5 Ways to Get Partners to Sell Your Product, Part 1
Many years ago a friend explained the term “Barney Partner.” This is where a sales partner is secured and signed, and a fanfare of PR is used to announce the partnership between the companies, but then the partnership doesn’t produce any customers.
May 6, 2015
By Donagh Kiernan 1
Many years ago a friend explained the term “Barney Partner.” This is where a sales partner is secured and signed, and a fanfare of PR is used to announce the partnership between the companies, but then the partnership doesn’t produce any customers. It wasn’t intended to be a barney partnership. The agreement and announcement was made with great hope of what might be achieved in the market with the two companies, but “hope” is not a word you should find in a business plan.
Growing a business carries many risks, where you seem to be doing all the right things but many still don’t go according to plan. Why do so many partnerships fail to produce on their initial promise? or, how do you better ensure that partnerships produce as promised—or at least set your expectations until proven?
Whether you’re evaluating a non-functioning partnership or want to plan on the next on-boarding of new partners, the following five points should help:
1. Partner Fit
The single-most important point for a sales channel partnership to work is partner fit. Partner fit is where your product fits into the channel partner's business that minimizes the partner’s business having to change to sell your product.
It is a mutual beneficial exercise that is much appreciated by the partners. It covers customer & decision maker focus, deal size and mix, strategic fit, current sales capabilities, technical delivery capabilities and other areas to ensure overall partner fit.
You will find many Tenego articles, an upcoming webinar May 21 and soon a white paper on partner fit.
2. Timing
For a sales channel partner, selling your product may present a great opportunity, but if the partner is already very busy with its own plans it may not have the resources at this time. Six months later all may be fine, but generally plans take longer than expected.
3. Immediate Market Engagement — Move Fast When it’s Hot
When you have found a partner where everything is right to go to market, then work fast for joint market engagement as quickly as possible. Keep it simple and move fast.
4. Minimize Agreement and Planning Discussions
Many times the efforts in minimizing the risks in the partnership actually take too much energy and jeopardize the partnership. Protracted agreement discussions and having the partner complete an elaborate business plan to better ensure the longer-term opportunity delays market engagement so much that people can lose interest or another opportunity can come along. Keep agreements simple, even ahead of terms, to enable fast discussions and agreement to enable the real business to get on with it. Engage, engage, engage.
5. Baby-Step It – The Lean Approach
In the majority of new partnerships, at Tenego we recommend a lean approach to partner engagement and partner market engagement to minimize risk on both sides, build confidence and progress faster when progress has been made. The lean sales channel development approach, allow vendor companies to manage time better, reduce costs and risk on both sides and allows the relationship to build on solid foundations while speeding initial market engagement and not reducing the overall results that can be achieved. Baby steps in quick succession.
Donagh Kiernan is founder and CEO of Tenego Partnering, a business development services company based in Cork, Ireland, providing hands-on international partner sales channels development for growing and established software product companies.
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