First, I wanted to thank everyone for replying to my previous post. I received a good deal of input via LinkedIn groups, email, and conversations so I wanted to summarize what you said about the qualities of a great channel leader. Instead of a laundry list of responses, here is a summary with some added commentary:
VISION & THOUGHT LEADERSHIP
This was interesting to me not because I was surprised to see so many responses regarding vision and thought leadership, but because of the lack of responses related to tactical execution. You identified the more strategic qualities of a channel leader much more frequently than the qualities related to the ability to deliver on the vision.
CREDIBILITY
I was pleased to see this quality mentioned a few times. It is not uncommon for companies to have a rotating door of channel leadership. It seems, especially in larger organizations, that there is a fair amount of churn in the channel leadership ranks. Solution Providers typically adapt pretty well to the changes, but they want credible leadership – someone that truly understands the channel model and how to best partner with their channels.
CURIOSITY
This is perhaps related to “credibility”. You want a leader that has a natural curiosity to the business. I have often used the phrase, “relentless discomfort with the status quo” as a quality of a great channel leader. Curiosity is just that; a desire to learn and implement innovative solutions to the channel challenge.
COLLABORATIVE
I wanted to highlight this quality because nobody mentioned it in their responses. I believe that a great channel leader must be collaborative with both their internal and external constituencies. As we all know, executing and delivering on a channel vision requires the active participation of virtually every functional team. If the channel leader cannot or will not collaborate with sales, marketing, customer service, operations, engineering, finance, etc… they will find themselves with a poorly developed channel initiative. I believe this is a critical quality and I was surprised this wasn’t mentioned…am I missing the boat on this one?
INTEGRITY, TRANSPARENCY & AUTHENTICITY
These are absolutely the most critical qualities of a great channel leader in your eyes. Almost every single response had at least one of these mentioned. Interestingly, the cover story of the latest issue of Business Week is dedicated to Trust. I am sure that the recent corporate bailouts, unethical business behavior, and irresponsible compensation practices have contributed to integrity, transparency, and authenticity being the most important qualities of leadership. This is clearly not reserved for channel leadership, but rather for leadership in general. I also believe that with the increasing power of consumers and their ability to organize and communicate quickly and effectively, companies and leaders must engage in open conversations. If they are transparent and authentic, then trust can become a great asset and improve for their brand. Interesting article…you should check it out.
Thanks again…keep the ideas coming!
Showing posts with label viral. Show all posts
Showing posts with label viral. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Is All of This Talk About Social Media Real?
Yesterday I had a conversation with a like minded channel professional about social networking. There seems to be a pretty large number of company leaders that view social networking as business tool to be somewhat of a fad. It seems pretty clear to me that the data indicates that it is certainly not a fad. While there remains kinks to be worked out and business models to be developed, social networking is rapidly becoming an integral part of marketing and customer relationship management.
Just this morning I stumbled across blog post (and subsequent research) from the Gilwell Group that you should check out. This research not only addresses the premise in the previous paragraph, but it is also directly related to B2B channel management. I highly recommend that you check it out here. Take a look at the SlideShare presentation as well.
Just this morning I stumbled across blog post (and subsequent research) from the Gilwell Group that you should check out. This research not only addresses the premise in the previous paragraph, but it is also directly related to B2B channel management. I highly recommend that you check it out here. Take a look at the SlideShare presentation as well.
Monday, August 17, 2009
Where Does Social Media Fit?

Data is collected, organized, and analyzed at the beginning of the process. Data can be quantitative (ie. POS information) or qualitative. It is important for organizations to review and stay abreast of the discussions happening in the social media realm about your company. LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, and others are places where there is tremendous amount of discussions happening everyday about your company, your competition, and your industry. This can be invaluable and timely qualitative information that should included in the early stages of your channel marketing process.
Finally, once you have used the data to identify an opportunity, followed your development process diligently, and created your content, it is now your job to engage your partners. Using traditional communication vehicles like email, portals, and newsletters should be part of the communication mix, but these are typically pushed (intrusive) methodologies. Your ability to truly engage and have conversations with your audience will come in with more “synchronous” communication methods. Obviously, anytime that you can engage in person with your customer the better, however this can be time consuming and expensive. The use of social media will enable you to engage your partners more quickly and through your trusted network. Social media will also give the added benefit of exponential reach that a face-to-face discussion will not offer.
Social media should play an increasingly important role of both your channel marketing strategy and the tactical execution.
Friday, August 14, 2009
Lighting The Fuse
The key to effectively build a string of mini-explosions is to reach the individuals that have reach and influence beyond your own. Actually, it is more than just reach and influence. They also have to be willing, able, and motivated to share your message with others that they think will benefit from what you have to say. No problem, then. All you have to do is find those people that find your content so compelling that they are willing to share your information (sometimes at a risk to their personal and/or professional reputation) with other people in which they have some level of influence.
Piece of cake, right?
Not exactly.
These people are often called “Sneezers” because they help spread your content/message...creating the viral effects of social media. They are hard to identify and reach. Even if you could identify them, their attention would be very difficult to get as there would be significant competition.
The BIG question, then, is how do we reach and motivate these Sneezers and get them to help spread your content. First, and foremost, you have to have something they care about. For example, my Mom would not be a Sneezer for this post about social media, but if I was writing about cooking a Bundt cake, she would be a great Sneezer. So you have to target your content to the right communities of individuals. The key is to not be too narrow. Since you may not know who the Sneezer will be, you will have to cast a big net.
The next step is motivation. Why would a Sneezer feel compelled to share your content? This really comes down to being part of communities that share a common purpose. LinkedIn Groups are wonderful examples of these types of communities. I belong to some very large groups, as well as some pretty small groups. The smaller groups are more narrowly focused, but tend to be more passionate about the topic. The larger groups have a smaller percentage of active participants, but those that are active tend to have broader sphere of influence.
The graphic below shows how this would work. The mini-explosions occur within each community as a Sneezer reaches another community…one in which he/she has some influence. In turn, another Sneezer reaches another community. The process continues as long as the content has some value to the next community. The mini-explosions create the viral effect of social media because you have successful caught the attention of the Sneezer who is motivated to share.
Piece of cake, right?
Not exactly.
These people are often called “Sneezers” because they help spread your content/message...creating the viral effects of social media. They are hard to identify and reach. Even if you could identify them, their attention would be very difficult to get as there would be significant competition.
The BIG question, then, is how do we reach and motivate these Sneezers and get them to help spread your content. First, and foremost, you have to have something they care about. For example, my Mom would not be a Sneezer for this post about social media, but if I was writing about cooking a Bundt cake, she would be a great Sneezer. So you have to target your content to the right communities of individuals. The key is to not be too narrow. Since you may not know who the Sneezer will be, you will have to cast a big net.
The next step is motivation. Why would a Sneezer feel compelled to share your content? This really comes down to being part of communities that share a common purpose. LinkedIn Groups are wonderful examples of these types of communities. I belong to some very large groups, as well as some pretty small groups. The smaller groups are more narrowly focused, but tend to be more passionate about the topic. The larger groups have a smaller percentage of active participants, but those that are active tend to have broader sphere of influence.
The graphic below shows how this would work. The mini-explosions occur within each community as a Sneezer reaches another community…one in which he/she has some influence. In turn, another Sneezer reaches another community. The process continues as long as the content has some value to the next community. The mini-explosions create the viral effect of social media because you have successful caught the attention of the Sneezer who is motivated to share.

Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)