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Channel Manager Activity Cadence

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.

9Daily
10Weekly
12Monthly
4Quarterly
30Best Practices
75Target Partners

"If a channel manager cannot describe exactly what they did today to move a deal forward, exactly which partners they engaged this week, and exactly how the program performed this month, they are not managing the channel. They are reacting to it."

"Consistency compounds. A channel manager who runs this cadence for 90 days will have a pipeline that is cleaner, a partner base that is more engaged, and a forecast that is more reliable than any channel manager operating on instinct alone."

Daily Activities

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.

01 Morning Pipeline Review SLA: 15 min
Description
Open CRM dashboard. Review all active deals. Check for stage changes, upcoming tasks, overdue follow-ups. Flag anything that needs same-day action. No channel manager should start their day without knowing exactly where every deal stands.
CRM Action Items
Custom dashboard with deal pipeline, tasks due today, stale deals (7+ days no activity).
Why This Matters
Visibility into pipeline health is the foundation of forecasting accuracy. A deal that sits in the same stage for 7 days without activity isn't stalled — it's dead and you haven't realized it yet.
02 Deal Registration Response SLA: 4h (ideally 2h)
Description
Every deal registration from a TSD gets acknowledged within 4 hours. Ideally 2. Review the registration, verify no conflicts, accept or request more info. Late responses signal to TAs that you don't value their business. They will register deals with a competitor who responds faster.
CRM Action Items
Automated alert on new registration. Deal created in "Registered" stage. Auto-assign to channel manager. 4h SLA timer starts.
Why This Matters
Speed of response signals respect. Every hour of delay tells the TA that your channel program is slower than a competitor. Registration response time is the first test of your partnership.
03 Inbound Communication Response SLA: 4h
Description
Emails, calls, Slack messages, TSD portal notifications from TAs and TSD field teams. Respond to every inbound within 4 hours during business hours. Even if the answer is "I'm looking into it," acknowledgment matters. Silence kills partnerships.
CRM Action Items
Log every communication as activity. Track response time.
Why This Matters
Responsiveness is the most basic expectation in channel partnerships. A TA will forgive a no, but they will never forgive being ignored.
04 Quote Request Management SLA: 4h standard / 24h complex
Description
When a TA requests a quote through the TSD or directly, generate and deliver within 4 hours for standard configurations. Complex custom quotes within 24 hours with status update at 4 hours. Include competitive positioning notes for the TA.
CRM Action Items
Quote requested date, quote sent date, auto-follow-up if no response in 48 hours.
Why This Matters
Quotes are deal velocity. The faster you quote, the faster deals move. A 24-hour quote delay turns a hot deal lukewarm.
05 Daily Partner Outreach SLA: 5 touches minimum
Description
Proactive outreach to TAs and TSD field reps. Not just deal-related — relationship building. Check in on active deals, share relevant content, congratulate wins, introduce to SEs when appropriate. Five touches is the minimum. Mix of calls, emails, and messages.
CRM Action Items
Log each outreach as activity. Track touches per partner per week.
Why This Matters
Partners who feel abandoned go dormant. Five proactive touches per day (across your entire partner base) keeps relationships warm and creates visibility for your brand in the advisor community.
06 Joint Selling and Deal Support SLA: 2h post-call summary
Description
When joining a TA on a customer call, the channel manager provides product expertise while the TA owns the relationship. After every joint call, send a summary to the TA within 2 hours: key takeaways, next steps, any resources needed. Never contact the customer directly without TA's explicit permission.
CRM Action Items
Log joint call, attach notes, set follow-up tasks.
Why This Matters
Joint calls are opportunities to show competence while reinforcing the TA as the relationship owner. The post-call summary is your chance to keep momentum going and demonstrate support.
07 Channel Conflict Triage SLA: 48h resolution
Description
Overlapping registrations (TA vs TA, or channel vs direct). Apply first-to-register rule. Investigate, document, and resolve within 48 hours. Escalate to VP if unresolvable. Every hour of delay in conflict resolution erodes trust.
CRM Action Items
Conflict Status property. "Under Review" pauses all stage workflows. Resolution logged with rationale.
Why This Matters
Conflicts that linger create resentment. Fast, fair resolution demonstrates program integrity and builds confidence in your conflict management process.
08 CRM Data Hygiene SLA: End of day
Description
Every touchpoint, every conversation, every piece of intel gets logged in the CRM before end of day. If the channel manager spoke with a TA, it goes in the system. Deal notes, stage updates, next steps — all documented. Six months from now, anyone should be able to open a deal record and reconstruct the full history.
CRM Action Items
Activity logging, deal note updates, next action required field updated on every deal touched.
Why This Matters
Undocumented work is invisible work. The CRM is your institutional memory. A deal record should tell the complete story of engagement, not just the outcome.
09 LinkedIn / Social Selling SLA: 10–15 min
Description
Engage with TA posts, TSD announcements, and channel community content on LinkedIn. Comment meaningfully (not just "great post"). Share relevant content. The channel community lives on LinkedIn. If the channel manager isn't visible there daily, they're invisible to the advisor community that drives revenue.
CRM Action Items
Track social engagement as activity. Log meaningful interactions with partners.
Why This Matters
LinkedIn is where advisors discover leaders and build reputation. Daily visibility establishes you as an active channel professional, not a transactional order processor.

