To stand out among hundreds of vendors, Akamai fosters relationships beyond the executive level. They connect their regional leaders in sales, technical, and marketing roles directly with their counterparts at key partner organizations. This builds trust and deep business understanding at the field level where customer engagement happens.

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Akamai leverages distribution partners like Arrow for more than just reach. They enable partners to use the distributor's technical resources for product demos and proofs-of-concept (POCs). This strategy allows Akamai to scale its technical sales support efficiently, avoiding resource constraints on its internal teams.

Partnership success hinges on more than executive alignment; it requires buy-in from the partner's technical team. These individuals are on the front lines, understand end-user problems intimately, and can quickly determine if a vendor's technology genuinely solves a recurring issue and fits their existing stack.

In high-stakes ABM plays, a peer-to-peer model is highly effective. A message from your CTO to their CTO, or your CFO to theirs, carries more weight and builds trust more rapidly than a salesperson's outreach. This executive engagement should be a core part of the ABM strategy.

To shift from reactive 'order takers' to strategic advisors, partner marketers should first document their sales counterparts' specific goals (e.g., net new logos, deal registrations). This 'working backwards' approach aligns all marketing activities to sales objectives, building trust and ensuring marketing serves as a strategic partner, not just an execution arm.

To prove its "partner-first" commitment, Akamai financially incentivizes its direct sales force to work with partners. Sales teams earn a higher commission on deals closed through a partner, even if Akamai initially sourced the opportunity, ensuring internal alignment and prioritizing the channel.

To break down silos between sales, channel, and field marketing, partner marketers act as a central hub. This is achieved by operationalizing transparency, establishing a formal communication cadence that replaces informal check-ins, and conducting blame-free reviews focused on future actions.

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.

The next evolution of partner marketing is a shift from one-to-one campaigns to an 'ecosystem-centric' model. This involves weaving together technology alliances, distributors, and service partners into a single, cohesive 'better together' narrative. This multi-partner storytelling is far more impactful and resonant for customers than siloed vendor messages.

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.

Akamai replaced its one-size-fits-all global partner tiering with a regional model. This new system recognizes the diverse partner landscape in each geography and evaluates partners on value-add contributions, such as sourcing new opportunities and delivering services, rather than solely on revenue.

Akamai Connects Its Regional Leaders Directly with Partner Counterparts to Build Trust | RiffOn