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 Operations and Alignment

Your Partnerships Team Should Report to Sales (At First)

by
Olivia Ramirez
SHARE THIS

Matt Bray says to launch your partnerships team within sales and then shift to product as you scale.

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 is Part One of “Reporting Lines” — our series on where (and who) your partnerships team should report to. You can catch the others below: 

Starting to think about where your new partnership team should live in your org chart (or, in 2020’s standards, who do you see them Slacking most heavily with)? It’s a simple enough question, but how you “lean” your partnerships team can determine the trajectory of your company’s growth for years to come. 

So, should your partnerships team report to sales, marketing, or product?—Should they be in the same Slack channel as your CRO, CMO, or CTO? 

Matt Bray, VP of Partnerships EMEA at Signavio and author of The Partnership Principle, thinks you should start out leaning your partnerships team towards sales and marketing because you get a quicker ROI, and then shift to product at the enterprise level because a) the ROI takes longer and b) the GTM is more involved (think tech partnerships that launch within months to years instead of weeks, product development and marketing campaigns vs. just marketing campaigns, and a greater financial investment in your team, product, and campaigns).

Bray’s suggestion of starting with sales and marketing before transitioning to product is particularly relevant to mid-market companies (between 100-1,000 employees) that make less than one billion dollars in annual revenue

According to our 2020 State of the Partner Ecosystem Report, which surveyed 126 industry professionals mostly working in the B2B world, we found that the first partnerships hire typically falls around the 100-employee mark. Additionally, 56.3% of our participants worked in sales before transitioning to partnerships. (Get the 2022 State of the Partner Ecosystem Report here.)

: The State of the Partner Ecosystem 2020

We think Matt Bray’s onto something. Let’s get into it.

Focus on Revenue and Pipeline First

Bray says you should launch your partnerships team with a focus on sales or marketing: “Your traditional mid-market SaaS organization will focus heavily towards revenue or pipeline generation, and therefore a sales mindset is critical in the role of partnerships.”

Prioritize your cash flow, your reseller relationships, your co-selling motions, and your co-marketing campaigns to increase your customer count and grow your presence in the market. 

While focusing your partner strategy on your current business goals, you’re setting the stage to meet your future business goals as well. As you scale, you can use the cash flow, product expertise, and brand image you’ve invested in to build the foundation for your more resource-intensive product partnerships. 

So, think “sales” early on, but keep “product” in your back pocket.

(Not convinced you’re ready for a channel program? Check your answers to these six questions to know for sure.)

Build Your Cash Flow Now to Invest in the Future 

“Enterprise companies have the luxury of a big cash flow, so they can fund a lot of partnership development before revenue starts coming in. Smaller companies don’t have that luxury,” says Bray.

Invest in cash flow (read: channel and reselling partnerships) now so you can afford longer-term investments later on (without stressing too much over numbers). With longer product development processes, sales enablement, go-to-market planning, and so on, it could be some time before you see a return.

Once you’re at a solid place revenue-wise, consider broadening out into other markets and ecosystems

Use Your Partnerships Strategy to Invest in Your Team (And Develop Your Team With Your Partnerships Strategy In Mind) 

In the Early Days, Prioritize Partner Managers With a Sales Background 

With sales in mind, you should consider not only seating your partnerships team near your sales and marketing teams but also consider this context during the hiring process. Is the potential hire a channel sales expert? Have they worked alongside sales teams before? Better yet, do they know how to get the sales team onto and excited about partnerships-fueled sales? 

When considering your long-term goals, you should consider your potential hire’s background working with product teams, their ability to become more product-savvy when the time comes, or their ability to work alongside a more technically-inclined partner manager in the future. 

Don’t Chase Technology Partnerships Until You Have Buy-In From Your Engineering Team

Bray believes that in the mid-market growth stage, you can use partnerships to grow your sales team. Your partnerships team can help grow your SDRs’ pipelines, enable them with more resources, and accelerate their expertise in the product. 

As you invest in your sales team to develop their career and product expertise, you should also invest in your product and engineering team. When you make the switch to prioritize tech partnerships later, you’ll need product people and engineers that have a certain level of expertise, time, and resources to dedicate to product development and go-to-market processes. 

Shift Your Partnerships Team to Product as You Scale

As your company grows and you focus more on product development and integrations, your partnerships may turn into more robust roadmaps that engage multiple internal teams. You’ll need not only the cash flow but the expertise and time of your employees.

“Once you start venturing into the world of product, you’ll start building campaigns and strategies that have six-month to year-long programs.” 

He adds, “You have to work backwards. What is the revenue potential of me doing this—whether it makes sense with the resources you have, the time it’s going to take in order to achieve that goal, is everyone bought in from an executive leadership perspective to make it happen?” 

Ultimately, you’ve invested in making your company, your team, and your product more mature and have improved your value proposition to your partners. 

Consider Your Priorities for Growth 

The framework that Matt Bray proposes is solid, and we’ve seen it work. At the same time, not every company upwards of the 100-employee mark invests in channel relationships before product (In fact, Part Two in this series will cover just that!).

Bray bases his framework on the following factors (and we think you should consider them): 

  • What’s the end goal for your company right now? Maximizing revenue? Attracting investors? Becoming “stickier” to boost retention? 
  • What’s the potential ROI of the partnerships you’re considering? Will your partnership strategy deliver short-term or long-term results (and, if the latter, are you able to wait)? 
  • What resources do you need? Think about the time, cash flow, and expertise you need to invest in before seeing the desired results.
  • Do you have buy-in? If your go-to-market strategy requires a heavy marketing investment, is your CMO on board? If we’re talking about a year-long product endeavor, is your product team ready and able to put in the time? Is your CEO on board for a long-term investment strategy?

So, what do you think? Will you hire your first partnerships team with a focus on sales and marketing and transition to tech partnerships later—or, are you not feeling that strategy?

This post is the first in Reporting Lines:

  • Part One – Sales-first partnerships with Matt Bray, VP of Partnerships EMEA at Signavio and author of The Partnership Principle
  • Part Two – Reporting to the CEO for product-first partnerships with Jake Wallace, Head of Strategic Partnerships at SignEasy
  • Part Three – Marketing-first partnerships with Garrett Helmer, CMO at PrinterLogic

You’ll also be interested in these