Weekly Activities

Ten activities that define the weekly operating rhythm. These are the structural disciplines that keep pipeline clean, partners engaged, and forecasts honest.

01 Monday Pipeline Scrub SLA: 30 min
Description
Review every active deal. Update stages, close dates, amounts. Apply the 30/60 Rule: any deal at 30 days without meaningful engagement gets a status check. At 60 days without documented progress, review for potential release. Kill dead deals. Clean pipeline = accurate forecast.
CRM Action Items
Pipeline review dashboard. Auto-flag deals 30+ and 60+ days stale.
Why This Matters
Dead deals in your pipeline are forecast poison. The 30/60 rule forces ruthless honesty about deal health and prevents the psychological bias of hoping deals will move on their own.
02 TSD Field Team Sync SLA: 15–30 min per TSD
Description
Regular touchpoints with TSD channel managers, field reps, and solutions engineers. Review pipeline, discuss TA opportunities, coordinate on enablement. These are the people who recommend you (or don't) to their advisor networks. Relationship depth here directly impacts deal flow.
CRM Action Items
Log TSD sync meetings. Track TSD field rep engagement.
Why This Matters
TSD field teams are the gatekeepers to their advisor networks. They recommend channel programs to advisors. If this relationship is weak, you're invisible to the people who control your pipeline.
03 Partner Enablement Activity SLA: 45–60 min
Description
Training sessions, product updates, competitive positioning calls with TAs. Can be 1:1 or small group. Focus on making TAs more effective at selling your solution. Share battlecards, case studies, objection handling. An enabled TA sells 3x more than an unenabled one.
CRM Action Items
Track enablement activities per partner. Note topics covered.
Why This Matters
Enablement is the most leveraged activity in channel management. One hour of training with a TA can unlock weeks of additional selling effort.
04 Stalled Deal Intervention SLA: 30–60 min
Description
Review all deals flagged as stalled (7+ days in same stage with no activity). Reach out to the TA, understand the blocker, offer resources. If the deal is dead, close it. If it's stuck, create a specific action plan with dates. Stalled deals don't unstall themselves.
CRM Action Items
Stall detection workflow (7 days). Intervention logged as activity.
Why This Matters
The difference between a managed channel and a reactive one is intervention. Identifying blockers early and removing them is channel management.
05 Internal Resource Coordination SLA: 30–60 min
Description
Coordinate with SEs, product team, marketing, and legal on active deals and partner needs. Pre-sales technical support, custom demo requests, contract reviews, marketing collateral. The channel manager is the quarterback — they connect partners to internal resources.
CRM Action Items
SE resource assignment, internal task tracking.
Why This Matters
Partners judge your company by how fast internal teams respond. The channel manager's job is to make internal resources feel like an extension of the partner's team.
06 New Partner Onboarding Check-ins SLA: 15–30 min each
Description
Any partner in their first 90 days gets a weekly check-in. Are they progressing through onboarding? Have they accessed training? Do they have their first deal in pipeline? The first 90 days determine whether a TA becomes a producer or goes dormant.
CRM Action Items
Onboarding pipeline (Identified → First Contact → Onboarding → Activated). Weekly task auto-created.
Why This Matters
The first 90 days determine lifetime value. Partners who feel abandoned in onboarding never become producers. Heavy touch early creates lasting relationships.
07 Partner Recruitment Activity SLA: 2–3 hours
Description
Identify and pursue new TA relationships. Work with TSD field teams to get introductions. Attend virtual events. Research TAs in target verticals. A healthy channel program adds 2–3 qualified new partners per month. Recruitment never stops.
CRM Action Items
Partner recruitment pipeline. Track source, TSD, vertical, status.
Why This Matters
Partner acquisition is as important as deal acquisition. Without new partners entering the funnel, the program plateaus.
08 Friday Forecast Update SLA: 15 min
Description
End-of-week pipeline snapshot. Update commit/upside/best case categories. Ensure all deal amounts and close dates reflect reality, not hope. This becomes the basis for Monday's pipeline scrub and the monthly business review.
CRM Action Items
Forecast properties updated. Weekly snapshot auto-captured.
Why This Matters
Forecast credibility depends on consistent, honest updates. Friday's snapshot becomes the baseline for tracking velocity.
09 Win/Loss Debrief SLA: 15–20 min
Description
Review any deals that closed won or lost during the week. What worked? What killed it? Was the TA well-supported? Was the competitive positioning effective? Did the quote go out fast enough? Log the pattern. This is how you improve the program — not by guessing, but by studying what actually happened.
CRM Action Items
Win/loss reason field required on every closed deal. Weekly report auto-generated.
Why This Matters
Pattern recognition is how you systematize wins and eliminate loss patterns. Every close should teach you something.
10 Customer Health / Renewal Monitoring SLA: 20–30 min
Description
Review active accounts approaching renewal (90, 60, 30 days out). Check for churn risk signals: support ticket volume, usage decline, billing disputes. If a customer churns, the advisor loses their residual income and blames the supplier. This is preventive, not reactive. The channel manager should never be surprised by a churn event.
CRM Action Items
Renewal date tracking. Auto-alert at 90/60/30 days. Churn risk score property.
Why This Matters
Renewal quality directly impacts partner lifetime value. Customers that churn make advisors question channel relationships and devalue the partnership.

