The magic ingredient for successful channel enablement at scale is data. Imagine having the financial, operational, and behavioral data you need on partners to optimize new product launches, coverage models, and channel programs. Imagine being able to show partners — no matter how new or small or niche their focus — how other partners like them have achieved high return on investment (ROI) on their business with you. IDC's Channel Enablement Maturity Model provides a stage-by-stage guide for advancing the organizational, process, technology, and data infrastructure necessary to transform your channel marketing and sales enablement operations. The journey along IDC's Channel Enablement Maturity Model is one of evolving from a publishing/transactional framework to a process-driven one.
Stage 1: Ad Hoc | Stage 2: Opportunistic | Stage 3: Repeatable | Stage 4: Managed | Stage 5: Optimized for Scale | |
Key characteristic | "Every product for itself" | "Portals grow like weeds" | "Consolidation but still stuck in publishing mode" | "Central control over process-driven approach" | "It's all about analytics (Data as a Service)" |
Source: IDC 2013
The DNA for Success is in the Data
IDC defines channel enablement as "developing the right competencies in the right partners to deliver the right solutions to the most profitable customers." Ultimately, the goal is to provide a scalable model to identify high ROI best practices and propagate them throughout the partner population at a very granular level. There are three ways in which manufacturers can capture the partner data needed to support the analysis:
- Contractual obligation: Requires significant time and effort from partner account management, is limited to the largest partners, and is periodic at best.
- Operationalized data capture: The partner platform should be thought of as a SaaS offering that provides a wide range of functionality but also collects data on every partner interaction. The ideal platform will consolidate all of the interactions with partners by offering personalized access to content and transactional systems, as well as execution platforms for marketing, sales, and support. By virtue of this consolidation, it captures an increasingly large portion of partner interactions and thus provides a great deal of valuable data to inform channel marketing and management.
- Data as a service: Externalize partner performance data and make it available to partners in a way that captures even more data from more partners. The level of detail they get depends on the level of detail they provide. As a result, they can get actionable insights on how to better manage their businesses and market, sell, and support specific solutions. The database is in a virtuous cycle of enrichment. They should be able to get insight into a wide variety of strategic and tactical questions such as:
- How many people do I need in marketing, sales, technical, and support roles?
- What level of skills and training should they have?
- What marketing activities are most effective?
- What sales methodologies and plays are most effective at what stage?
- What manufacturer resources and networks should staff be utilizing most frequently?
While data is the crown jewel, there are significant people, process, and technology prerequisites for success. To find out more please see IDC's Channel Enablement Maturity Model or contact me at gmurray (at) idc (dot) com.
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