get to the point. If your emails read like novels, this decreases the odds of a partner reading them and increases the odds of your recipient missing important details.

  • Not everything is urgent. Similarly, if you start every other email with “URGENT” or “TIME SENSITIVE”, nothing becomes “urgent” or “time sensitive.” Be thoughtful, have perspective, and plan ahead.

  • Be proactive. Consider throwing out a date and time rather than asking your contact for a good time to connect. If it makes sense, proactively share screenshots, data, demo account info, or anything that can help accelerate the partnership and strengthen the relationship.

  • Be as specific as possible. Who is accountable for what, when, and how? Spelling these things out early and often only adds value and clarity.

And now, what follows is how I’ve found success working through situations we’ve all encountered by recapturing a partner’s attention when the going gets tough:

Situation: When you have a good relationship and you’re suddenly ghosted

Objective: Get your initiative back on your partner’s front-burner.

Remember: Not every silence signals bad intentions—emails go to spam, people take vacations, switch teams, etc. Be patient within reason, and remain specific with your goals and timelines.

Try this:

Hi [Contact Name] — 

Following up again after our meeting on (date). Is (specific date and time) next week a good time to regroup on (specific thing that was discussed)? In the meantime, I wanted to share a few data points that might be useful as you socialize the idea internally. Were you able to learn more about (action item)? Lmk if there are other helpful details I can share before we chat next.

Thanks — 

[Your Name]

Why this works: This email doesn’t attempt to assign blame, express disappointment, or convey frustration. Instead, it’s a straightforward get-out-of-jail-free card for you both, a chance to reset at a specific time on a specific thing.

 

 

Situation: When you left things on a not-so-great note but still need partner engagement or support

Objective: Get your partner back on board with working together.

Remember: How does this partnership benefit both parties? If you dropped the ball, apologize. Avoid blame and focus on how you can jointly achieve your objectives and goals. Try this trick: instead of rinsing and repeating the habits that caused things to go awry, try introducing a new contact to help breathe fresh, positive life into the relationship. Consider restating goals to realign.

Try this:


Hi [Contact Name] — 

I’m hoping to reconnect to discuss [XYZ]. [Name], our Engineering Lead (cc’d), offered to jump on a call this Friday to help smooth out some of the wrinkles we ran into during our previous attempt at [thing you were trying to do]. She’s happy to work with the appropriate person on your team to better [understand, document, and prioritize the remaining integration action items]. Who’s the best person for her to team up with? We’re confident this could drive meaningful impact for [ABC].

Thanks — 

[Your Name]

Why this works: Bad relationships, in any context, are the pits. Instead of playing blame ping-pong, introducing a new contact can alleviate pressure and force the group to recognize what’s important. Different individuals can often help unearth valuable insights and understandings. I’ve used this tactic successfully when I seem to be running in circles with a partner or running up against a wall with a request.

 

Situation: When you’ve followed up multiple times and it’s still crickets

Objective: You need to get back on your partner’s radar ASAP.

Remember: Try sending an invite directly to your contact’s calendar (be careful about overusing this tactic). If you’re supposed to be working backward from a milestone or deadline with the partner, mention this in your note. If you continue to get no response, consider finding another point of contact at the company via LinkedIn, the company website, etc. on your own.

Try this:

Hi [Contact Name] — 

Checking in again — I popped something on your calendar for later this week, I’m hoping we can connect to talk through (XYZ) since we’d like to allocate resources for this in our sprint starting (date). If that time doesn’t work or you’re no longer the best point of contact for us, please let me know another time or point person. We’re looking forward to getting this off the ground.

Thanks —

[Your Name] 

Why this works: I’ve used the “pop something on their calendar” trick on three big occasions that stand out in memory as major nail-biters. All three times proved effective: even though the partner had been missing in action over multiple emails, they jumped on a video chat when they saw the calendar alert. Reinforcing why a response is time-sensitive by including a milestone and also offering your contact an easy response option if they’ve moved on to another shiny object can help keep the initiative moving when it otherwise could become easy for them to ignore.

 

Situation: When you’re proposing something different than what was agreed upon and you’re looking for alignment

Objective: Get buy-in on your new approach. 

Remember: How does this change benefit the partnership? If the change largely benefits only you or it requires significantly more work from your partner, can you counterbalance it with something that the partner will be happy with? If it involves changes to an established contract, SLA, etc., be sure to call this out and/or get ahead of things by vetting with your legal team before broaching with the partner.

Try this:

Hi [Contact Name] — 

As we were (building/thinking through XYZ), we realized (ABC). What are your thoughts on (describe desired change and how it impacts customers and both parties’ business/customer interests). We ran past Legal and they are comfortable with the change. Any risks or potential issues from your end? Let me know if you want to connect sooner than our scheduled check-in next week and I’ll make the time.

Thanks — 

[Your Name]

Why this works: Instead of just springing a new thing on your partner, your email demonstrates you thought through the context, were proactive in assessing risk, and value partner input and collaboration. You show you’re prioritizing the relationship and are mindful of how this change impacts stakeholders.

 

Situation: When something bad happens to their company (ie layoffs, a scandal, etc.) 

Objective: Understand if/how this impacts your partnership while extending empathy and keeping the partner excited/interested in the relationship 

Remember: How would you feel if you were in your partner’s shoes? This may be an extremely tough and stressful time for your contact—responses may be delayed or they may not be in a position to support the partnership at all anymore. If your partner has not proactively reached out to you to discuss the bad news (ie, you learned about the news on an industry blog, Twitter, etc.), give things a few days to settle if timelines allow.

Try this:

Hi [Contact Name] — 

I wanted to reach out after hearing about (news). Layoffs are awful, I’m sorry your team has to endure this right now. Let me know if there’s anything we can do to make things easier right now and if you anticipate any changes to (thing that you’re working on) work or timelines. We’re still on track on our end to get you (thing) by (date) and know our customers are going to love this (integration/new feature/initiative/campaign/etc).

Thanks —

[Your Name]

Why this works: Reaching out in the aftermath of bad news can be daunting or awkward. If you’re able to extend an offer to provide additional partner support, that helps demonstrate you value the relationship and care. It’s important to know if/how the news impacts your partnership. The phrasing above explicitly asks for impacts on the partnership and keeps the focus on your objectives ahead.

 

You’ll also be interested in these

Article
|
8
 minutes
Tech Ecosystem Maturity: How to Co-Sell Like a Supernode
Article
|
8
 minutes
The 2023 State of the Partner Ecosystem Report
Article
|
8
 minutes