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By Peter Strohkorb, Founder and CEO, Peter Strohkorb Advisory
October 7, 2024
In business, as in life, things go better when you're prepared.
This is why sales teams rely on sales enablement to help them sell more — and sell better. Similarly, channel partners selling your products or services need to be set up for success. That's your job, and that's what partner enablement is all about. We'll walk through what partner enablement is, why it's important, and how to build your partner strategy.
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Partner enablement is the process of equipping partners with the tools, resources, and training needed to sell and support a company's products or services. These partners include resellers, affiliates, vendors, and agents. They are your partner in selling and need the same support and resources that sellers on your internal team need and use. This includes knowledge about the product, its features and benefits, the problems it solves, and the pricing structure in place.
You want to ensure your partner knows what they're selling so they don't over-promise or undersell a product's capabilities. They also need to understand the ideal customer so they don't waste time targeting the wrong prospects.
Strong partnerships can lead to expansion of your customer base and significant revenue gains. When you enable partners to do a great job, you'll see more than just increased sales. Here are just a few added benefits of good enablement:
At a high level, you'll need to do the following to implement a strong partner enablement process:
By focusing on these essential components, you can build a robust partner sales enablement strategy that empowers your partners to succeed (and also drive mutual growth).
Beyond these seven steps are two important components that must be addressed: setting objectives and partner onboarding. Let's dive a little deeper.
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You and your partner must be crystal clear on what you're trying to achieve together. This includes goals and specific metrics you'll use to determine success.
While you'll have overarching sales goals, it's important to plan to measure the success of the partnership and enablement efforts more specifically.
New partners need to be onboarded so that they become deeply familiar with your company, products or services, and any relevant policies or branding. As products, pricing, or policies change, you've also got to keep your partners up to speed. Factor in partner enablement as part of any major releases or launches, but also at a regular cadence.
Develop a structured onboarding process that includes an introduction to your company, products, market positioning and sales processes. Offer both initial and ongoing training programs on product knowledge, sales techniques and competitive differentiation.
Create take-home materials alongside the training. These may include detailed sales playbooks with step-by-step guidance on how to sell your products, including value propositions, objection handling
, and best practices. Plan to develop and share comprehensive product guides that outline features, benefits, use cases, and technical specifications.
Provide a centralized repository of up-to-date online marketing and sales collateral, such as brochures, case studies, presentations, and whitepapers to help drive demand. Make it extra easy on partners by providing easy to access marketing materials, tools and templates that they can customize, co-brand, and make their own. The goal is to enable partners to hit the ground running with materials they can send to or leave behind with customers. Consider investing in a software solution that also enables partners to easily request marketing funds or request campaign approvals.
Ensure partners have access to a customer relationship management (CRM) system to manage leads, track opportunities, and monitor sales activities. Provide access to sales enablement tools, such as demo environments, proposal builders, and ROI calculators.
Design incentive programs that reward partners for achieving sales targets, closing deals, or participating in training. Recognize and reward top-performing partners through awards, certifications, and public acknowledgment.
Establish regular communication channels (such as newsletters, webinars, and partner meetings) to keep partners informed and engaged. Also provide dedicated support resources, including a partner manager and a helpdesk for technical and sales assistance. Partners should always know who they can reach out to when they have questions.
A strong partner enablement process requires clear delineation between the roles and responsibilities of each party and good bilateral communication. This is essential — and not just when issues arise. Like any kind of partnership, it works best when both parties communicate often and are committed to working well together. Here are some of my top tips.
You want your partners to be busy selling your products and services. In my personal experience, however, partners are typically bombarded with product information from companies — sometimes daily. The last thing they need is more stuff to read. But how do you provide ongoing product and sales training, without overloading your partners? Yes, online video training is one way, but I've found that partners want their vendors to make them feel special, nurtured, and supported. So, create a budget for in-person get-togethers and workshops. Make them feel part of your corporate family, not some sort of remote appendage.
I've had great success inviting partners to a specific partner enablement event, like a two-day kickoff or launch. This allows you to engage with them and maybe spend one day focused on product training and the next on effcetive and actionable sales training. This is a more thoughtful approach than simply shooting resources and materials across for them to decipher on their own.
To set up a partner for success after an event, you have to do more than wish them luck and send them off with a pat on the shoulder. It's necessary to follow up with ongoing product and sales coaching to reinforce the new learnings and help individual reps feel comfortable with the new information.
You can also develop advanced training and certification programs to deepen partners' expertise and credibility, or implement sales simulations and role-playing exercises to enhance practical selling skills. A tip: AI can be your friend here.
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A partner portal is more than just a nice to have. It should be part of your partner enablement strategy. This may be as robust as a partner relationship management tool or something simpler like a website or knowledge base where partners can routinely access training and other resources.
A great partner portal should:
Don't let your partners go at it alone. You can be partners in marketing as well as sales. Collaborate with partners on co-branded materials and marketing campaigns to generate leads and build brand awareness. You can also provide market development funds (MDF) for partners to use for executing their own marketing activities and demand generation efforts.
Of course, the most basic metric is partner revenue, but there may be others based on your enablement efforts. Ideally, when a company provides partner enablement training, they have specific outcomes in mind.
You should set KPIs and metrics that measure the desired outcomes. For example, if your partner enablement training is about improving product knowledge, then the metric should focus on how well and easily the partner can represent the product to a customer. In short: Measure what you're trying to achieve.
Communication is a two-way street, and partners will have feedback for you. It's important to validate and incorporate this feedback as you iterate your approach to working together. You should actively seek and regularly collect this feedback, and there are a couple easy ways to do this:
When you're working with multiple partners, it can be helpful to have a partner relationship management (PRM) system in place, integrated with your CRM. Solutions like this help personalize and automate activities — including communication, training, and sales and marketing campaigns — at scale. They can also use data and analytics to deliver personalized content and recommendations to partners based on their sales history, market focus, and performance. You can also use a PRM to implement automated marketing campaigns that partners can easily customize and deploy.
Appointing partners is not a set-and-forget exercise. Your sales partnerships are only going to be as strong as your partner enablement strategy and its execution. Bringing on channel partners and resellers means committing to supporting the relationship over time and working to make it stronger and more effective as you go.
See how to give partners clear onboarding goals and automated business insights to grow faster, together.