Methodology: Every two weeks we collect most relevant posts on LinkedIn for selected topics and create an overall summary only based on these posts. If you´re interested in the single posts behind, you can find them here: https://linktr.ee/thomasallgeyer. Have a great read!
If you prefer listening, check out our podcast summarizing the most relevant insights from Channel Marketing CW 03/ 04:
Cloud Marketplaces and Co-Sell Execution
Marketplaces are positioned as a primary revenue lever, not a side channel, with emphasis on deal size, speed, and predictability
Compensation neutrality emerges as a baseline requirement to avoid seller resistance and channel leakage
Temporary incentive uplifts are used to trigger behavior change and accelerate early adoption
Marketplace success is framed as a sales process problem, not a platform awareness problem
Measurement of deal velocity, average deal size, and time-to-cash is highlighted as essential for long-term program survival
Partner Incentives and Commercial Design
Incentives are increasingly designed to reward behaviors, not just closed revenue
SPIFs are treated as time-boxed change tools rather than permanent compensation structures
Internal recognition mechanisms are used to reinforce partner-led selling across sales, renewal, and channel teams
Peer visibility and internal competition are leveraged to normalize partner-first deal paths
Financial alignment between direct and partner motions is presented as non-negotiable
Channel Enablement and Internal Adoption
Enablement focus shifts from training content to operational readiness inside CRM and sales workflows
Sellers are encouraged to document and share partner-led wins to create internal playbooks
Knowledge sharing is incentivized to turn individual wins into scalable motions
Channel success is linked to internal evangelism rather than top-down mandates
Enablement is framed as continuous reinforcement, not a one-off rollout
Partner Programs and Ecosystem Structure
Partner programs emphasize clarity of motion, roles, and value exchange over expansion of tiers
Co-selling is treated as a structured motion requiring clear rules, data visibility, and accountability
Ecosystem maturity is associated with fewer partners executing better, not broader partner counts
Program credibility is tied to consistency in execution across regions and sales teams
Marketplace and partner programs are increasingly interconnected rather than managed separately
Product and Platform-Driven Channel Leverage
Platform integrations are positioned as enablers of partner-led scale rather than technical features
Product updates are framed through their impact on partner selling efficiency
Tooling is evaluated based on how seamlessly it fits into existing seller workflows
Channel relevance is linked to reduced friction in deal registration and transaction flow
Technology investments are justified through measurable revenue outcomes, not partner satisfaction metrics
Want to see the posts voices behind this summary?
This week’s roundup (CW 03/ 04) brings you the Best of LinkedIn on Channel Marketing Insights:
→ 62 handpicked posts that cut through the noise
→ 31 fresh voices worth following
→ 1 deep dive you don’t want to miss