Monthly Activities

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.

01 Monthly Business Review (Internal) SLA: 60–90 min
Description
Present to leadership: pipeline health, revenue forecast, partner engagement metrics, program KPIs, commission status, competitive landscape. This is not a status update — it's a strategic review. What's working, what's not, what needs to change.
CRM Action Items
Monthly report auto-generated. Pipeline, revenue, partner activity, deal velocity.
Why This Matters
This is your chance to influence strategy and get support for program improvements. Data-driven insights beat intuition every time.
02 Partner Segmentation Review SLA: 30 min
Description
Review partner tiers based on trailing 90-day activity. Tiers: Active Producer, Developing, New Partner, Dormant, Inactive. Move partners between tiers. Adjust engagement strategy per tier. Don't spend the same energy on a dormant partner as an active producer.
CRM Action Items
Monthly tier evaluation workflow. Auto-calculate based on deal activity, engagement, revenue.
Why This Matters
Resource allocation should match partner revenue potential. Segmentation forces intentional choices about where to invest your time.
03 Commission Reconciliation SLA: 60 min
Description
Verify every commission payment matches the deal, the rate, and the timeline. Check for disputes, late payments, missing statements. Commission accuracy is the single fastest way to build or destroy trust in the channel. One incorrect statement undoes months of relationship building.
CRM Action Items
Commission status tracking. Escalation alert if payment exceeds 45 days past due.
Why This Matters
Commission accuracy is non-negotiable. Partners will forgive late payments if they're transparent and correct. They will never forgive wrong payments.
04 Strategic Partner Development SLA: 60 min
Description
Deep-dive with top-tier partners. Business planning, growth targets, co-marketing opportunities, vertical expansion. This is not a deal review — it's a relationship investment. Top producers want to know you're invested in their growth, not just their deals.
CRM Action Items
Partner development plan property. Quarterly goals tracked.
Why This Matters
Top partners expect partnership, not just transactions. Strategic conversations keep top producers engaged and loyal.
05 SPIFF and Incentive Program Management SLA: 30–60 min
Description
Review active SPIFFs. Track qualification, payout status, program effectiveness. Are SPIFFs driving the right behavior? Plan next month's incentives. SPIFFs must be paid within 30 days of qualification — late SPIFF payments are talked about.
CRM Action Items
SPIFF qualification workflow. Payout tracking. Program ROI measurement.
Why This Matters
SPIFFs are the fastest way to drive behavior change, or the fastest way to waste budget if poorly designed. Monthly review ensures ROI.
06 MDF and Co-Marketing Planning SLA: 60 min
Description
Plan co-marketing activities with TSDs and TAs. Webinars, events, content, campaigns. Allocate MDF budget. Track ROI on previous activities. Marketing without measurement is just spending.
CRM Action Items
MDF budget tracking. Campaign attribution. Lead/deal source from marketing activities.
Why This Matters
Co-marketing is how you amplify partner reach. Without measurement, you can't tell if you're generating ROI or just spending.
07 TSD Portal and Marketplace Audit SLA: 30–60 min
Description
Review your listing on every TSD marketplace. Is collateral current? Are videos working? Is pricing accurate? Is your Power Brief updated? Is your logo in the right format? TSD portals are your storefront. A stale listing is a closed store.
CRM Action Items
Portal audit checklist. Track last update date per TSD.
Why This Matters
TSDs direct their advisors to your portal first. A stale listing signals that you're not invested in the partnership.
08 Events and Field Activity Planning SLA: 60 min
Description
Plan upcoming events: TSD conferences, advisor summits, regional meetups, webinars. Book travel, coordinate sponsorships, prepare materials. Events are where relationships are built and deals are seeded. Under-investing here is under-investing in pipeline.
CRM Action Items
Event tracking. ROI measurement (deals sourced, partners recruited).
Why This Matters
In-person relationships are harder to replicate than remote ones. Events are where you cement relationships and seed next quarter's deals.
09 Post-Sale Account Reviews SLA: 60 min
Description
Review all accounts in post-sale pipeline: implementation status, go-live progress, first bill accuracy, 30/60/90-day check-in status. The post-sale experience determines whether the TA sells you again. A smooth implementation is your best marketing.
CRM Action Items
Post-sale pipeline. Milestone tracking. Advisor communication cadence automated.
Why This Matters
Every implementation problem becomes a sales objection for the next deal. Advisor confidence in your post-sale team is as important as confidence in your product.
10 Content and Collateral Review SLA: 30 min
Description
Audit all partner-facing materials: one-pagers, battlecards, case studies, slide decks, videos. Is anything outdated? Does competitive positioning reflect current market? Are case studies recent? Stale collateral undermines credibility.
CRM Action Items
Content library with last-updated tracking.
Why This Matters
Stale collateral signals that the program is stale. Partners notice when case studies are from 2 years ago or pricing has changed.
11 Channel KPI Scorecard SLA: 30 min
Description
Grade yourself. Deal velocity by stage, conversion rate, average days to close, partner engagement rate (% of active partners with activity this month), quote-to-close ratio, commission accuracy rate, new partner activation rate. This is the mirror. Look at it honestly.
CRM Action Items
Auto-calculated KPI dashboard. Month-over-month trending.
Why This Matters
You can't improve what you don't measure. Monthly KPI review keeps you accountable and helps identify trends early.
12 Lost Deal Pattern Analysis SLA: 30 min
Description
Monthly roll-up of lost deals. Are deals dying at the same stage? Is one TSD consistently underperforming? Is a competitor winning on price or product? Are deals stalling in specific verticals? This is not individual win/loss — this is pattern recognition. Fix the system, not just the deal.
CRM Action Items
Loss reason analysis report. Competitor won tracking. Stage-of-death analysis.
Why This Matters
Patterns repeat. If 30% of deals die in Quoting, that's a process problem, not a luck problem. Identify patterns and fix them.

