Template: Tech integrations by partner
Template: Partner tiering checklist
Template: Partner onboarding workbook template
Template: Integration questionnaire
Template: Integration announcement
Template: Co-marketing checklist
ELG Insider Daily #686: AI is a partner’s partner
Uncovering the Crossbeam Ecosystem Revenue Platform
ELG Insider Daily #685: 43% of buyers don’t want a rep…
ELG Insider Daily #683: How to put your buyer in the driver’s seat
Follow the network: Your path to market expansion
Following to Lead: How to Win Buyer-Driven Deals
ARReasons to pay for Crossbeam
ELG Insider Daily #681: The 5S framework is not just for marketing
Incentives: The Key to Activating Your Partner Ecosystem
ELG Insider Daily #680: A lush forest of opportunity
ELG Insider Daily #676: What it really means to scale
ELG Insider #678: The 4 +1 pillars that hold up your partner ecosystem
5 Ways to Leverage Ecosystem Data
ELG Insider #677: In business, context is everything
What's Better Than an Open Opportunity? 1.6 Million of Them
ELG Insider #661: Step aside, spreadsheets
ELG Insider Daily #674: Help write the new GTM playbook
ELG Insider Daily #673: I just want to sell, sell, sell
ELG Insider Daily #671: 7 tactics to turn partnerships into pipeline
How to Scale Your Reselling Program
ELG Insider Daily #670: Trust the process
ELG Insider Daily #669: The foundation of a $1B partnership program
ELG Insider Daily #668: This is what great sales leaders are made of
ELG Insider Daily #667: When less is more in your partner ecosystem
Good partner managers/ bad partner managers
Good Sales Leader / Bad Sales Leader
ELG Insider Daily #666: How much power do numbers really have?
ELG Insider Daily #665: Fix your GTM problem
ELG Insider Daily #664: Meet the fresh new ELG Insider
ELG Insider Daily #663: Every GTM motion is a fact-finding mission
How I Present Partner Strategy to CxOs & the Board for Decacorns ($10B+) and a Unicorn ($3.8B)
ELG Insider Daily #662: When your own GTM team is your ICP
ELG Insider Daily #660: Decode your deal
ELG Insider #658: The new high-performing seller
ELG Insider Daily #651: Use this easy account mapping win for customer retention
Maximize Your Existing Accounts: 3 Proven Ways to Boost Revenue
ELG Insider #657: Who is the MVP of your GTM motion?
ELG Insider #656: Money, money, money, must be funny
ELG Insider #655: How to develop a top skill of the best sellers
How FullStory Increased Client Retention Using Ecosystem-Led Growth Tactics
ELG Insider #654: What sets high-performing sales teams apart
ELG Insider #653: Curiosity killed the cat?
ELG Insider #652: Cheers to outreach success
ELG Idols: Meet the Enterprise Sales Veteran Who Turned commercetools’ Ecosystem into a Revenue Machine
How to Win with Partner Marketing
Nearbound.com is now ELG Insider!
ELG Insider Daily #650: How to boost your Ecosystem-Led Customer Success wins
ELG Insider Daily #649: ELG for and by marketers
ELG Insider Daily #648: The Google + HubSpot story
ELG Insider Daily #646: EQLs, the gifts that keep on giving
What Can B2B SaaS Companies Learn About Ecosystem-Led Growth from a Solo Entrepreneur?
ELG Insider Daily #645: Where is the AI in ELG?
ELG Insider Daily #644: Three easy ELG plays
ELG Insider Daily #642: Make the money follow you
When Sales and Partnerships Partner Up
ELG Insider Daily #640: Do not let anybody ghost you
ELG Insider Daily #639: Do not be an ordinary seller, instead do this!
ELG Insider Daily #638: The secret to customer retention
ELG Insider Daily #636: Speed up deals with this warm intro email template
ELG Insider Daily #635: How to Make the Right Noise at INBOUND
ELG Insider Daily #632: To win in sales, Always Be Collaborating
ELG Insider Daily #631: How to turn frenemies into power partners
Everything You Need to Know to Build a Reseller Program
ELG Insider Daily #630: Give your prospects the gift of time
ELG Insider Daily #628: Boost integration adoption by knowing your customers tech stack
ELG Insider Daily #627: 3 tips to master co-selling with partners
ELG Insider Daily #623: Cold email is not dead, it is just not partner-led
ELG Insider Daily #626: Shorten your enterprise sales cycles by 44%
ELG Insider Daily #625: The sales vet who turned an ecosystem into a revenue machine
The Crossbeam x Reveal merger: Watch Bob Moore and Simon Bouchez give the inside scoop
The story behind the merger: A recap from ELG Con London
ELG Insider Daily #622: To the infinity and beyond of channel partners
ELG Insider Daily #621: Focus on market trends, not just on product demand
ELG Insider Daily #620: How Cloud GTM is Transforming Legacy Partnerships
ELG Insider Daily #619: The GTM Attribution Conundrum
ELG Insider Daily #616: Rollworks' Crawl-Walk-Run Approach to Achieve Time To Value Faster
ELG Insider Daily #618: Get the Exclusive Story of the Crossbeam x Reveal Merger
ELG Idols: A Channel Sales Leader’s 10 Lessons for SaaS Orgs Transitioning to Partner Implementations
ELG Insider Daily #617: The Darling of 2010s Marketing Died. Who Did It?
Nearbound Weekend 06/22: Steal This Framework For Strategic Alliances
ELG Insider #679: Build a revenue-driven partner ecosystem
Nearbound Podcast #168: The BIG Announcement
Nearbound Daily #613: Reveal and Crossbeam Got Married—The Dawn of a New Era
Crossbeam Explains: Co-Selling
Nearbound Daily #614: BREAKING NEWS: Crossbeam and Reveal are Joining Forces
Is Your SaaS Org an Ecosystem Business?
Nearbound Daily #611: How To Best Use Account Mapping At The Expand/Engage Phase of the Bowtie
Nearbound Daily #610: Nelson Wang #1 Lesson Working With Resellers
Nearbound Daily #609: Five Ways To Create Nearbound Sales Champions
Nearbound Podcast #167: Building SaaS Credibility in a Skeptical World - Bobby Napiltonia
Nearbound Daily #608: Validate Your Partnerships Strategy with 'WOW' Moments
My #1 Lesson in Reseller Strategy that led to $250M+
Nearbound Daily #607: Find and Leverage Signals for Partnerships
Nearbound Weekend 06/15: The Soul of Nearbound
NU - Tactics

