The operating rhythm that separates managed channels from reactive ones.
A structured playbook defining the daily, weekly, monthly, and quarterly activities for a supplier-side channel manager operating through the TSD distribution model. Every activity maps to a CRM workflow.
Nine activities that define what a productive day looks like. These are not aspirational — they are the minimum operating standard for a channel manager who intends to build a program, not just maintain one.
Ten activities that define the weekly operating rhythm. These are the structural disciplines that keep pipeline clean, partners engaged, and forecasts honest.
Twelve activities that define the monthly operating rhythm. These are the structural reviews, strategic investments, and program-level disciplines that separate a managed channel from a reactive one.
Four activities that define the quarterly operating rhythm. These are the strategic reviews and relationship investments that determine program direction and long-term growth.
The cadence tells you what to do and when. Best practices tell you how to do it so it actually works. These are the principles that separate channel managers who hit quota from channel managers who build programs that scale.
Every partner has a preferred way to communicate. Your job is to learn it, not impose yours.
Ask every partner directly: "How do you prefer to communicate — call, email, text, Slack?" Then honor it. Just because you prefer texting doesn't mean that's how they best receive information. A partner who prefers email will ignore your texts. A partner who prefers calls will resent a wall of emails. Match their style, not yours.
"I'm looking into it and will have an update by end of day" is infinitely better than silence. Partners don't need instant answers — they need to know you heard them. Acknowledgment within 2 hours. Resolution within the SLA. Silence is the fastest way to lose a partner's confidence.
Never surprise a partner with bad news in a group setting, on a QBR, or in an email thread with their leadership cc'd. Difficult conversations happen privately first. Give them time to process, ask questions, and prepare before it becomes public. This is basic respect and it builds deep trust.
Log personal details in your CRM notes — family milestones, hobbies, favorite teams, upcoming vacations. A 10-second "How was your daughter's graduation?" at the start of a call signals that you see them as a person, not a revenue line. Relationships built on genuine interest outlast any SPIFF program.
Some partners want weekly check-ins. Others want to hear from you only when there's something to say. Ask: "How often do you want to hear from me, and what format works best?" Then build your CRM tasks around their answer. Over-communication is just as damaging as under-communication if it doesn't match their preference.
When you email a partner, put the ask or the update in the first two sentences. Channel managers are busy. TAs are busier. If they have to read four paragraphs to find out what you need, they'll stop reading your emails altogether.
You don't sell to partners. You sell through them. That distinction changes everything about how you operate.
Never contact the end customer without the TA's explicit, documented permission. Never. Not for a "quick question." Not for a "status update." Not even if the deal is stalling and you think you can help. Going around the TA is the fastest way to kill a partnership and your reputation in the advisor community. Word travels.
When a TA brings you into a deal, your job is to make them look brilliant in front of their customer. You're not there to sell your product — you're there to give the TA an edge they can't get from any other supplier. Product expertise, competitive intel, custom configurations, executive sponsorship. Be the reason they win.
Competitive insights, market trends, vertical expertise, customer benchmarks — share it all. The more valuable you are beyond the transaction, the stickier the relationship. TAs remember the channel manager who sent them a competitive battlecard before a big meeting. They forget the one who only called about deal registration.
After every joint customer call, send the TA a summary within 2 hours: key takeaways, customer concerns, next steps, resources needed, and who owns what. This isn't administrative work — it's how you demonstrate professionalism and keep deals moving. The TA should never have to ask "what happened on that call?"
When a TA closes a deal, recognize it — on LinkedIn, in your TSD newsletter, in a partner Slack channel, on your next QBR slide. Public recognition costs nothing and creates loyalty that SPIFFs alone can't buy. Other TAs see it and want the same treatment.
Channel management is an operational role disguised as a relationship role. The best channel managers run tight processes.
A fast wrong quote is worse than a slightly slower right one. The TA sends your quote to the customer. If it's wrong, the TA loses face, not you. Check configurations, margins, terms, and competitive positioning before you hit send. Speed matters — accuracy matters more.
Log every touchpoint, every conversation, every piece of intel in the CRM as if someone else has to pick up every deal and every relationship tomorrow. Because someday they will. A deal record should tell the complete story of engagement — not just the outcome. If it's not in the CRM, it didn't happen.
