Posts Tagged ‘channelinsight’

How To Keep Channel Partner Sales Rolling Through The Holiday Season

December 21st, 2011

These wintery weeks between Thanksgiving and New Years Eve create many diversions that put the focus on your channel’s performance on ice. Meetings and calls freeze, strategic planning slips, and the groundwork for creating a big New Year push of channel sales support ends up on the backside of decision-making mindshare – effectively putting you on a steep slope in front of the rolling snowball for the start of the year push.

To keep your channel sales support rolling during these slower times, you don’t have to think of January as your tabula rasa. Here are a couple of things you can do to melt the ice on your holiday season channel marketing push and glide toward greater ROI on your 2012 spend.

  • Use your downtime to re-evaluate your incentive programs. Our recent Best Practices survey shows that 60% of respondents still rely on hands-on incentive programs. Seriously folks, there is a way to get better ROI on your programs AND real-time management of your programs to boot. Using applications like Channelinsight Incentive Manager and CRM tools such as salesforce will help you spend less time managing the programs and more time helping your sales teams close deals.
  • Enhance your Channel Social Media. Engage and enable your partners through social media. Sounds like a no-brainer, right? But research shows that more than 50% of channel marketers are not effectively leveraging a potent mix of traditional and social media vehicles. By the way, a recent survey by AdWeek shows that incentivized app downloads do not create customer loyalty. So can we apply this to SPIFs as well? Let me know if you think that is too giant of a leap!

By the way, check out our strategic partner CCI’s Craig DeWolf blog post, “What’s going to keep channel marketers up at night in 2012.

I am pretty confident that here at Channelinsight we use best in class marketing efforts and engage BiC strategic partnerships to help potential customers. That’s because our tools enable channel marketers to reach your benchmarks and avoid sliding on your year-end goals. Happiest of the holiday season to you and your families.

The Social Enterprise and the Channel

September 6th, 2011

The theme of Dreamforce ’11, The Social Enterprise, marks a new direction for enterprise software, one that embraces social media as an integral part of enterprise applications. The emergence of the social enterprise has already dramatically changed how businesses interact with their customers. Customers engage actively in two way conversations with vendors; providing consumers with a powerful voice providing unprecedented influence over everything from how customers are serviced to product strategy and direction.

“We often forget the symbiotic relationship between trust and ROI”
Gary Vaynerchuk, The Thank You Economy

However, the impact of the Social Enterprise on business-to-business relationships is evolving more slowly as many industries cling to out-moded ways of interacting and doing business. Take the relationship between many industrial product vendors and their distribution partners for instance. Being “social” starts with trust between the parties. How do you build a full relationship when parties are reluctant to share sales and forecast data freely with each other? In many industry segments partners are still unwilling to share end-customer data due to the fear of disintermediation. The irony is that when the information is shared vendors can better serve their partners by improving incentive programs, product features and marketing programs.

Communication must be a two-way street. Countless partners have been burned in the past when they shared information with vendors, but this is changing. Just as consumers have found a stronger and more powerful voice through social media, so will partners and end-customer businesses. The vendor / partner relationship will be transformed with open sharing of information. Information will flow more freely among all parties and will become actionable analytics that will guide vendors and partners alike in an interactive “social” relationship. Those that embrace it will benefit greatly as they understand the real ROI associated with trust.

Special Pricing Program Abuse

July 15th, 2011

Abuse of special pricing programs may cost high tech companies an estimated $1.4 billion in lost profits each year. That really grabbed my attention. According to the latest survey conducted by The Alliance for Gray Market and Counterfeit Abatement (AGMA) special pricing abuse may affect up to 25% of all channel sales. 84% of respondents agree that incentives program abuses can fuel gray market activity, resulting in unfair competition and price erosion.

I found it interesting that 75% of respondents use some combination (stacking) of end-user, programmatic and channel partner accreditation level incentive types, and many use all three. Most respondents felt that end-user incentive programs had the strongest potential for abuse because companies have little visibility into the end-customer and must rely on unverified partner reporting.

The next largest potential for special pricing abuse lies with stacking incentives in a single transaction. Many companies may not have the mechanisms to track total incentive payments across multiple programs, allowing inappropriate use of special pricing to go undetected.

So, what can you do to stop special pricing abuse?

• Improve partner programs by testing and modeling based on historical data
• Automate incentive and discount programs with custom rule to prevent inappropriate stacking of special pricing programs
• Monitor special pricing program performance in real-time to gain visibility into how the programs are used by product, partner, territory
• Track serial numbers to the end-customer to identify potential gray market activity

I’m interested in your thoughts on the survey results, and in what you do to prevent your partners from abusing the special pricing that you give them.