Schweitzer Fachinformationen
Wenn es um professionelles Wissen geht, ist Schweitzer Fachinformationen wegweisend. Kunden aus Recht und Beratung sowie Unternehmen, öffentliche Verwaltungen und Bibliotheken erhalten komplette Lösungen zum Beschaffen, Verwalten und Nutzen von digitalen und gedruckten Medien.
Unlock the timeless secrets to building strong business partnerships based on the foundation of trust
In The Go-to-Market Cheat Code: The Secret to Unlocking B2B Growth, award-winning entrepreneur Justin Gray and seasoned executive Josh Wagner deliver a research-rich and example-based exploration of why trust and relationships are the true foundation of every thriving business, and how you can build, maintain, and leverage trust in your own business dealings to gain an edge over competitors. This book avoids flash-in-the-pan trends and focuses instead on timeless proven principles that can help you scale your organization to the next level.
Backed by a wealth of research and case studies, this book provides all of the practical tools readers need to bridge the gap between theory and practice. Readers will learn about topics including:
The Go-to-Market Cheat Code: The Secret to Unlocking B2B Growth is a timely, essential read for all executives and founders seeking to understand the importance of trust in business relationships and unlock the secret to stronger, more lucrative business partnerships.
JUSTIN GRAY is the Co-Founder and Managing Partner at In Revenue Capital and an award-winning 5X entrepreneur who has made a career of launching and scaling companies, guiding them to successful exits of over $250MM. As a recognized speaker and thought leader, Justin has presented at top industry conferences and has been published more than 500 times.
JOSH WAGNER is a sales, marketing, and channel leader who has spent 20 years selling to and through strategic partners and has helped start-ups scale from $0 - $20MM. Today Josh is the Co-Founder and Managing Partner at In Revenue Capital, where he provides GTM operator expertise to support growth stage founders.
Foreword xi
Introduction 1
1 The Digital Mask 7
2 Growth and the Cheat Code 19
3 The Top-Down Necessity 29
4 How to Set Up Your Own Cheat Code 41
5 Customer, Context, and Culture 55
6 Partner Ecosystem Nuts and Bolts 81
7 Co-Marketing 91
8 In the Field 101
9 The Relationship Recipe 117
10 When It All Goes Wrong 127
11 Success and the New Metrics 137
12 When It All Goes Right 149
13 Insights into Successful Partner Programs 165
14 Cash in Time 173
Conclusion 187
Appendix: Supplemental Information 191
Notes 195
Acknowledgments 197
About the Authors 199
Index 201
Josh Wagner
Up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B, A, start. If you grew up in the 1980s, you remember this sequence as the 30 lives Cheat Code for the game Contra on the original Nintendo Entertainment System. For those who didn't . Google it!
If digital is no longer the cheat it was in the early 2000s and relationships are the new prospector, what's the new Cheat Code? It might be counterintuitive to think of relationship building as a cheat, but that is the premise of this chapter.
McKinsey1 predicts that within the next two or three years, partnership ecosystems will represent 30% of the global economy. That's up from 1-2% today. There were also some impressive stats that came out of the first Partnership Leader Catalyst conference in Miami in 2022. According to partner-led growth champion and industry pioneer Allan Adler,2 who you will hear more from in this book,
The conference was amazing, as are some of the data that is coming out on Partner Ecosystem performance. Their data suggests that account mapping and other tools help B2B SaaS [Software-as-a-Service] partnership teams crush it with their tech partnerships by:
Even so, partnerships can mean a lot of things in Business-to-Business (B2B) SaaS. Ask 10 "partner people" how they define partnerships and you'll get 10 different answers. Some might consider channel partnerships the primary kind of partner, and others might think of partnerships in terms of relationships with suppliers or technology providers.
We host a podcast called The Cheat Code, on which we interview the best and brightest Go-to-Market (GTM) leaders. What we've learned is that, when it comes to partnerships, the definition is consistently inconsistent.
We define a partner broadly as another organization whose people hold trusted relationships with the customers we want to acquire. It's as simple as that, and the key word is relationship.
According to Jay McBain and Forrester, 76% of world trade is indirect,3 meaning it happens through partnerships. The food you eat, the car you drive, and the clothes you wear all happen through manufacturing, distribution, and sales channel partnerships.
But in the B2B SaaS world, that isn't the norm, except for a few companies like Salesforce, HubSpot, and Shopify, which have grown through the partner ecosystems they have built around them. That's changing. SaaS companies are recognizing that the strategies of the past digitized sales and marketing automations aren't delivering the cheap customer acquisition of the past. Can the Cheat Code be the pivot?
Consider this hypothetical situation. Imagine that the Microsoft of today was selling its products directly, not through the partner ecosystem of more than 400 000 partners who employ 22 million people and deliver more than $10 in economic value for every dollar of Microsoft revenue, worldwide.4
What if that partner ecosystem didn't exist? Envision instead that Microsoft had a massive team of salespeople, and an equally massive marketing effort designed to drive direct leads to those salespeople who called on customers. The impact is not the same. The reason the partner ecosystem at Microsoft is so successful is that Microsoft leverages the most powerful thing their partner has: the relationship with the customer.