Quarterly Activities

Four activities that define the quarterly operating rhythm. These are the strategic reviews and relationship investments that determine program direction and long-term growth.

01 TSD Quarterly Business Review (QBR) SLA: 90 min per TSD
Description
The most important meeting in the channel manager's quarter. Present to TSD channel leadership: pipeline performance, advisor adoption, revenue contribution, deal velocity, marketing ROI, and growth plan. Come with data, not excuses. Propose specific initiatives for the next quarter. QBRs are where you prove you're worth the shelf space.
CRM Action Items
QBR prep dashboard. Quarterly performance report auto-generated per TSD.
Why This Matters
TSDs allocate resources to suppliers who demonstrate performance and preparation. An unprepared QBR signals a weak program. A strong QBR earns more shelf space.
02 Partner Advisory Council SLA: 60–90 min
Description
Gather your top 5–8 producing TAs for a call. What's working? What's broken? What do they need? What are competitors doing better? This is your product feedback loop from the field. TAs will tell you things in a council that they'll never say in a 1:1. Act on the feedback visibly.
CRM Action Items
Council meeting logged. Action items tracked. Feedback themes documented.
Why This Matters
Partner advisory councils legitimize your program and create a feedback loop. Acting on feedback demonstrates that partners' voices shape strategy.
03 Channel Program Strategic Review SLA: 90 min
Description
Step back from operations. Are we in the right TSDs? Is our ICP still valid? Do commission rates need adjusting? Is headcount adequate? Are we hiring the right roles for the next growth phase? This is the quarterly gut-check that prevents strategic drift.
CRM Action Items
Program health scorecard. Strategic initiative tracking.
Why This Matters
Operational excellence at the wrong strategy is a waste. Quarterly reviews keep the program aligned with market conditions and company priorities.
04 Compensation and Incentive Review SLA: 60 min
Description
Are SPIFFs driving the right behavior? Is the base commission structure competitive? Are top producers being recognized? Are incentive trips / President's Club equivalents planned? Quarterly review against market rates and program performance. The channel votes with its attention — compensation is how you earn it.
CRM Action Items
Commission rate benchmarking. SPIFF ROI analysis. Incentive program planning.
Why This Matters
Compensation is the fastest way to change behavior. If you're not addressing it quarterly, you're leaving leverage on the table.

