The Allbound Podcast: Driving Revenue First with the Right Partners

Scott Salkin
Partner Sales Acceleration
4 min readOct 4, 2017

Larry Walsh, CEO and Chief Analyst at The 2112 Group join me, Scott Salkin, CEO and Founder of Allbound to chat about driving more revenue with the right partners on this episode of The Allbound Podcast.

Larry, you wrote an article called “Scale Matters, but the Channel has Size Limits” and you state that if an organization wants to double its channel-generated revenue then its number of partners will need to increase by 115%. Can you explain?

What I was saying in that blog post is there are natural limits to productivity. And if you accept that the 80/20 rule is alive and well in the channel, then you’ve also accepted that there’s a speed limit to the number of partners, or the potential growth that you can get out of any side. Let’s start by looking at the tenants of what the channel is supposed to do. The channel’s supposed to extend market coverage, and particularly get you into niche markets. The other purpose is to create points of presence to create points of sales for customers to come in. Now, that theory works well, but there’s a certain point after you start to exceed capacity, which is the reason why we actually have such an exaggerated 20% rule in the channel.

One of the reasons the channel exists is “to create points of presence, to create points of sales for customers to come in” @lmwalsh2112

So, the notion of squeezing more value out of the long tail, particularly, the extreme end of a long tail, becomes less advantageous. If you start pushing down the long tail, and you want to start growing your channels and thinking that you’re going to double your channel revenue just by adding more partners, then you actually have to over-subscribe and get lesser value out of your partners over time, which is the reason why we come to a 115% increase just to double revenue rather than just a pure one over one increase.

Scott, reruitment has an enormous influence on channel program success. What should channel leaders be doing today when it comes to recruitment so they can focus on quality over quantity?

Scott: Today’s channel leaders have so much more access to data now that can tell them which partners are having the most success and also predict which partners are best postioned for success. We’ve got to get smarter with new more modern day KPIs that don’t just measure success based on how many partners you’re bringing in, but exactly on what those partners are — things like velocity rate, and how they’re actually growing the business with you.

What advice can you give leaders who would like to transition into a more account-based partnering strategy?

Larry: Start at the end. When you make recruitment a metric, then it’s all about bodies, or it’s all about the number of companies. Stop making recruitments, or the number partners important. Make productivity of it important. When I say “start at the end,” one of the other tenants of the channel is that it has to be a net contributor to the vendor or to the enterprise, and enterprise in this case, means business venture.

When you make a channel metric “Stop making recruitments, or the number partners important. Make productivity of it important.” @lmwalsh2112

Scott: Channel has to be aligned with your entire business. If you don’t have the education, enablement, empowerment and training nailed down for your channel partner program, it’s going to be hard to drive more revenue, create more margin, and add more logos to the business. You’ve got to take care of the partners you have, and you’ve got to help them be more successful.

To learn more about driving more revenue with channel partners, tune in to episode 39 of The Allbound Podcast.

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Originally published at www.allbound.com.

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Scott Salkin
Partner Sales Acceleration

Husband, father of twins, #SaaS entrepreneur. Founder & CEO of Allbound, channel software that makes sure you #NeverSellAlone.