Article
|
8
 minutes
Partnerships 101: What Is a PRM and Should I Use One?
Article
|
7
 minutes
Tech Ecosystem Maturity: How to Level Up Your “Better Together” Messaging
Video
|
36
 minutes
Partner Ecosystems 101
Video
|
1
 minutes
Dave Goldstein: Ecosystem-Led Sales for the Enterprise: How Braze Leveraged Alliances to Fuel Robust Growth | Supernode 2023
Article
|
11
 minutes
8 Times a Partnership Impacted an “Exit Event” (And Why Acquisitions are on The Rise)
Article
|
9
 minutes
5 Signs Your Tech Partner's About to Get Acquired (And How to Prepare for Change)
Article
|
12
 minutes
Tech Ecosystem Maturity: How to Level Up Your Integrations Team
Video
|
18
 minutes
The Inside Track: Crossbeam Security 101 with CISO Chris Castaldo
Article
|
8
 minutes
Six Tips for Expanding Internationally Using Channel Partners
Article
|
6
 minutes
10 steps to develop a co-marketing strategy
Article
|
4
 minutes
How Typeform Went from 30 Integrations to 100+ in Just One Year
Article
|
6
 minutes
How Typeform Improved Their Revenue by 40% with ELG and PLG
Article
|
6
 minutes
Partnerships 101: What Is Co-Selling?
Article
|
6
 minutes
Partnerships 101: Inbound vs Outbound Integrations and Why They Matter for Your Partnerships
Article
|
11
 minutes
How to Communicate Effectively With Your Entire GTM Team and The C-Suite
Article
|
11
 minutes
Partnerships 101: What Is an Ecosystem and How Is It Redefining Partnerships?
Video
|
20
 minutes
The Inside Track: Get to know the Crossbeam Salesforce App
Article
|
18
 minutes
The 7 Metrics That Prove the Business Impact of Your Tech Integrations
Article
|
7
 minutes
8 Times Sales Reps Won the Deal by Co-Selling With Partners
Article
|
9
 minutes
6 Ways Sales Professionals Can Use Partnerships to Advance Their Careers (and Get Promoted)
Article
|
6
 minutes
How Co-Selling & Co-Marketing Build Revenue
Article
|
43
 minutes
How Demandbase Acquired DemandMatrix in Seven Months After Launching a Partnership
Article
|
8
 minutes
The Intersection of Partnerships and Product Development with Pandium’s Cristina Flaschen
Video
|
37
 minutes
The 4 Levels of Tech Ecosystem Maturity
Article
|
12
 minutes
8 Tips for Surfacing the Business Impact of Partnerships and Driving Partner-Sourced Revenue Earlier
Article
|
7
 minutes
Tech Ecosystem Maturity: How to Level Up Your Co-selling Workflows
Article
|
31
 minutes
Despite The Economy, Gartner Projects Double-Digit Growth As Companies Find Ways to Do More with Less
Article
|
11
 minutes
The 5 Things to Do in Your First 90 Days as a Partnership Leader
Article
|
6
 minutes
Ecosystem is Everything: How to Embrace Second Party Data with Crossbeam
Article
|
7
 minutes
Vetting 100s of Channel Partners? Use This Four-Criteria Checklist to Speed Up the Process
Article
|
6
 minutes
8 Ways to Treat Your Co-Selling Partners With R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Video
|
42
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #026: Building Trust in Channel Partnerships
Article
|
12
 minutes
Partnership KPIs For Marketing, Sales, Customer Success + More
Video
|
44
 minutes
No More Silos: 4 New Ways to Use Partner Data
Article
|
12
 minutes
Account mapping. How to (finally) do it without giant, cumbersome spreadsheets
Article
|
13
 minutes
15+ Questions to Help Your Sales Reps Master Their Co-Selling Motions
Article
|
23
 minutes
How We Foster Collaboration Remotely at Crossbeam
Article
|
7
 minutes
21 Partnerships People You Should Follow on LinkedIn
Article
|
10
 minutes
A Fill-in-the-Blanks Exercise for Evaluating Your Partner Program
Article
|
12
 minutes
How to Use CRM Data & Automation to Nurture Your Co-Selling Relationships
Article
|
12
 minutes
How to Use Partner Data In Your Sales and Marketing Dashboards (Part 2 of 2)
Article
|
7
 minutes
How CallRail Increased Integration Adoption by 167% Through Strategic Partnership with HubSpot and Reveal
Article
|
7
 minutes
3-step strategy for partnership managers
Video
|
5
 minutes
How to Execute an Effective Nearbound Channel Strategy
Article
|
10
 minutes
Don't Try To Fit Ecosystem Partners into a Channel Hole
Video
|
61
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #022: Build, Buy, or Partner
Article
|
9
 minutes
You Should be Account Mapping at Every Stage of the Customer Lifecycle
Article
|
5
 minutes
5 Ways to Incentivize Your Sales Team to Live, Eat, and Breathe Partnerships
Article
|
7
 minutes
How to Learn the Partnerships Love Languages
Article
|
5
 minutes
How to Learn Your Customer’s Tech Stack and Increase Integration Adoption by 17%
Article
|
11
 minutes