Channel Management Best Practices

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.

Communication & Relationship Management

Every partner has a preferred way to communicate. Your job is to learn it, not impose yours.

Ask How They Want to Be Reached

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.

Respond Even When You Don't Have the Answer

"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.

Deliver Bad News 1:1 First

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.

Remember the Person Behind the Partnership

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.

Mirror Their Cadence Preferences

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.

Never Bury the Lead

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.

Selling Through, Not To

You don't sell to partners. You sell through them. That distinction changes everything about how you operate.

The TA Owns the Customer — Always

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.

Position Yourself as Their Competitive Advantage

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.

Share Intel Freely

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.

Post-Call Summaries Are Non-Negotiable

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?"

Celebrate Their Wins Publicly

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.

Operational Discipline

Channel management is an operational role disguised as a relationship role. The best channel managers run tight processes.

Quote Accuracy Over Quote Speed

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.

Document Like You're Leaving Tomorrow

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.

Never Let a Commission Dispute Last More Than One Pay Cycle

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.

Treat Every TSD Field Rep Like a Customer

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.

Kill Dead Deals Without Mercy

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.

Build Your CRM for Reporting, Not Just Logging

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.

Program Intelligence

Data without interpretation is noise. The best channel managers are pattern hunters.

Know Your Numbers Cold

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.

Study Losses Harder Than Wins

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.

Match Enablement to Their Sweet Spot

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.

Track Leading Indicators, Not Just Lagging Ones

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.

Benchmark Against Yourself First

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.

Partner Onboarding & Activation

The first 90 days of a partner relationship determine whether they become a producer or a name in your CRM.

Over-Communicate in the First 30 Days

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.

Get Them to Their First Deal Fast

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.

Assign a Single Point of Contact

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.

Set Expectations in Writing

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.

Event & Field Engagement

Events are where pipeline is seeded, relationships are cemented, and reputations are built. Show up prepared.

Work the Floor With a Plan

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.

Follow Up Within 24 Hours

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.

Host, Don't Just Attend

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.

Capture Event Intel in the CRM

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.

The Channel Standard Companion

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:

  • Communication tracking — Log every partner touchpoint and get alerts when engagement drops below your defined threshold. Know which partners haven't heard from you in 14 days before they become dormant.
  • Quote SLA monitoring — Automatic timers from quote request to quote delivery. Get flagged when you're approaching the 4-hour standard SLA or the 24-hour complex SLA. No deals stall because a quote sat in a queue.
  • Partner engagement scoring — Algorithmic scoring based on activity frequency, deal flow, enablement participation, and communication cadence. See at a glance which partners are thriving and which need intervention.
  • Pipeline health automation — The 30/60 Rule enforced automatically. Stall detection, stage velocity tracking, and forecast accuracy scoring — all surfaced in a single dashboard.
  • Onboarding workflow — Automated 90-day onboarding sequences with milestone tracking. New partners get the right touchpoints at the right time without the channel manager manually managing a calendar.
  • CRM integration — Works with your existing CRM. No rip-and-replace. Layers intelligence on top of the data you're already capturing.
See how The Channel Standard Companion turns these best practices into automated workflows. Learn More →

Top 75 Partners

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.

Tier 1: Active Producers
15–20 partners

Consistent deal flow. Revenue contributors. Get the most attention. These are your revenue engine.

Weekly Minimum 1 meaningful touchpoint (call, email, or joint activity)
Monthly Deal review + development discussion (30 min)
Quarterly Strategic business plan review (60 min)
Always Priority response (2h SLA on any request)
Tier 2: Developing
20–25 partners

Have registered deals or shown intent. Need enablement and support to produce. Potential for growth.

Weekly Minimum 1 touchpoint (check-in, enablement, deal support)
Bi-weekly Enablement session or co-sell opportunity
Monthly Progress review and goal setting (15–20 min)
Always Same-day response (4h SLA)
Tier 3: New Partners
10–15 partners

In first 90 days. Onboarding in progress. High-touch until activated. Critical onboarding phase.

