To provide maximum flexibility, Lenovo allows partners to choose their procurement path. They can either use traditional distribution channels or engage directly through Lenovo's .com engine, Lenovo Pro. This empowers partners to select the model that best fits their business operations and desired level of autonomy.
To manage enablement across 180 markets, Lenovo avoids a purely centralized or decentralized model. Instead, they focus on "harmonizing" foundational elements like customer data centrally. This creates a unified, reliable data layer that then empowers local teams to execute culturally relevant enablement programs effectively.
Lenovo strategically partners with Pax8, a software marketplace, attending their events not to sell hardware, but to engage with the MSP community where they are already active. This demonstrates an ecosystem-first approach focused on sharing best practices and building relationships beyond direct sales.
A common vendor mistake is attempting to apply a direct sales model to the channel. uSecure found success by truly adapting its business model, citing specific examples like moving from annualized to flexible monthly billing and eliminating minimum purchases. These concessions signal a genuine, partner-first commitment rather than just paying lip service.
Instead of building its program in a vacuum, Lenovo proactively gathered a group of MSPs to act as an advisory council. This allowed them to understand partner needs, identify market gaps, and craft a more relevant and successful program from the outset, which they continue to iterate on.
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.
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.
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.
Instead of letting a partner program evolve organically, start with a clear vision of the ideal channel based on board-level metrics. Actively build towards that future state, which includes strategically stopping activities that only service a legacy model.
Recognizing that MSPs are engineering-led, Lenovo provides its partners with the "Lenovo 360 Solutions Hub." This tool shifts the sales motion away from technical specs and towards outcome-based, strategic conversations that help MSPs identify and solve their customers' core business pain points.