Commission errors erode trust faster than any other operational failure. If a partner flags a discrepancy, resolve it within one pay cycle — even if it means issuing a provisional credit while you investigate. The longer a commission dispute sits, the louder it gets in the advisor community.
TSD field reps are the ones recommending you (or not) to their advisor networks. They talk to each other. If you're slow, unresponsive, or difficult to work with, every field rep at that TSD will know within a month. If you're fast, helpful, and easy to work with — same thing. Make it the latter.
A pipeline full of stale deals is a lie you tell yourself and your leadership. If a deal hasn't had meaningful activity in 60 days, it's dead. Close it. A clean pipeline with 15 real deals is infinitely more valuable than a bloated pipeline with 50 deals where 35 are ghosts.
Every field you fill in should serve a report. If you can't explain what report a data point feeds, you're logging for logging's sake. Properties like "Days in Current Stage," "Win/Loss Reason," and "Stall Status" exist to surface patterns — not to create busywork.
Data without interpretation is noise. The best channel managers are pattern hunters.
Pipeline, velocity, conversion rate, average deal size, time-to-close by stage, partner engagement rate, quote turnaround time. If someone asks, you should be able to answer without opening a dashboard. If you can't recite your top 5 metrics from memory, you're not close enough to the business.
Wins sometimes have luck. Losses always have patterns. Are deals dying at the same stage? Is one TSD consistently underperforming? Is a competitor winning on price or on implementation speed? Monthly loss pattern analysis is the most underrated activity in channel management.
Track which TAs sell what verticals, what deal sizes, what use cases. Then tailor your enablement to their strength — not your product roadmap. A TA who excels at healthcare vertical deals doesn't need generic product training. They need healthcare-specific case studies, compliance positioning, and reference customers.
Revenue is a lagging indicator — it tells you what happened. Leading indicators tell you what's about to happen: number of new registrations this week, partner touches per day, quote turnaround time, onboarding completion rate. By the time revenue dips, the problem started 90 days ago. Leading indicators catch it early.
Industry benchmarks are useful context, but your most important comparison is you vs. last quarter. Are your deal velocity numbers improving? Is your partner engagement rate trending up? Is quote turnaround time shrinking? Self-benchmarking eliminates excuses and creates accountability.
The first 90 days of a partner relationship determine whether they become a producer or a name in your CRM.
New partners don't know your process, your team, your tools, or your expectations. Weekly check-ins minimum for the first month. Walk them through deal registration, quoting, CRM access, who to call for what. Don't assume they'll figure it out. The partners who go dormant are the ones who never got comfortable.
Nothing activates a partner faster than closing their first deal. Prioritize first-deal support: join their customer calls, fast-track their quotes, provide extra SE time, offer a first-deal SPIFF. The psychological shift from "I'm exploring this program" to "I closed a deal with this program" is everything.
New partners should have one person to call for everything — not a support email, not a portal FAQ, not a team alias. One human. The channel manager. For the first 90 days, you are their concierge. After activation, you can introduce them to the broader team. Not before.
In the first week, send a simple onboarding plan: here's what you'll get from us (training, support, SLAs), here's what we need from you (first deal registration, CRM access, quarterly review). Put it in writing. Ambiguity in the first 30 days becomes resentment by day 90.
Events are where pipeline is seeded, relationships are cemented, and reputations are built. Show up prepared.
Before any TSD conference or advisor summit, know exactly who you want to meet and what you want to discuss. Have a target list. Pre-schedule meetings. Walk the floor with purpose, not just a badge and a smile. Unplanned networking is a gamble. Planned networking is a strategy.
Every meaningful conversation at an event gets a follow-up email within 24 hours. Not 48. Not "next week." Twenty-four hours. Reference something specific from the conversation. Include one clear next step. The partner met 40 vendors at that event — be the one who followed up first.
Whenever possible, host a dinner, a breakout session, a happy hour, or a roundtable. You go from "one of 50 sponsors" to "the company that brought 12 TAs together for a real conversation." Hosting creates intimacy and positions you as a leader, not a vendor.
Every event interaction — new contacts, competitive intel, partner feedback, deal leads — gets logged in the CRM within 48 hours of the event ending. If it's not in the system, the insight dies with the trip report. Make event ROI measurable.
Best practices are only as good as your ability to execute them consistently. The Channel Standard Companion is the system that makes consistent execution the default.