Weekly Onboarding check-in (15 min)
Bi-weekly Training/enablement session
Monthly 30/60/90-day milestone review
First Deal Channel manager joins the first customer call
Tier 4: Strategic Targets
15–20 partners

Not yet partners. Identified as high-potential recruits. Active recruitment in progress. Future pipeline.

Bi-weekly Recruitment outreach (call, email, LinkedIn, event invite)
Monthly TSD field team coordination on introductions
Quarterly Evaluate target list — add/remove based on fit and response

TSD Personnel Cadence

In addition to working with your 75 partners, maintain these engagement rhythms with TSD teams who control your access to their advisor networks.

TSD Channel Managers (Your Primary Contact)
Weekly 15–30 min sync call per TSD. Pipeline review, TA opportunities, co-marketing status.
Monthly Business review with data. What's working, what needs support.
Quarterly QBR participation. Present performance, propose initiatives.
Always Respond to their requests within 2 hours. They control your access to their advisor network.
TSD Solutions Engineers / Technical Resources
As Needed Pre-sale technical support for advisor deals. Always brief them before a call, never cold-transfer.
Monthly Relationship maintenance. Coffee chat, share product roadmap updates, get their perspective on competitive positioning.
Quarterly Product training update. Keep them current on new features, integrations, use cases.
Key Rule: SEs talk to other SEs across TSDs. If your product is hard to demo or poorly documented, every SE in the ecosystem will know within a month.
TSD Supplier Managers / Vendor Relations
Monthly Check-in on program compliance, marketplace listing status, contract matters.
Quarterly QBR alignment. Ensure your data matches their data. Resolve any discrepancies before QBR.
Annually Contract renewal discussions. Start 90 days early.
Key Rule: Supplier managers evaluate you on responsiveness, data accuracy, and advisor adoption. Give them zero reasons to doubt your commitment.
TSD Marketing / Events Teams
Monthly Co-marketing planning. Webinar calendar, SPIFF announcements, content collaboration.
Quarterly Event sponsorship and participation planning. Budget allocation.
As Needed Collateral updates, portal listing changes, promotional campaigns.
Key Rule: Marketing teams have limited bandwidth. Come with finished materials, not requests to "put something together."

CRM Architecture

The structural backbone of channel operations. These workflows, properties, and pipelines transform activity into measurable results.

Deal Pipeline Stages

StageForecast ProbabilityEntry Criteria
Registered10%TA submitted registration through TSD
Qualified20%Registration accepted, conflict verified, deal profile complete
Discovery30%Initial customer call scheduled or completed, needs identified
Quoting50%Quote requested and in progress or delivered
Proposal65%Quote accepted, formal proposal sent, decision criteria documented
Verbal Commit85%Customer verbally committed, contract terms being finalized
Contract Sent95%Contract issued to customer, signature pending
Closed Won100%Contract signed, deal closed, moves to post-sale
Closed Lost0%Deal lost to competitor or customer decision, loss reason documented

Additional Pipelines

PipelineStagesPurpose
Partner RecruitmentIdentified → First Contact → Engagement → Activated / DeclinedTrack new partner acquisition and onboarding progression
Post-SaleImplementation → Go-Live → First Bill Review → 30/60/90-Day Check-In → Steady StateMonitor customer health, renewals, and expansion opportunities

Pipeline Rules and Governance

No Stage Regression: Once a deal moves to Quoting or beyond, it cannot move backward without channel manager override + documented reason.
No Stage Skipping: Deals must progress sequentially. Cannot jump from Registered directly to Proposal without passing through intermediate stages.
Required Properties at Stage Gates: Each stage transition requires specific properties to be completed before advancement is allowed.
Conflict Status Override: When Conflict Status = "Under Review," all stage workflows are paused. Deal cannot progress until conflict is resolved and status updated.

