Smartsheet's Scott Strubel argues that vendors who truly succeed in marketplaces like AWS are those who approach it with proactive enthusiasm. A reluctant, obligatory presence is insufficient. This mindset shift drives deeper integration, better sales alignment, and ultimately, accelerated revenue.
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.
Channel strategy shouldn't be reactive. Leaders must define their ideal partner ecosystem for 3-5 years out and proactively build towards it. This requires a vision-led approach and a willingness to stop servicing legacy models that don't fit the future.
To ensure focus and drive adoption of its AWS partnership, Smartsheet defines success with a clear, specific metric: a target percentage of all indirect transactions must occur through a cloud marketplace. This simple KPI aligns sales and partner teams, moving the goal from a vague initiative to a measurable outcome.
Don't try to compete with hyperscalers like AWS or GCP on their home turf. Instead, differentiate by focusing on areas they inherently neglect, such as multi-cloud management and hybrid on-premise integration. The winning strategy is to fit into and augment a customer's existing cloud strategy, not attempt to replace it.
Hyperscalers are new ecosystem marketplaces, not just advanced distributors. They have fundamentally changed the B2B customer journey, invalidating traditional sales and marketing playbooks. Established tech companies must adapt to new co-selling motions or risk becoming obsolete.
Smaller software companies can't compete with giants like Salesforce or Adobe on an all-in-one basis. They must strategically embrace interoperability and multi-cloud models as a key differentiator. This appeals to customers seeking flexibility and avoiding lock-in to a single vendor's ecosystem.
Instead of scaling a costly direct sales team, SpeedSize focused early on partnerships with major cloud providers. Their strategy targets platforms like AWS that lack a built-in image and video compression solution, positioning SpeedSize as the essential add-on, despite a multi-year setup time.
To successfully sell complex solutions like process automation and AI, resellers must first apply these principles internally. By re-engineering their own business to an MSP model, they gain the experience and credibility needed to guide clients through a similar journey, moving from vendor to trusted advisor.
Founders often dread sales because they mistakenly believe their role is to aggressively convince customers. This "seller push" feels inauthentic. Adopting a "buyer pull" perspective, where you help customers solve existing problems, transforms sales from a chore into a collaborative process.
To become indispensable to SMBs, a marketing platform cannot be a standalone tool. It must deeply integrate with the specific, proprietary systems that define an industry's workflow, such as a real estate agent's CRM or a mechanic's booking software. This ecosystem-first approach eliminates the friction of switching between tools, making the marketing platform a natural and effective extension of the SMB's core business operations.