Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Top 5 Things Your Executives Need to Know About Alliances - #3


Alliances Make the Pie Bigger


There is sometimes a misconception that working with partners is a “zero sum game”  - the more money a partner makes on a deal, the less money your company will make on a deal. In actual fact, more times than not, a partner will help make the size of the pie bigger – “supersize” the deal if you will. How? In a few ways.

1) Scale
At my company, we have several partners that are much larger organizations with thousands of employees and deep presence in Fortune 500 firms. We also have a very large network of smaller partners, who may not have the same reach as the larger partners, but do have deep domain expertise in areas where we need it, and are "boots on the ground" for us in many accounts.  In both instances, partnering with these firms enhances our reach, drives customer satisfaction, and extends our influence.     

2) The vision thing

Many customers have at least one "trusted adviser" consulting organization that they engage at the C level to advise them on vision and strategy. These firms have significant influence with customers and in the IT industry, determine or influence the "stack" (software/hardware solution components) that is ultimately sold to the customer. Partnering with these firms early can put you in the "pole position" in this process and uncover opportunities that you did not even know were there. And turn what for you might have been a departmental sale ($) into a much larger enterprise ($$$) sale. 

3) Access to new markets

Often companies will use partners to establish their presence in new geographic markets. In this case, partners not only increase the size of the pie, they serve up the pie, too!


4) Deal acceleration

Partners can really help provide account intelligence that help you identify potential risks to deal closure. Partners can also help you mitigate those risks to help increase the odds of closure. They can also help validate your solution (through Proof of Concept support for example) and can accelerate your sales cycle, helping you close deals faster. All of these efforts increase your revenues.

Next post - Top 5 Things Your Executives Need to Know About Alliances -  #4 : Alliances Help Drive Innovation

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Top 5 Things Your Executives Need to Know about Alliances - #2




    Alliances are a Team Sport


The alliances organization is a completely dependent organization  – that is to say, we are completely dependent upon the involvement of other organizations to successfully develop and execute alliances. When we make a commitment to a partner, we are making a corporate commitment to that partner on behalf of our company. This means that many organizations at our company (sales, product marketing, product management, professional services, legal, field marketing, external communications, etc.) have a role to play and will be engaged early and often as we establish and develop partnerships.

Therefore, as an executive, in order to ensure high performing alliances, it's not only important that you have strong collaboration skills within your alliances organization, you must also ensure that these skills permeate across the company. You want an "alliance aware" organization - where all the departments that are involved in establishing and developing alliances understand how to collaborate, manage conflict, ensure alignment and drive positive outcomes for BOTH companies.

Alliances are a team sport!

Next post: #3 Alliances Make the Pie Bigger

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Top 5 Things Your Executives Need to Know about Alliances - #1


As alliance managers, sometimes our biggest sales job of all is convincing our internal executives of the value of alliances and what it takes to make them successful. Among the key questions we need to answer are:

  • What is involved in establishing new partnerships? 
  • Why do we need partners? 
  • What do alliance managers do anyway? 
  • Why do I care?

Do you get these questions from your executives? 


In my next several posts I'll cover the Top 5 Things Your Executives Need to Know About Alliances.


1.       Alliance Relationships Require Care and Feeding


Alliance relationships are much like personal relationships, they require care and feeding to establish and grow. Alliance relationships are made up of a series of personal relationships between executives and stakeholders at both companies. Managing these relationships, developing the shared vision and constructing and executing the joint business plan, is the raison d’etre of the Alliance Manager. All alliances are established based on a promise of mutual value. The role of the Alliance Manager is “value creation” – orchestrating resources, aligning strategic goals, managing conflict to ensure that both our company and our partner realize mutual value.


Next post - #2: Alliances are a Team Sport



Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Managing Differences - Job #1



One of my most important takeaways from Vantage Partner's Alliance University last month was the whole idea that alliances at their core, are about managing differences.

We've all heard people say that alliances are all about "finding the win-win", "looking for the joint value proposition", finding "common ground" and the like. It turns out, that while those things are important, even necessary in forging an alliance relationship, they are not sufficient.

Why?

Well, think about it. According to various studies, alliances have a 50% (or higher depending on the study) failure rate. Presumably, the alliances formed based on identified "common ground" or compelling "joint value proposition", but they didn't last. When I look back at failed partnerships in my 15+ years in alliances, the root cause of the failures was a lack of attention paid to the differences between the two organizations.

Alliance managers sit in between two organizations with different structures, business models, politics, org charts, policies, cultures, philosophies, processes, contracts, etc. etc. The list of differences is usually longer than the list of things we have in common!