Core Automated Workflows (18)

Workflow NameTriggerAction
Daily DigestEvery morning at 6amSend email with deals due today, tasks overdue, stale deals (7+ days)
Registration AlertNew deal registration submittedInstant Slack/email alert. Create deal. Auto-assign to channel manager. Start 4h SLA timer.
Stage Change LogDeal stage changesAuto-log activity with timestamp, previous stage, new stage, change reason
Stall Detection (7 days)Deal in same stage for 7+ days with no activity loggedFlag deal "Stalled," send alert to channel manager, suggest intervention actions
Registration Expiry WarningDeal registered 14+ days ago, still in "Registered" stageSend warning: registration expires in 14 days. Require stage change or deal closes.
Quote Follow-UpQuote sent 48 hours ago, no response loggedSend reminder email to TA. Update activity log. Set follow-up in 48h if no response.
Dormancy AlertPartner: no activity logged in 21 daysFlag partner "Dormant," alert channel manager, suggest outreach activities
Closed Won ProcessingDeal moves to "Closed Won"Auto-create post-sale record, set implementation milestones, notify ops team
Closed Lost CaptureDeal moves to "Closed Lost"Require loss reason, competitor (if applicable), lessons learned before deal closes
Post-Sale MilestonesDeal closed won, post-sale record createdAuto-create tasks for implementation, go-live, 30/60/90-day check-ins on cadence
Conflict AlertOverlapping registration detected (first-to-register check)Instant alert to channel manager, set Conflict Status = "Under Review," pause workflows
SPIFF QualificationDeal meets SPIFF criteria (e.g., closes with specific term, margin, or product)Auto-qualify deal, calculate SPIFF amount, flag for payout approval
SPIFF PayoutSPIFF approved for paymentSubmit to finance/payroll, track payment date, log to TA record
Monthly Tier EvaluationFirst day of monthAuto-calculate partner tier based on trailing 90-day activity, update tier assignments
Commission Escalation (45 days)Commission payment overdue 45+ daysAlert finance and channel manager. Require explanation and corrective action.
Onboarding TasksPartner moves to "Onboarding" stageAuto-create weekly tasks: account setup, training scheduling, product orientation
Onboarding Stall AlertPartner in onboarding 30+ days with <3 completed tasksAlert channel manager. Partner at risk of dormancy. Escalate engagement.
Renewal Alert (90/60/30)Customer approaching renewal dateAlert at 90 days (plan), 60 days (engage), 30 days (commit). Track renewal status.

Contact Record Properties (15 Properties)

Property NameTypePurpose
Contact NameTextFull name of TA/TSD field rep
Contact RoleDropdownValues: Sales Rep, Solutions Engineer, TSD Channel Mgr, TSD Field Rep, Account Executive, Other
Associated OrganizationLinked RecordLinks to Partner/TSD company record
EmailEmailPrimary contact email
PhonePhoneDirect phone number
LinkedIn URLURLLinkedIn profile link
Partner TierDropdownValues: Active Producer, Developing, New Partner, Dormant, Inactive (assigned to parent partner record)
Last Activity DateDateAuto-populated: most recent activity date
Days Since Last ActivityCalculatedAuto-calculated: today - last activity date
Total Deals RegisteredCalculatedCount of all deals registered by or with this contact
Revenue Contribution (Last 90 Days)CalculatedSum of closed-won deal amounts in last 90 days
Assigned Channel ManagerLinked Record / UserWhich channel manager owns this relationship
Engagement LevelDropdownValues: High, Medium, Low (based on activity frequency)
Recruitment SourceTextHow we identified this partner (TSD intro, event, LinkedIn, etc.)
Notes / BioLong TextRelationship notes, preferences, strategic value

Deal Record Properties (30 Properties)

Property NameTypePurpose
Deal NameTextCustomer name + product/term description
Deal AmountCurrencyTotal contract value (ACV or ARR as defined)
Close DateDateExpected or actual close date
StageDropdownRegistered, Qualified, Discovery, Quoting, Proposal, Verbal Commit, Contract Sent, Closed Won, Closed Lost
Forecast Probability %CalculatedAuto-populated from stage (10%, 20%, 30%, 50%, 65%, 85%, 95%, 100%, 0%)
Registration DateDateDate deal was registered with TSD
Days Since RegistrationCalculatedAuto-calculated: today - registration date (for stall detection)
Days in Current StageCalculatedAuto-calculated: days deal has been in current stage (triggers stall alert at 7 days)
Trusted Advisor / TALinked RecordWhich TA registered or is driving deal
TSD PartnerLinked RecordWhich TSD the TA operates through
Customer NameTextEnd customer's organization name
Customer Industry / VerticalDropdownVertical categorization for pattern analysis
Decision CriteriaLong TextWhat customer is evaluating (price, features, timeline, integration, etc.)
Competitive ThreatDropdown / Linked RecordWhich competitor(s) are in the deal
Deal NotesLong TextRunning log of all conversation notes, updates, blockers, action items
Quote Requested DateDateWhen TA requested quote
Quote Sent DateDateWhen quote was delivered to TA
Quote StatusDropdownPending, Sent, Accepted, Rejected, Rework Required
Last Activity DateDateMost recent logged activity on deal (auto-populated from activity feed)
Days Since Last ActivityCalculatedAuto-calculated (triggers stall alerts)
Stall StatusDropdownClean, At Risk (5+ days), Stalled (7+ days) — auto-updated by workflow
Conflict StatusDropdownNone, Flagged, Under Review, Resolved — pauses workflows when "Under Review"
Conflict NotesLong TextDetails of conflict and resolution
Next Action RequiredTextClear description of what happens next and by whom
Next Action Due DateDateBy when the next action must be completed
Close ReasonDropdownFor closed deals: Product, Price, Service, Competitor, Timeline, Budget, Other
Win/Loss CategoryDropdownWon (product choice, price, service, relationship), Lost (to competitor, lost deal, budget, timeline, other)
SPIFF EligibleCheckboxDoes deal meet SPIFF criteria? Auto-calculated from SPIFF rules
Commission Rate %NumberCommission percentage applied to this deal
Commission AmountCalculated CurrencyDeal Amount x Commission Rate %
Commission StatusDropdownNot Applicable, Pending, Paid, Disputed