The 9-Step Partner Impact Score Methodology for Strategic Co-Selling With Partners
Video
|
7
 minutes
Catherine Brodigan: Effective Co-Selling* (*because you have no other choice) | Supernode 2023
Article
|
11
 minutes
The Most Common Partnership KPIs (According to Company Size and Maturity)
eBook
State of the Partner Ecosystem 2021
Article
|
1
 minutes
Your Slack Connect Channels: Now Powered by Crossbeam
Video
|
2
 minutes
Demystifying Partnership KPIs: Know What to Measure & When
Article
|
26
 minutes
Democratize Partner Insights with Crossbeam’s Chrome Extension
eBook
The Partner Playbook
Article
|
4
 minutes
10 Facts You Oughta Know if You Work in B2B Partnerships
Article
|
9
 minutes
20 Integrations and Chrome Extensions for Partner Managers
Article
|
21
 minutes
An Inside Look Into Google and HubSpot’s GTM Strategy for Their Ads Integration
Article
|
11
 minutes
5 Partnership Challenges Agencies Face (And How to Tackle Them Head-On)
Article
|
9
 minutes
Two Attribution Challenges for Partnership Professionals (and How to Get Ahead of Them)
Article
|
12
 minutes
We Mapped the Career Paths of 6 Women in Partnerships
Article
|
10
 minutes
Five Tactics You Can Use Right Now to Show the Real-Time Impact of Partnerships
Article
|
5
 minutes
How Sendcloud Achieved an 80% Increase in New Leads Sourced from Partners Using Reveal
Article
|
9
 minutes
WP Engine Used This 7-Stage “Bow-Tie” Funnel to Increase Agency Partners by 50%
Video
|
45
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #013: David and Goliath — Partnering Up With the Big CO's
Article
|
4
 minutes
Nine Micro Co-Marketing Motions for Warming Up a Partnership
Article
|
6
 minutes
ELG and the revenue team: How to break down silos so every GTM function wins
Article
|
4
 minutes
Ecosystem Ops 101: Six Ways to Drive Efficiency and Maximize the ROI of Your Partner Program
Article
|
6
 minutes
30+ Integration Listing Page Examples for Designing Your Tech Marketplace
Article
|
12
 minutes
Your Partner Vetting Checklist: 7 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Signing an Agreement
Article
|
7
 minutes
Standout Traits for a Great Partner Case Study (with Examples)
Article
|
5
 minutes
The Seven Filters You Need for Your Agency Partner Directory
Article
|
5
 minutes
Growth Hack: Where to Find your First Partner
Article
|
8
 minutes
The Enablement Program That Can Help You Boost Agency Partner Retention by 70%
Article
|
2
 minutes
ActiveCampaign’s Co-Marketing Playbook for Getting the #1 Spot in Salesforce’s AppExchange
Article
|
4
 minutes
Your Partnerships Team Should Report to Marketing
Article
|
7
 minutes
The Co-Marketing Flip: Get Strategic with Your Partner Marketing Six Months into the Partnership
Video
|
9
 minutes
Friends With Benefits #8: Good Things Come to Good People
Article
|
5
 minutes
Get Off the Partner Enablement Treadmill
Article
|
9
 minutes
How alliances can leverage their channel partners to go to market with their integrated solution
Article
|
4
 minutes
The Anatomy of a Killer SaaS Partner Newsletter (Plus Examples)
Video
|
53
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #010: Creating Categories and Partner Ecosystems
Article
|
6
 minutes
You Should Train Your Sales Team to be Tech Stack Experts
Article
|
3
 minutes
Your Product-First Partnerships Team Should Report Directly to the CEO
Video
|
7
 minutes
How to Activate Ecosystem Insights with Reports and Dashboards in Salesforce | Connector Summit 2022
Article
|
4
 minutes
Your B2B SaaS Partner Page Checklist (with 50 Examples)
Article
|
7
 minutes
Your Partnerships Team Should Report to Sales (At First)
Video
|
49
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #004: Secrets of Partner Enablement & Marketing
Video
|
44
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #001: Landing your first Sumo
Video
|
50
 minutes
Nearbound Podcast #003: Building API ecosystems, Stripe & Notion
Article
|
10
 minutes
Advanced Crossbeam: Too Many CRMs? Here’s How to Sort it All Out
Article
|
7
 minutes
AEs are Leveraging Ecosystem-Led Sales to Close Deals 46% Faster
Article
|
27
 minutes
The 12 Best Partnership and Business Development Podcasts (So Far)
Article
|
33
 minutes
Monetize Your Technology Partnerships With These 8 Tactics
Article
|
13
 minutes
Source, Decide, Execute: Your Framework For a Successful Partner Program
Video
|
38
 minutes
4 Easy Account Mapping Wins
Video
|
3
 minutes
Cristina Flaschen: Proving the ROI of partnerships | Supernode Conference 2022
Ecosystem Operations and Alignment
Tech Ecosystem Maturity: How to Level Up Your Integrations Team
by
Olivia Ramirez
SHARE THIS

