Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Lemlist shifted its partnership strategy to focus on agencies with a 'done with you' motion, rather than 'done for you.' This ensures the end-customer learns and uses the product directly, leading to better adoption and an LTV that's more than double that of typical customers.

Related Insights

To support smaller partners who lack marketing resources, vendors can offer a concierge service through their partner demand center. This provides hands-on human help for executing pre-built, turnkey campaigns. This model drives significant adoption and results from the long-tail segment, which often feels neglected by vendors.

Smartsheet's partner value proposition extends beyond resale margins. The company strategically positions partner-led professional services (implementation, integration) as essential for its own success. These services drive customer adoption, which in turn leads to higher retention rates for Smartsheet's core software.

Instead of just buying leads from partners like wholesalers or agencies, consider acquiring them. If your business has a more effective way to monetize that deal flow (e.g., higher margins, better LTV), you can generate more profit from their leads than they can. This turns a variable marketing expense into a profit-generating asset.

The most effective partner marketing strategy isn't about getting partners to resell your product. Zendesk's Amy Avalos argues it's about enabling them to sell their own unique value, with your technology as the engine. This positions them as trusted advisors and strengthens their brand.

To ensure sales reps focus on long-term value (LTV), structure compensation to reward customer success. Pay half the commission on contract signing and the other half only when the customer hits a predefined activation metric, known as the Leading Indicator of Retention (LIR). This forces reps to sell to right-fit customers.

“Partner Lifetime Value” reframes partnerships as long-term assets, not transactional wins. Companies committing to consistent, long-run partnerships achieve superior growth and profitability, creating a force multiplier effect far beyond standard customer lifetime value.

While strong marketing is ideal, a business model engineered for high lifetime value (LTV) is a more powerful lever for growth. The enormous profit margins generated per customer create a financial cushion that allows you to scale profitably even with less-than-perfect, inefficient marketing campaigns, crushing competitors who rely on optimization alone.

Shift from a transactional view of partners to a long-term investment mindset. This "Partner Lifetime Value" approach, which treats partnerships like long-term assets, acts as a force multiplier for growth, leading to higher profitability and success.

C-suites and shareholders are increasingly focused on the long-term profitability of customer relationships. ABM programs should be measured by their ability to increase customer LTV, which reflects success in retention, cross-selling, and building "customers for life," not just closing the next deal.

If your business relies heavily on referrals from centers of influence (e.g., consultants, agencies), reframe your entire business model. Your true customer is the referral partner. Build a 'customer journey' specifically for them, focused on making it easy and profitable for them to send you well-framed, high-quality leads.