If I started a new job as a partnerships manager today, here are the 7 things I'd do: 1 - Become the jack-of-all-trades for your company In the first 90 days, aim to be 70% proficient in everything from sales pitches to product demos. You need to understand your business inside and out before you can effectively partner. 2 - Get on sales calls immediately Listen to how customers describe their challenges. Develop relationships with the sales team. They'll be crucial for hitting your numbers. 3 - Network internally like crazy Set up meetings with department heads. Ask what they care about, what they're responsible for, and how they think partnerships can help. If they don't know, educate them. 4 - Gather data and set realistic expectations Use industry benchmarks and internal historical data (if available) to inform your strategy. Don't promise immediate revenue - it typically takes 6-18 months for a new program to produce results. 5 - Focus on inputs, not just outputs Track leading indicators like partner conversations, program sign-ups, and leads generated. Revenue will come later once you understand your funnel. 6 - Be transparent with potential partners If your program isn't ready, tell them. Respect their time and set clear expectations on when you'll be prepared to engage. 7 - Align with company goals Make sure your partnership strategy supports broader business objectives. Show executives how you'll drive value across the organization. The key is laying a strong foundation before diving into deals. Take the time to truly understand your business, build internal relationships, and set up the right processes. That's how you'll create a partnership program built for long-term success. Anything you would add to the list?
Great list Fredrik - we always advise to 'build your bench'. Start creating internal advocates who are going to help make your initiatives a success, like the CFO, sales teams, marketing, customer success, AE's, operations, etc. Because you'll always be able to go further as a team
I can confirm these are the topics I went for when I joined my last two partnership roles - very comprehensive, Fredrik!
Great list Fredrik! 👏🏼 🌟 I might add: 8, Identify your “quick wins” Look for relevant partnerships that can deliver quick value to build early momentum. These small wins build trust, both internally and externally. Even though major results take months, I’m a big fan of seeing outcomes early on ☺️ It helps drive better results and fine-tune your strategy as you gather valuable feedback.
Love it, couldn’t agree more We tend to focus too quickly on the outcomes expected even before thinking wisely about the leading indicators. By flipping the coin and focusing on what really matters the results can only be better But as mentioned… Patience is key ⏳🙏🏼
I'm going to stress #4, these days you cannot walk into meetings with your ELT without data
Great list Fredrik Mellander 🐝 To extend on #6. You don't need a full program from day 1. Your program itself can have crawl, walk, run steps.
I completely agree with this, and it’s likely very applicable to many other roles as well. Simply showing interest through actions is incredibly powerful and a great way to set the stage 🙌🏻
Can't emphasize number 3 enough. Partnerships shows up in every department, and they show up differently, too. Best to understand other departments, how they actually view partnerships (or need for education, like you said), and how you can best support THEIR goals, not just your own. :)
Great list Fredrik! What’s your take on partner success? Any lessons learned there? I like the quick wins mentality Martin Weibull mentioned. Alex Hormozi talks about that a lot and I’ve been trying to get there too.
I help B2B SaaS Revenue Leaders transform their Pipeline and Sales with Partner-Ecosystem led GTM strategies
1moA great list. I'd use this list to create 2-3 measurable 'impacts' I can have on the business. To your #1, I'd double-click on (a) knowing the customers and (b) being able to demo the product (at a proficient level - rather than technical)