Actionable next steps for improving your integrations team reporting lines and structure in order to mature your tech ecosystem.

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.

This post is part of the “Tech Ecosystem Maturity” series, exploring the 30+ criteria of Crossbeam’s Tech Ecosystem Maturity Diagnostic. The diagnostic helps you understand how your partner program stacks up against others in the B2B SaaS industry, what you’re doing well, and how you can advance to the next level of maturity. To learn more and take the tech ecosystem maturity diagnostic, click here.

Where the person responsible for integrations reports into contributes to your tech ecosystem maturity level, but keep in mind this is just one of 23 criteria! There are multiple factors at play.

The right reporting structure at the right part of your ecosystem’s growth is essential. For example, if the person on your team responsible for integrations reports to “sales,” it may be extremely difficult to tie the effectiveness of your integrations to revenue — especially when you’re early in your partner program’s journey. After all, you likely don’t have a solid attribution model just yet, and your biggest priorities and key performance indicators (KPIs) should be launching new integrations and onboarding new tech partners. As a result, you’ll have trouble getting the resources you need and your tech partnership program will suffer. 

On the other hand, if you report to “product” early on, getting resources will be much more straightforward. It’s much easier to tie early integration success with retention and customer satisfaction (as opposed to revenue), especially considering your existing customers will be the first to try out your integrations and provide feedback.

In this article, we explore tech ecosystem maturity through the lens of where your integrations team rolls up to and how it’s organized. 

Tech Ecosystem Maturity Level #1: Explorer 

“Explorers” are doing some guess work and experimentation to determine what works for their tech ecosystem right now, giving that a shot, and then iterating as their ecosystem and company grows. At the “Explorer” level, the person responsible for integrations at your company likely reports to “product”. This is in part due to the tendency for businesses at the explorer level having their engineering team’s time split between product development and integration development. Additionally, Explorers are setting the foundation for their tech ecosystem’s future growth. This entails: 

  • Developing APIs for you and your partners to develop inbound and outbound integrations. As you launch your first handful of integrations, your engineers may learn more about your APIs functionalities and what they can and can’t support. Sometimes, that means it’s back to the drawing board! 
  • Developing and managing the integration infrastructure particularly if you’re leveraging an iPaaS solution
  • Building and managing your marketplace UI 

In regards to your “integrations team” (or integrations team in-the-making), this could mean: 

  • Splitting your product and engineering team’s time between the product roadmap and the integrations roadmap
  • Dividing responsibilities between your product, engineering, and partnerships team to fulfill the duties of more dedicated tech ecosystem roles (like an Ecosystem PM).