The Channel Standard Companion automates the operational rhythm behind these best practices:
Every channel manager should have their top 75 target partners loaded in their CRM at all times. Not 50. Not 100. Seventy-five. This is the manageable universe that gets real attention — active producers, developing partners, and strategic recruitment targets. If a partner isn't in your top 75, they're getting leftover energy.
Consistent deal flow. Revenue contributors. Get the most attention. These are your revenue engine.
Have registered deals or shown intent. Need enablement and support to produce. Potential for growth.
In first 90 days. Onboarding in progress. High-touch until activated. Critical onboarding phase.
Not yet partners. Identified as high-potential recruits. Active recruitment in progress. Future pipeline.
In addition to working with your 75 partners, maintain these engagement rhythms with TSD teams who control your access to their advisor networks.
The structural backbone of channel operations. These workflows, properties, and pipelines transform activity into measurable results.
| Stage | Forecast Probability | Entry Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Registered | 10% | TA submitted registration through TSD |
| Qualified | 20% | Registration accepted, conflict verified, deal profile complete |
| Discovery | 30% | Initial customer call scheduled or completed, needs identified |
| Quoting | 50% | Quote requested and in progress or delivered |
| Proposal | 65% | Quote accepted, formal proposal sent, decision criteria documented |
| Verbal Commit | 85% | Customer verbally committed, contract terms being finalized |
| Contract Sent | 95% | Contract issued to customer, signature pending |
| Closed Won | 100% | Contract signed, deal closed, moves to post-sale |
| Closed Lost | 0% | Deal lost to competitor or customer decision, loss reason documented |
| Pipeline | Stages | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Partner Recruitment | Identified → First Contact → Engagement → Activated / Declined | Track new partner acquisition and onboarding progression |
| Post-Sale | Implementation → Go-Live → First Bill Review → 30/60/90-Day Check-In → Steady State | Monitor customer health, renewals, and expansion opportunities |
| Workflow Name | Trigger | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Daily Digest | Every morning at 6am | Send email with deals due today, tasks overdue, stale deals (7+ days) |
| Registration Alert | New deal registration submitted | Instant Slack/email alert. Create deal. Auto-assign to channel manager. Start 4h SLA timer. |
| Stage Change Log | Deal stage changes | Auto-log activity with timestamp, previous stage, new stage, change reason |
| Stall Detection (7 days) | Deal in same stage for 7+ days with no activity logged | Flag deal "Stalled," send alert to channel manager, suggest intervention actions |
| Registration Expiry Warning | Deal registered 14+ days ago, still in "Registered" stage | Send warning: registration expires in 14 days. Require stage change or deal closes. |
| Quote Follow-Up | Quote sent 48 hours ago, no response logged | Send reminder email to TA. Update activity log. Set follow-up in 48h if no response. |
| Dormancy Alert | Partner: no activity logged in 21 days | Flag partner "Dormant," alert channel manager, suggest outreach activities |
| Closed Won Processing | Deal moves to "Closed Won" | Auto-create post-sale record, set implementation milestones, notify ops team |
| Closed Lost Capture | Deal moves to "Closed Lost" | Require loss reason, competitor (if applicable), lessons learned before deal closes |
| Post-Sale Milestones | Deal closed won, post-sale record created | Auto-create tasks for implementation, go-live, 30/60/90-day check-ins on cadence |
| Conflict Alert | Overlapping registration detected (first-to-register check) | Instant alert to channel manager, set Conflict Status = "Under Review," pause workflows |
| SPIFF Qualification | Deal meets SPIFF criteria (e.g., closes with specific term, margin, or product) | Auto-qualify deal, calculate SPIFF amount, flag for payout approval |
| SPIFF Payout | SPIFF approved for payment | Submit to finance/payroll, track payment date, log to TA record |
| Monthly Tier Evaluation | First day of month | Auto-calculate partner tier based on trailing 90-day activity, update tier assignments |
| Commission Escalation (45 days) | Commission payment overdue 45+ days | Alert finance and channel manager. Require explanation and corrective action. |
