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You signed partners. Maybe a lot of them. They're not producing. Direct sales treats them like furniture. Nobody owns the motion.

Most partner programs fail the same way. Someone signs a bunch of partners, announces the program, maybe even hires a channel manager. Then nothing happens. Partners don't sell. Direct sales ignores them — or worse, actively works around them. Revenue from ecosystem is a rounding error.

The problem isn't the partners. It's that nobody built the system. There's no architecture for how ecosystem and direct sales work together. No governance. No scorecards. No shared incentives. No enablement that actually enables.

I've built this before — at Dotdigital where partners drove 80% of revenue, and at Emarsys where ecosystem contributed 30%+, and within a $21B conglomerate. Not by accident. By architecture.

In 12 weeks, I'll build or rebuild the partner ecosystem so it actually produces. Including the part nobody talks about: making direct sales and partners stop fighting each other.

Ecosystem Architect

What 12 Weeks Looks Like

Phase 1

Weeks 1-3: Ecosystem Audit

Current partner landscape, performance data, direct sales relationship, channel conflict points. I find out why partners aren't producing — and it's almost never what leadership thinks.

Phase 2

Weeks 4-6: Architecture

Partner tiers, scoring models, incentive structures, co-sell processes. The blueprint for how ecosystem and direct sales actually work together instead of around each other.

Phase 3 →

Weeks 7-10: Build & Enable

Playbooks, scorecards, governance model, enablement materials. Built with your team — including direct sales leadership — so there's buy-in from day one.

Phase 4

Weeks 11-12: Launch & Handoff

The ecosystem is live and measurable. Your team owns it. We document the operating rhythm and decide whether ongoing support makes sense.

What You Walk Away With

Ecosystem Architecture

Tier model, incentive structure, and governance framework that turns a list of partners into a revenue-producing ecosystem.

Partner Scorecards

Clear metrics for every partner. Who's producing, who's developing, who's dead weight. No more guessing.

Direct-Partner Alignment

The piece everyone skips. A co-sell model where direct sales and partners reinforce each other instead of competing.

Operating Playbooks

Enablement, onboarding, deal registration, conflict resolution — documented and repeatable.

Where I've Done This

dotdigital

dotdigital

Built the partner ecosystem from the ground up in a market where nobody was doing it this way. Partners drove 80% of revenue. Not a support channel — the primary growth engine.

SAP-Emarsys

Emarsys

Ecosystem contributed roughly 30%+ of revenues. Built and scaled the partner motion alongside direct sales.

Comviva | Tech Mahindra | Factoreal

Comviva | Factoreal

Built successful partner-led GTM across ecommerce, telco, sports. Unified sales ops across Factoreal, Comviva, Tech Mahindra, and related organizations.

FAQ

What if we don't have many partners yet?

Even better. Building the architecture before you scale is significantly easier than retrofitting it after you've signed 50 partners with no structure. We'll design the system and recruit into it.

How do you handle channel conflict with direct sales?

Head on. Channel conflict exists because nobody designed the rules of engagement. We build a co-sell model with clear territory and deal registration rules, shared incentives, and a governance process. Direct sales leadership is in the room for this — not informed after the fact.

Can this work alongside a Revenue Engine Build?

Yes, and it often should. If both the core revenue engine and the partner ecosystem need work, we can sequence or run them in parallel depending on team capacity.

What if our existing partners just aren't good?

Some of them probably aren't. The scorecard and tiering system will make that visible. But in most cases, the partners aren't the problem — the system they're operating in is. Fix the system first, then evaluate the partners.