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.
StackAI's early attempts at using resellers were counterproductive because the product and messaging were evolving too quickly. Partners can't sell a moving target. The channel only became successful after the company established a clear ICP and repeatable value proposition.
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.
Instead of treating all channels equally, identify which customer segments (e.g., brand advertisers) are best served by which channels (e.g., TV screens). Shifting demand accordingly can unlock massive growth by optimizing the entire portfolio and increasing customer ROI.
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.
In a resource-constrained environment, growth is found by improving and connecting existing channels, not by launching new ones. Re-architect your current marketing activities—like paid ads and field events—to work together to create a unified customer journey, rather than chasing the next shiny object.
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.
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.
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.
When a company has strong inbound interest, the sales playbook shifts from aggressive outreach to rigorous partner qualification. The team acts more like a DSP's supply side, carefully selecting who to work with to ensure quality and strategic fit, rather than working with everyone.