When we just focus on the things we have in common, the things our two companies are completely aligned on, and ignore the long list of things where we are not aligned - where we have differences - we are inviting the inevitable conflict. Often that conflict simmers under the surface, but it is always there, like a cancer on the alliance relationship. Left untreated, the patient - our partnership - dies.

Instead, we should proactively, deliberately and intentionally, work with our partner to identify our areas of difference, with particular focus on those areas that are likely to cause conflict. It is a fool's errand to pretend that we can wish away or hope away these differences. A better strategy is to face them head on, and talk openly as a joint team about how we can manage these differences.

Managing differences is job #1 for alliance managers!

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Curiosity Killed the Cat (but Saved the Alliance)


More from Vantage Partner's Alliance University class delivered by Stu Kliman.

Curiosity - genuine and honest curiosity, is a critical mindset for successful alliance managers. This is the mindset for effective conflict resolution. Why?

When we are in the midst of conflict with our partner or with an internal stakeholder, we tend to assume our intentions are good (and we are "right"), but we don't always extend the benefit of the doubt to our partners. We assume we understand their intentions (bad) and that we are in full possession of all the facts.

The fact is, the only thing we know with certainty is what's going on in our own head!

Understanding our partner's interests and intents requires breaking through our "certainty" and adopting a mindset of curiosity. "Hmmn, she has a completely different take on this situation than I do. I wonder what data she's looking at? I wonder what's her reasoning is? I wonder why she feels this way". These are the questions that start a learning dialog.

And curiosity, genuine and true curiosity about our partners interests and intents, is the starting point to resolving conflict in our alliance relationships.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Mind the Gap


Stu Kliman from Vantage Partners did an excellent session for our alliances organization last week on conflict management and resolution. My takeaways from this session, which we called SAS Alliance University, will be the subject of several blog posts.

My first takeaway I call "Mind The Gap". No, not the ubiquitous retail store!

Stu kicked off the session with a video of a difficult conversation between two alliance managers and he asked us to identify "helpful and unhelpful" behaviors. We all proceeded to diagnose the root causes of the conflict and develop a list of the "unhelpful" comments from both parties.

Stu posited that if you could put these two alliance managers in our class and have them watch the same video, they would have no problem identifying the problem behaviors. In other words, "out of the moment" they could dispassionately diagnose the "good, the bad and the ugly." We are the same way - often we know what the right thing thing to do is, but in the moment, we fail to do the right thing.

Why?

When we are in conflict ridden alliance conversations, the stakes are usually high. The success of the alliance is often on the line, and the expectations and pressure to deliver are high. This ratchets up our emotions and increases the likelihood of a bad outcome.

Stu calls this phenomenon - the "gap between our espoused beliefs and our practiced beliefs."

What does it require to close this gap? Humility and deliberate, intentional effort to practice good conflict management and resolution techniques. I'll cover these in subsequent posts.

Ironically, the more arrogant someone is about their conflict management skills, the larger the gap is between their espoused and practiced beliefs! To develop your alliance skills in this area - mind the gap!

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Zero Sum Game



I think you can boil down most of the issues we face in alliance management to "scarcity mentality". Folks with scarcity mentality view life (and alliances) as a zero sum game. If you win, I lose. If I win, you lose.

Those who view the world from this perspective, have a very hard time collaborating. Viewing partnerships from this prism causes their mindset to be very self focused and "shrinks" their universe. Their "pie" is small, and their life is a constant battle to win turf, presumably at the expense of someone else. It's hard to think creatively about options and fresh new approaches when crouched in the fighting stance ready for battle!

The best cultural mindset for positive partnering and collaboration is an "abundance" mindset. You can always tell when you are dealing with a partner with this mentality. The possibilities are limitless. Collaboration with them is about making the pie bigger, not fighting over pieces of a small pie.

Let's do all we can as alliance managers to promote this mindset in our organizations - and be sure that we walk in this mindset ourselves.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Five Rules! (or Badda Bing Badda Boom Part II)



The picture above was me (metaphorically) after sitting through a conference call with a company who wanted to talk about partnering with my company. As you can see from the picture, it was not a great experience. It still amazes me how many alliance people schedule exploratory partnership conversations, but then don't take the time to prepare for those discussions!

To prevent this from happening to others, I bring you the Five Rules for Having an Exploratory Partnership Conversation!

Rule #1. Tell me what you want!

If you approach me, the onus is on YOU, to explain what you want - where you see the value in a potential partnership. Don't leave it to me to "intuit" your proposal, or guess what you want us to do together.

Rule #2. It's all about me.

I'm already working on more than I can say grace over. You want me to attend to you and this potential partnership. This means I've got to figure out what I'm not going to do so that I can do this. Which means you need to sell me on why I should care. What's in it for me?  I don't care what your alliance and product strategy is - unless it's directly relevant to what you are proposing and its value to me. Set your radio to my favorite radio station - WIIFM (What's in it for me?) and make your message compelling.