How to advance to the “Producer” Level

Establish an integrations team separate from the product team. This could involve some experimentation at first. Choose a couple of engineers to work on integrations full-time or part-time. In the case of reviews platform REVIEWS.io, they have two developers that build and manage integrations in sprints in addition to working on their product roadmap. By assigning specific developers to integrations, it ensures those engineers will always know the status of each integration and won’t need to transfer information on to other developers who fill in ad hoc. Additionally, the dedicated engineers can create documentation for the integrations, and they can shift to product-related work and then back to integrations work to pick up exactly where they left off. 

Prioritize strategic integrations through sprints and aim to be first to market. E-signature platform SignEasy aligns its product roadmap with Apple’s iOS releases. This way, SignEasy is first-to-market when Apple releases new features like widgets and iPad pencil. This hussle to go-to-market with their most strategic partners ensures that SignEasy will stay ahead of its competitors. 

Open the lines of communications between customer success, partnerships, and integrations. Launch a Slack channel for your customer success (CS) team to share integration requests, and document customer feedback and requests for integrations in a project management tool like Notion. Send out surveys to customers using your integrations to determine customer satisfaction scores (CSATs) for each integration

Make thoughtful decisions about who’s going to build and manage your integrations, integration infrastructure, marketplace UI, and other foundational aspects of your tech ecosystem that can help you scale. Consider which members of your engineering and product teams will help fill the shoes of your ecosystem product manager (Ecosystem PM), solutions engineers, and other critical roles within your “Ecosystems Team” that you likely won’t be able to hire dedicated employees for until you’ve launched and proven the benefit of your first batch of integrations.

Tech Ecosystem Maturity Level #2: Producer

As a “Producer,” you’ve launched some integrations, but you don’t yet have the processes and frameworks that can help you grow your tech ecosystem at scale. At the “Producer” level, the person who is responsible for integrations typically reports to marketing. With your next wave of integrations up your sleeve, your go-to-market strategy is just as important if not more than the integrations themselves. 

The integrations you launch at this phase can establish your brand’s positioning in the ecosystem, help you access new markets through your partners, and generate ecosystem qualified leads (EQLs). After you’ve launched your integrations, you’ll be able to start tracking leading and lagging indicators of success. 

For now, you’re focusing on getting the word out that your product can help your shared prospects and customers optimize their tech stacks and improve their metrics across their existing products. Perhaps you’re also providing your sales team with some co-marketing and co-selling collateral, but likely only for a few strategic partnerships, since you’re busy getting your tech ecosystem off the ground! 

The REVIEWS.io integrations team rolls up to the COO, who rolls up to the Chief Technology Officer for deployment approval. Their developers split their team’s time between the product roadmap and the integration roadmap. Previously, whichever developers had more flexibility would hop on the task of developing a particular integration. Now, they have two developers on the team who are dedicated to managing their integration development during sprints. After the sprints, those developers return to typical product updates on the product roadmap. 

“We had five to six developers working at any one time and whoever was free would work on an integration,” says Rich Ball, Marketing Manager at REVIEWS.io.

“The problem we had there is every developer works differently. By having a dedicated team of two that solely works on those integrations, it’s allowed them to improve that process and create documentation that supports another developer that comes into that space.”

How to advance to the “Connector” Level

Hire roles dedicated to your integrations. Eventually, this team should include solutions engineers and an ecosystem PM. The solutions engineers are responsible for technical scoping and serving as a technical resource for integration partners. The ecosystem PM interfaces with your internal teams to ensure everything is running smoothly and on track to meet your go-to-market deadlines. 

Consider splitting up your integrations team by personas. For example: Typeform’s integrations team divides its work according to the “customer,” “developer,” and “builder” personas (learn more in the next section).

Consider adopting an iPaaS solution to help you scale. Typeform went from 30 integrations to more than 100 integrations in just a year after adoptiong an iPaaS solution and with the help of its partners.

Tech Ecosystem Maturity Level #3: Connector

As a “Connector,” you’ve found your groove. Your integrations inform your business strategy, and you’ve got the metrics to prove it. Companies at the “Connector” level have a thriving forward-momentum from repeatable processes, frameworks, and templates. 

