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Partners are called resellers for a reason. They are not called remarketers. Most partner organizations (system integrators, VARs, resellers, franchises, agents, etc.) are resource-strapped and lack proper training, skills and marketing resources. So, despite the availability of sophisticated channel marketing automation tools, adoption of these tools has been tepid. That doesn’t mean vendors should abandon these platforms and go back to the dark ages of ZIP-file-based asset sharing. However, it is the duty of the channel marketing automation platforms to rise to the next challenge and address the core issue of sales enablement.
It is fair to assume the channel will look roughly the same over the next five years as it did over the past five. Until and unless a game-changing platform suddenly appears on the horizon or some other disruption takes place, changes in the channel are likely to continue incrementally. Despite seismic shifts tied to the cloud, mobility and the digitization of buyers’ engagement, it is highly unlikely that partner organizations will suddenly end up having abundant marketing resources. Therefore, channel marketing automation platforms need to address this gaping hole that the lack of marketing resources presents and convert that challenge into an opportunity. Instead of looking at the glass as a half-empty (partners lack marketing resources), I’d suggest we look at it as a half-full (sales resources are available) and focus on enablement activities.
By ZINFI Technologies, Inc.5
22 ratings
Partners are called resellers for a reason. They are not called remarketers. Most partner organizations (system integrators, VARs, resellers, franchises, agents, etc.) are resource-strapped and lack proper training, skills and marketing resources. So, despite the availability of sophisticated channel marketing automation tools, adoption of these tools has been tepid. That doesn’t mean vendors should abandon these platforms and go back to the dark ages of ZIP-file-based asset sharing. However, it is the duty of the channel marketing automation platforms to rise to the next challenge and address the core issue of sales enablement.
It is fair to assume the channel will look roughly the same over the next five years as it did over the past five. Until and unless a game-changing platform suddenly appears on the horizon or some other disruption takes place, changes in the channel are likely to continue incrementally. Despite seismic shifts tied to the cloud, mobility and the digitization of buyers’ engagement, it is highly unlikely that partner organizations will suddenly end up having abundant marketing resources. Therefore, channel marketing automation platforms need to address this gaping hole that the lack of marketing resources presents and convert that challenge into an opportunity. Instead of looking at the glass as a half-empty (partners lack marketing resources), I’d suggest we look at it as a half-full (sales resources are available) and focus on enablement activities.