Shift partner tiering away from being solely based on sales volume. Instead, use a partner's investment in training and certification as the main parameter. This approach rewards commitment and capability, which are leading indicators of future success. It allows smaller, highly-invested partners to be recognized and supported appropriately.
While individually small, the collective business from your "long tail" of partners creates a huge compound effect, forming a significant part of your overall revenue. This justifies investing in scalable, simple programs and a two-tier distribution model to serve them. This long tail provides essential market reach and commercial proximity that larger partners cannot.
Metrics like "Marketing Qualified Lead" are meaningless to the customer. Instead, define key performance indicators around the value a customer receives. A good KPI answers the question: "Have we delivered enough value to convince them to keep going to the next stage?"
Traditional revenue tiers (Gold, Silver, Bronze) are vendor-centric. A more effective approach is to classify partners by their business model. For example, an MSSP needs predictable upfront costs to build a service, while a value-added reseller may prefer volume-based rebates. Tailoring your program to their model, not just their size, is key.
As ad costs rise and organic reach declines, B2B businesses should evolve their sales teams. Instead of focusing solely on cold outreach, empower them with the bandwidth and capability to build and manage a systemized network of referral partners. This creates a predictable and more profitable growth engine.
Beyond not competing with partners, genuine trust is built by preventing "extreme favoritism to the bigger partner." Partners watch to see if you provide a level playing field for everyone, regardless of size. Trust is also solidified by how you act when things go wrong; a vendor that "shows up" during a crisis builds loyalty.
Vendors and TSDs get lost in partner labels. The critical distinction is the partner's business model: Do they want a residual commission, to resell on their own paper, or a one-time payment? Offering this flexibility is key to recruiting and enabling modern partners.
To truly meet partners where they are, align your internal team structure with your partner segmentation strategy. Create dedicated internal groups specializing in different partner types, such as one team for advisory MSSPs and another for high-volume resellers. This ensures partners interact with managers who deeply understand their specific business model and needs.
Escape the trap of chasing top-line revenue. Instead, make contribution margin (revenue minus COGS, ad spend, and discounts) your primary success metric. This provides a truer picture of business health and aligns the entire organization around profitable, sustainable growth rather than vanity metrics.
A sales organization has truly scaled when leadership stops talking about individual deals and starts managing based on predictable capacity. This means knowing that a certain number of ramped sellers will predictably generate a specific amount of revenue each quarter, turning sales into a machine.
In a B2B supplier or distributor model, success depends on going downstream. You must understand not only your direct partner's business drivers and KPIs but also the needs of their end-customer. This allows you to align strategy across the entire value chain.