At this level, the person responsible for integrations likely reports to sales and is deeply invested in their sales team’s co-selling strategy. Integrations play a vital part in your team’s ability to convert, onboard, and retain customers, and your account mapping strategy directly contributes to the success of every stage of the customer lifecycle

But there are other ways to embed partnerships into the goals of your internal teams. 

Typeform’s integrations team rolls up to the Chief Product Officer, and they use a matrix organization to keep cross-functional teams working together to get its integrations to the finish line. Individual roles across multiple teams comprise Typeform’s “ecosystems colony”.

In 2019, Typeform split its integrations team into two: one based in the US that managed integration development and one based in Barcelona that managed the integration infrastructure. When Typeform adopted an integration platform as a service (iPaaS) solution in 2020, its Barcelona team developed the integration infrastructure for the iPaaS solution to integrate with Typeform; then, the Barcelona team prioritized working with external developers looking to build on top of Typeform’s platform. Meanwhile, the engineers in the US built and managed the integrations internally, with the support of the iPaaS solution, and with the support of external partners.

Since then, Typeform has organized its integrations teams according to three personas. One team prioritizes integrations for external developers, one prioritizes integrations for customers, and the last prioritizes integrations for the “builder”. The builder refers to developing blocks and new software development kits (SDKs) that will ultimately be relevant to partners in Typeform’s tech ecosystem. 

In our article showing partnership team org charts, we spoke about how Contentsquare’s integrations team used to report to customer success and business development and now reports to product. Gilad Zubery, Executive Vice President of Global Business Development and Partnerships at Contentsquare, said the change helped the company scale and productize its integrations. 

“My team’s goal is to productize as many integrations as possible,” says Zubery. “And that can only be done if the integrations team sits under product, follows product processes, and has the head of technology partnerships to direct them on priorities and support the work with our partners.”

How to advance to the “Supernode” Level

Make it easy for external developers to build on your platform and to use your product in all of their workflows. Establish dedicated roles on your integrations team to work with external developers, develop and maintain relevant APIs, and software development kits (SDKs). 

Establish repeatable workflows, templates, and go-to-market strategies with partners. For example, RollWorks implements the co-marketing flip six months into a tech partnership to ensure integration adoption. Zapier uses a partner tiering system to incentivize partners to improve their integrations and drive more adoption in exchange for benefits. Repeatable workflows like this are the first step of becoming a Supernode.

Provide your partners with integration analytics and improvement suggestions. Salesforce AppExchange displays analytics directly in its partners account dashboards and enables its partners to call an API to retrieve more data on the user experience. Additionally, Salesforce sends automated reports to each tech partner with suggestions for improving their integration listing pages. The more your partner is invested in optimizing their integration with your product, the more qualitative your partner ecosystem will become.

Tech Ecosystem Maturity Level #4: Supernode

You’ve made it to Supernode stardom. You’re incorporating partner data into every department, and every department benefits. Your tech ecosystem has magnetic effects on other SaaS companies in your space; your ecosystem is extensive, and you’re a target partner to many. 

At the “Supernode” level, the person responsible for your integrations reports to the CEO, or, if you’re like experience management platform company Reputation, you’ve hired a Chief Ecosystem Officer (the other CEO).

As a partnerships manager, you’re likely familiar with most of the Supernodes in the space. CRM company Salesforce has 2465 partners and counting (and we’re one of them). Slack has 1653 partners (we’re one of those, too). Our Tech Ecosystem Maturity Diagnostic can help you determine your tech ecosystem maturity level and identify the tactics you could implement to level up your tech ecosystem to “Supernode” status. 


Where the person responsible for integrations reports to (and subsequently the organization of your integrations team) is just one criteria of 23. Take the Tech Ecosystem Maturity Diagnostic, and you’ll find actionable tips for graduating from one maturity level to the next. Plus, you’ll receive custom-tailored content according to your answers in the months to come. What’s your level?

You’ll also be interested in these

Article
|
12
 minutes
Article
|
12
 minutes
Partnerships 101: Sandboxes (And Why You Should Consider Building One)
Article
|
12
 minutes