| Onboarding Tasks | Partner moves to "Onboarding" stage | Auto-create weekly tasks: account setup, training scheduling, product orientation |
| Onboarding Stall Alert | Partner in onboarding 30+ days with <3 completed tasks | Alert channel manager. Partner at risk of dormancy. Escalate engagement. |
| Renewal Alert (90/60/30) | Customer approaching renewal date | Alert at 90 days (plan), 60 days (engage), 30 days (commit). Track renewal status. |
| Property Name | Type | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Contact Name | Text | Full name of TA/TSD field rep |
| Contact Role | Dropdown | Values: Sales Rep, Solutions Engineer, TSD Channel Mgr, TSD Field Rep, Account Executive, Other |
| Associated Organization | Linked Record | Links to Partner/TSD company record |
| Primary contact email | ||
| Phone | Phone | Direct phone number |
| LinkedIn URL | URL | LinkedIn profile link |
| Partner Tier | Dropdown | Values: Active Producer, Developing, New Partner, Dormant, Inactive (assigned to parent partner record) |
| Last Activity Date | Date | Auto-populated: most recent activity date |
| Days Since Last Activity | Calculated | Auto-calculated: today - last activity date |
| Total Deals Registered | Calculated | Count of all deals registered by or with this contact |
| Revenue Contribution (Last 90 Days) | Calculated | Sum of closed-won deal amounts in last 90 days |
| Assigned Channel Manager | Linked Record / User | Which channel manager owns this relationship |
| Engagement Level | Dropdown | Values: High, Medium, Low (based on activity frequency) |
| Recruitment Source | Text | How we identified this partner (TSD intro, event, LinkedIn, etc.) |
| Notes / Bio | Long Text | Relationship notes, preferences, strategic value |
| Property Name | Type | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Deal Name | Text | Customer name + product/term description |
| Deal Amount | Currency | Total contract value (ACV or ARR as defined) |
| Close Date | Date | Expected or actual close date |
| Stage | Dropdown | Registered, Qualified, Discovery, Quoting, Proposal, Verbal Commit, Contract Sent, Closed Won, Closed Lost |
| Forecast Probability % | Calculated | Auto-populated from stage (10%, 20%, 30%, 50%, 65%, 85%, 95%, 100%, 0%) |
| Registration Date | Date | Date deal was registered with TSD |
| Days Since Registration | Calculated | Auto-calculated: today - registration date (for stall detection) |
| Days in Current Stage | Calculated | Auto-calculated: days deal has been in current stage (triggers stall alert at 7 days) |
| Trusted Advisor / TA | Linked Record | Which TA registered or is driving deal |
| TSD Partner | Linked Record | Which TSD the TA operates through |
| Customer Name | Text | End customer's organization name |
| Customer Industry / Vertical | Dropdown | Vertical categorization for pattern analysis |
| Decision Criteria | Long Text | What customer is evaluating (price, features, timeline, integration, etc.) |
| Competitive Threat | Dropdown / Linked Record | Which competitor(s) are in the deal |
| Deal Notes | Long Text | Running log of all conversation notes, updates, blockers, action items |
| Quote Requested Date | Date | When TA requested quote |
| Quote Sent Date | Date | When quote was delivered to TA |
| Quote Status | Dropdown | Pending, Sent, Accepted, Rejected, Rework Required |
| Last Activity Date | Date | Most recent logged activity on deal (auto-populated from activity feed) |
| Days Since Last Activity | Calculated | Auto-calculated (triggers stall alerts) |
| Stall Status | Dropdown | Clean, At Risk (5+ days), Stalled (7+ days) — auto-updated by workflow |
| Conflict Status | Dropdown | None, Flagged, Under Review, Resolved — pauses workflows when "Under Review" |
| Conflict Notes | Long Text | Details of conflict and resolution |
| Next Action Required | Text | Clear description of what happens next and by whom |
| Next Action Due Date | Date | By when the next action must be completed |
| Close Reason | Dropdown | For closed deals: Product, Price, Service, Competitor, Timeline, Budget, Other |
| Win/Loss Category | Dropdown | Won (product choice, price, service, relationship), Lost (to competitor, lost deal, budget, timeline, other) |
| SPIFF Eligible | Checkbox | Does deal meet SPIFF criteria? Auto-calculated from SPIFF rules |
| Commission Rate % | Number | Commission percentage applied to this deal |
| Commission Amount | Calculated Currency | Deal Amount x Commission Rate % |
| Commission Status | Dropdown | Not Applicable, Pending, Paid, Disputed |
Key terms and definitions that form the shared language of channel management.