Glossary

Key terms and definitions that form the shared language of channel management.

TSD (Technology Service Distributor)
A wholesale distributor that aggregates multiple technology solutions and sells them to a network of Trusted Advisors. TSDs control access to their advisor networks and set the terms of supplier participation.
TA (Trusted Advisor)
An independent IT consulting firm, systems integrator, or value-added reseller that purchases solutions through a TSD and resells them directly to end customers. TAs maintain customer relationships and manage implementations.
Channel Manager
Supplier-side role responsible for managing the relationship with a TSD, recruiting and supporting TAs, driving deal registration, monitoring pipeline, managing partner engagement, and driving revenue through the channel.
Deal Registration
The formal process where a TA submits an opportunity to the supplier through the TSD portal, declaring intent to work an opportunity with a customer. Registration establishes first-to-register rights and protects the TA from channel conflict.
The 30/60 Rule
A pipeline hygiene discipline: any deal stalled (no documented activity) for 30+ days triggers a status check. At 60+ days, the deal should be closed or a specific recovery plan documented. Prevents false pipeline.
Partner Tiers
Segmentation of partners based on activity and revenue: Tier 1 (Active Producers), Tier 2 (Developing), Tier 3 (New Partners), Tier 4 (Strategic Targets). Determines engagement cadence and resource allocation.
SPIFF (Special Performance Incentive Fund)
Short-term cash incentive paid to partners for achieving specific deal criteria (e.g., closing by a certain date, including specific products, meeting margin targets). Must be paid within 30 days of qualification.
MDF (Market Development Funds)
Budget allocated to co-marketing activities with partners: webinars, events, content, advertising. Requires ROI tracking and attribution to pipeline/deals.
QBR (Quarterly Business Review)
Formal quarterly meeting between channel manager and TSD leadership to review program performance, pipeline, revenue contribution, KPIs, and strategic initiatives. Critical for program continuation and investment.
Joint Call
Call where channel manager and TA both participate with a customer. Channel manager provides product/technical expertise. TA maintains customer relationship. Requires post-call summary within 2 hours.
Channel Conflict
Situation where two TAs register the same opportunity (or a TA and direct sales register the same deal). Resolved via first-to-register rule. Can also occur when a TA works outside their AOR.
AOR (Agent of Record)
The TA designated as the primary representative for a given customer or opportunity, often based on account assignment, geography, or relationship history. Protects the TA from channel conflicts.
Power Brief
Executive-level summary document published on TSD marketplaces describing your solution, value proposition, and key differentiators. Must be updated quarterly. Often a TA's first impression of your program.
ROE (Rules of Engagement)
Formal document outlining the terms of your channel program: commission rates, SPIFF eligibility, exclusivity rules, partner requirements, deal registration process, and conflict resolution procedures.
Battlecard
One-page competitive positioning document given to TAs comparing your solution against specific competitors. Includes key differentiators, messaging, pricing comparison, and objection handling.
Stale Deal
A deal in the pipeline with no documented activity for 7+ days. Indicates the deal may be dead or the TA has lost momentum. Requires intervention or closure.
Dormant Partner
A partner with no activity logged in 21+ days. No deals registered, no outreach, no engagement. Should be moved to "Dormant" tier and re-engaged with specific outreach activities.
Commitment Pipeline
The subset of deals in pipeline that the channel manager commits to close in the current quarter. Includes Verbal Commit and Contract Sent stages. Differs from "Upside" (forecast but not committed) and "Best Case" (aspirational).