Rule #3. Know what my company does.

This might seem obvious, but as my grandmother was fond of saying "common sense ain't so common". I've gotten calls from companies who had not even bothered to look at my company's website to understand our solutions and key industry segments. It will be difficult for you to craft a compelling value proposition, much less a partnering proposition, if you don't know what I do.


Rule #4. Have a clear call to action or next step.

Loosey goosey close is simply inviting me put this at the bottom of the pile. If you get my attention, have a clear next step identified. Who do we need to engage next? What do we need to cover? How do we complete the due diligence process to get to EOJ?

Rule #5. PREPARE before you get on the phone with me!

Rules 1 through 4 pretty much indicate that you've got to do your homework. Do not throw your standard 25 slide company presentation at me and expect me to "figure it out"! Think through your pitch, develop a compelling story and "serve it up to me on a biscuit!" - meaning, clearly articulate what you want and why I should care.


Follow these rules and the odds of you having a productive dialog with your partner prospect will go up exponentially. Even if you wind up mutually determining that this is not a good partnership opportunity, at least you will have left a favorable impression, and that will do nothing but help you in the future!


Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The Bermuda Triangle and partner triangulation



According to Wikipedia "The Bermuda Triangle is a region in the western part of the North Atlantic Ocean where a number of aircraft and ships allegedly disappeared under mysterious circumstances.


The "Alliance Bermuda Triangle" is typically where partners wind up when attempting "triangulation" - the pursuit of that elusive holy grail resulting from the coming together of 3 companies.


It typically goes like this..... you're working with a partner on an initiative, and he mentions, "hey, we have a partnership with Acme Technologies, we should loop them in to our discussions.  There's typically lots of enthusiasm in the beginning after a series of exploratory discussions...Lots of IGBG - "it's gonna be great" and then..... nothing.


Why? Because getting alignment between two companies is challenging enough. Adding a third to the mix increases the complexity (and risk) by an order of magnitude.


I'm not saying it can't work... I've seen a few. Just know what you're getting into, ask a lot of questions and set expectations all around.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Top 5 Things to Know About Alliances!



Happy New Year to my fellow alliance professionals! After a hiatus and the holiday break, I'm back in the blogger's chair.. 


As we are all in the midst of our 2012 joint business planning efforts with our partners, it's a good time for a few reminders to our alliance stakeholders about what's involved in establishing and developing partnerships. 


To that end, I bring you - The Top 5 Things Stakeholders Should Know About Alliances.

1.       Alliance Relationships Require Care and Feeding
Alliance relationships are much like personal relationships, they require care and feeding to establish and grow. Alliance relationships are made up of a series of personal relationships between executives and stakeholders at both companies. Managing these relationships, developing the shared vision and constructing and executing the joint business plan, is the raison d’etre of the Alliance Manager. All alliances are established based on a promise of mutual value. The role of the Alliance Manager is “value creation” – orchestrating resources, aligning strategic goals, managing conflict to ensure that your company (and the partner) deliver increased value to our customers.


2.       It takes a village
In today’s increasingly complex and interdependent world, it often “takes a village” to deliver a complete solution to the customer. For example, your company may have world class technologies and solutions in multiple industries and horizontal domains. Your partners may bring strong business consulting and domain expertise, scalable delivery capability, complementary technologies and solutions and in many cases, supplementary understanding of your customers’ business issues and environments.

Together with your partner ecosystem, your company is able to extend its capabilities to maximize value to the customer.


3.       Customer demand often drives partnerships

Your customers might express a need for a third party provider’s unique and niche capabilities and may request integration of the third party’s software with yours. Or your Partner’s customer may be making the same request of your partner. Or your company may identify a need to collaborate with a third party to address market demand driven by customer requirements in a certain industry or domain. These are the three major drivers of partnerships.

4.       Alliances help drive innovation!

At SAS, we are collaborating with partners in many of our key technology innovations (e.g. high performance computing) and partners also provide benchmarking/tuning/optimization and new technology adoption support.

In addition to supporting your company's technology innovation, partners also help identify new opportunities, in which we collaborate to deliver joint initiatives. 


5.       Alliance Management is profession! 
Most of the alliance professionals in SAS Global Alliances and Channels division are certified alliance professionals, who have earned their certification through The Association of Strategic Alliance Professionals (ASAP). ASAP is the largest global professional organization dedicated to alliance formation and management. Additionally, SAS is a Global Sponsor of ASAP and we have been encouraging our key partners to become members as well. We leverage ASAP best practices in our work. This helps both our partner community and by extension, our customers, because as a result, we are able to more effectively develop partnerships to create and deliver innovative solutions for our customers.