Whale Watching: The Inside Story of the +$100M Microsoft and Facebook Alliance
by
Franz-Josef Schrepf
SHARE THIS

Dan Rose sealed a $100M+ Microsoft partnership in 6 weeks. Franz-Josef Schrepf breaks down how Rose secured the alliance.

by
Franz-Josef Schrepf
SHARE THIS

In this article

Join the movement

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

Six weeks after Dan Rose joined Facebook as VP of Partnerships, he closed a $100M+ deal with Microsoft. He shared this amazing story in a Twitter Thread, which I’ve read at least ten times. 


Today, I want to break down how Dan was able to close the biggest deal of his career and the lessons we can learn to broker industry-defining alliances for our own companies.


Lesson #1: Understand your partner’s context


When Dan Rose joined Facebook in 2006, it was the underdog. MySpace had 10x the users and signed an advertising deal with Google worth $1 Billion. However, through his connections, Dan knew that MySpace had left Microsoft at the altar when it decided to sign with Google. 


He saw an opening to become Microsoft’s “rebound date”. Steve Ballmer believed that ads could become an existential threat to their software and knew he needed scale to build an ad platform. 


Dan was able to spot this opportunity because of his extensive network at Microsoft and other tech companies. A large part of a partnerships leader’s role is to gather intel and understand the industry context in which her own company and her partners operate in. 


Lesson #2: Create urgency

Facebook was the #2 in this market and there weren’t many deals left that could offer this scale in web-standard banner ads. Dan told the Microsoft team they would need to move fast. Google also had an eye out for this deal. 


Under normal circumstances, industry giants like Microsoft are slow to move. However, Dan knew that Steve Ballmer was upset about his recent loss to Google and didn’t want another deal to slip. He aligned himself with a key leadership initiative (Microsoft’s ad platform ambitions) and greased the wheels with FOMO to get the giant to move. 


Lesson #3: Identify shared enemies

What Dan failed to mention was that he was worried about Google’s own ambitions in the social media space. Remember Google+? The Facebook team knew that Google would eventually try to crush them, so they sought out an enemy-of-my-enemy alliance.


This mutual fear of Google was the foundation for the Microsoft and Facebook partnership for years to come. Microsoft even became the lead investor for Facebook’s Series C round at a $15B valuation. 


Lesson #4: Identify value drivers for each party

Here’s my favorite lesson from Dan’s story


"Good partnerships maximize value for both sides with minimal waste. If you are bargaining over an orange, one resolution is to slice it in half. But if you dig deeper into the motivations of each side, you might find one party cares about the meat while the other cares about the rind."


If you had sliced the orange in half, there would have been waste on both sides. Alliances have a high failure rate because we often don’t understand what drives value for the partner. We assume a partner cares about the same things we do. We get defensive when we should be curious. 


The Microsoft ad deal contributed significantly to Facebook’s revenues in the early days. It outsourced its ads business at a time when user growth and winning market share were more important than owning the entire value chain. Banner ads weren’t strategic for Facebook at this point. 


At the same time, Microsoft was happy with the deal. It gave them scale. Google also lost tons of money as the MySpace deal dissolved—an added bonus they couldn’t have planned for. 


Lesson #5: Leave value on the table

After he signed a deal worth hundreds of millions of dollars, Mark Zuckerberg asked Dan a simple question: “How’s it working for Microsoft so far?”


Long-term relationships aren’t built by squeezing pennies. Partnership pros need to dig deep, identify leverage, and minimize waste. But they also need to leave enough room for both companies to benefit from the relationship. BD deals are not about dividing a pie into equal parts. 


The goal is to grow the pie together.  


Conclusion: Timing + Network + Value = Alliance

The Microsoft and Facebook alliance was exceptional in many ways. These types of deals usually take years to negotiate and only come around once every blue moon. 


Dan Rose joined Facebook at the right time, had the right industry connections, and offered access to a corned resource Microsoft urgently needed. 


You can’t expect to close a similar deal within six weeks of starting your new job, but if you keep an eye out for these three factors, you might just hit the jackpot! 


Franz Schrepf is the Head of Strategic Partnerships at StreamYard. He’s also the host of The Partner Ship, a bi-weekly LinkedIn Live Show where he interviews the world’s leading partnerships experts.

You’ll also be interested in these

Did AI Just Kill SEO?
Nearbound Daily #417: This company killed its website