That relationship provides the partner proximity to the customers' problems and the trust required to provide a solution. Microsoft provides a host of products, all of which can be molded by the partner to meet the needs of the customer. Creating that level of trust at scale is untenable without a robust partner network.
According to Jared Fuller, one of the leading voices in the partner ecosystem movement and founder of PartnerHacker, "Bessemer Venture Partners was quoted as saying in 2021, 'Do not invest in a partner program until you're past $100 million in revenue.' Then, the very next year - 2022 - their number one recommendation in the Bessemer State of the Cloud annual report was partner-led growth, calling it table stakes from day one."5 How quickly things change.
Folks like us at In Revenue Capital, Jared, and many others you'll meet throughout this book are leading the movement behind the Partnership Cheat Code and are catalysts for changing the narrative of the traditional partner program.
Digital has failed to deliver, inbound and outbound are failing, yet expectations from investors continue to rise. Account Executive quota attainment is at an all-time low. Sellers who once lived on inbound during the golden age of content marketing have gone the way of the dodo bird due the oversaturation of mediocre and flat-out bad content put into the market by B2B marketing teams.
The response to the lack of inbound has been a flood of outbound. Armies of sales development representatives are being hired to pound phones like a scene from the film Boiler Room. It doesn't stop there. The rise of sales technology, which looks remarkably like marketing technology, has given this eager bunch license to blast automated email sequences to the masses. And marketing is not the only department responsible for spam.
The Partnership Cheat Code is one that adds value to all who are involved. It's a give-to-get mentality focused on leveraging existing relationships to accelerate growth. This thinking can be applied to our Venture capital (VC) firm as well as the early-stage companies like those in our portfolio.
"When I got an opportunity to run partnerships in one of my earlier roles, it was my lightbulb moment. I liked sales, but sales always felt very transactional to me. I enjoyed creating genuine connections and relationships rather than transactional sales. Partnerships were the best of both worlds. I saw that it was sales but also building long-term, genuine strategic relationships with people. And because it resonated with who I am, I excelled at it."
- Greg Portnoy, cofounder and CEO, EULER
Here are the three main ingredients a startup needs to be successful:
Then apply our Cheat Code and you will quickly see a divergence from the traditional VC model, which is focused on deploying capital. The founders are left to find their way with strategy and execution. The way traditional VC firms look at their portfolio is centered on fund dynamics, a concept we take a deep dive into in Chapter 14 of this book. For now, let's focus on strategy and execution.
When a founder closes a round of funding, it's a big deal. It could mean critical hires, it could mean product upgrades and, frankly, it could mean they live to fight another day. The one thing it means without question is that the company is expected to GROW! Seed stage companies that take on VC financing are typically expected to grow between 100% and 300% year over year.
Figure 2.1 Perceived impact of a VC.
Source: Copyright In Revenue Capital.
That's no small feat, especially given the state of traditional GTM functions like inbound and outbound. Founders typically expect their new capital partners will support them in that growth, be it referrals, recruiting, or potentially operational support, only to find that they are ill-equipped to do so (see Figure 2.1).
Here's why. At Stanford, UC Berkeley, or any number of Ivy League universities, where venture capitalists tend to get their finance degrees, company operations are not a focus. So, for the most part, these investors "know" operations theoretically, maybe from textbooks or, for the more seasoned, by watching from the sidelines.
They might have some answers, but they don't have the actual experience to back up those answers or provide any real business wisdom that comes from doing the work. At the end of the day, the job of a venture capitalist is to finance businesses to generate a return, not to operate them.
The other factor at play is what we call the blockbuster movie model. The one mega-million-dollar box office smash pays for all the other box office losers. Unfortunately, this is very similar to the way a traditional VC fund operates. In fact, these funds evaluate companies based on their ability to "return the fund."
This is a dynamic that does not incentivize investors to help founders operate; rather, it encourages a focus on placing more bets to increase their odds. If the key to growth is more than capital, where do we turn? This is the core tenet of the operator immersive model, which Justin and I created based on our experience building...
Dateiformat: ePUBKopierschutz: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
Systemvoraussetzungen:
Das Dateiformat ePUB ist sehr gut für Romane und Sachbücher geeignet – also für „fließenden” Text ohne komplexes Layout. Bei E-Readern oder Smartphones passt sich der Zeilen- und Seitenumbruch automatisch den kleinen Displays an. Mit Adobe-DRM wird hier ein „harter” Kopierschutz verwendet. Wenn die notwendigen Voraussetzungen nicht vorliegen, können Sie das E-Book leider nicht öffnen. Daher müssen Sie bereits vor dem Download Ihre Lese-Hardware vorbereiten.Bitte beachten Sie: Wir empfehlen Ihnen unbedingt nach Installation der Lese-Software diese mit Ihrer persönlichen Adobe-ID zu autorisieren!
Weitere Informationen finden Sie in unserer E-Book Hilfe.