Skip to content
Logo — It’s All AboutThe Team
  • Home
  • Who We Serve
    • By Category
      • SaaS
      • Professional Services
      • Platforms (Large Ecosystems)
      • Private Equity
    • By Role
      • Chief Revenue Officers (CRO)
      • Chief Financial Officers (CFO)
      • Chief Marketing Officers (CMO)
      • Chief Executive Officers (CEO)
      • Sales Leaders
      • Partnership Professionals
  • Solutions
    • By Partner Program Maturity
      • Partnerships Foundation
      • Partnerships Acceleration
      • Ecosystem-Wide Orchestration
    • Specialized Solutions
      • Net-New Named Account Development
      • Large Ecosystems
      • M&A: Post-Acquisition Internal Cross-Selling
  • Education
  • Company
    • Our History
    • Security
  • Login
Logo — It’s All AboutThe Team
  • Home
  • Who We Serve
    • By Category
      • SaaS
      • Professional Services
      • Platforms (Large Ecosystems)
      • Private Equity
    • By Role
      • Chief Revenue Officers (CRO)
      • Chief Financial Officers (CFO)
      • Chief Marketing Officers (CMO)
      • Chief Executive Officers (CEO)
      • Sales Leaders
      • Partnership Professionals
  • Solutions
    • By Partner Program Maturity
      • Partnerships Foundation
      • Partnerships Acceleration
      • Ecosystem-Wide Orchestration
    • Specialized Solutions
      • Net-New Named Account Development
      • Large Ecosystems
      • M&A: Post-Acquisition Internal Cross-Selling
  • Education
  • Company
    • Our History
    • Security
  • Login
  • Home
  • Who We Serve
    • By Category
      • SaaS
      • Professional Services
      • Platforms (Large Ecosystems)
      • Private Equity
    • By Role
      • Chief Revenue Officers (CRO)
      • Chief Financial Officers (CFO)
      • Chief Marketing Officers (CMO)
      • Chief Executive Officers (CEO)
      • Sales Leaders
      • Partnership Professionals
  • Solutions
    • By Partner Program Maturity
      • Partnerships Foundation
      • Partnerships Acceleration
      • Ecosystem-Wide Orchestration
    • Specialized Solutions
      • Net-New Named Account Development
      • Large Ecosystems
      • M&A: Post-Acquisition Internal Cross-Selling
  • Education
  • Company
    • Our History
    • Security
  • Login
Back to all blogs
  • Partner Tech & PRM
Alex Buckles

Partner Relationship Management: What It Is, How It Works

A partner operations lead and a channel manager at a monitor walking through a partner relationship management workflow, the screen showing a partner roster, deal registrations, and a tier ladder, a printed onboarding checklist on the table, deep navy and warm amber palette

What is partner relationship management?

Short answer: Partner relationship management is the operating discipline, and the software behind it, for recruiting, onboarding, enabling, and measuring the partners who help you win business. It runs the partner side of your go-to-market the way a CRM runs the direct side, giving each partner a defined motion and giving you a number you can defend.

Partner relationship management covers both the practice and the tooling. As a practice, it is how a company turns signed partners into producing partners through a repeatable sequence of recruit, onboard, enable, and measure. As tooling, a PRM platform is the system of record that holds the partner roster, deal registrations, content, and reporting in one place so that work does not live in spreadsheets and inbox threads.

Why partner relationship management matters in 2026

Partner relationship management matters in 2026 because partner-influenced revenue is now a line leadership expects to see, and you cannot report a number you never instrumented. A program run out of a spreadsheet hits a ceiling fast: nobody can tell which partner sourced which deal, enablement content goes stale, and onboarding depends on whoever happens to remember the steps. The discipline exists to remove that fragility.

The second reason is that ecosystems have gotten bigger and more layered. A modern program might run technology partners, channel resellers, services firms, and referral sources at once, each with a different motion. Partner relationship management gives each motion its own lane inside one system, so a tech-partner deal registration and a reseller margin claim are handled by the same operating model rather than by four disconnected processes.

How partner relationship management actually works

Partner relationship management works as a sequence, not a switch you flip. Each stage feeds the next, and a gap in any one of them shows up as leakage later, so the order is the point.

partner relationship management framework showing the four-stage operating model: recruit and qualify partners, onboard and activate, enable and co-sell, measure and report

  1. Recruit and qualify: Identify partners who already have a reason to work with you and bring them in deliberately, rather than opening a sign-up page to anyone. The qualifying question is whether a partner touches the same customers you want, not whether they will accept a badge.
  2. Onboard and activate: Give a new partner a defined first action, the materials to take it, and a named contact, all in the first weeks. A partner who cannot tell what to do or who to call after signing will do nothing, and activation is where most programs quietly stall.
  3. Enable and co-sell: Equip partners with current positioning, deal-registration mechanics, and joint-selling support so they can actually move a deal with you. Enablement is continuous, not a one-time kit, because the product and the pitch keep changing.
  4. Measure and report: Instrument attribution so every partner-sourced and partner-influenced deal is tagged from the first touch, then report it the way leadership reports direct pipeline. A program you cannot measure cannot be managed or defended at budget time.

You are running partner relationship management well when a partner can name their next action, claim a deal without friction, and show up tagged in your pipeline, and badly when you have a long roster and no partner-sourced number to point to.

Common pitfalls in partner relationship management

  • Buying tooling before defining the motion: A PRM platform automates whatever process you give it, so a vague program just produces automated confusion. Define the recruit-onboard-enable-measure motion on paper before you configure software around it.
  • Treating onboarding as paperwork: Collecting a signed agreement is not activation. If a partner finishes onboarding without a defined first action and a named contact, the program has signed a logo and produced nothing.
  • Letting enablement go stale: A content library that was current at launch and never refreshed actively misleads partners. Stale positioning loses deals more quietly than no positioning at all.
  • Skipping attribution until later: Standing up the program first and adding measurement after the fact means the early wins cannot be attributed and the number cannot be defended. Instrument attribution before launch.

Tools and examples

A PRM platform is the system of record for the motion above. The market splits into a few recognizable groups, and the right fit depends on which partner types you run and how deep your data needs go. The table below frames the options at a category level rather than ranking them.

Tool group What it is built for Representative platforms
Full-suite PRM End-to-end recruit, onboard, enable, deal-reg, and reporting Impartner, Allbound, ZINFI, Introw, Euler
Ecosystem and overlap data Account mapping and partner-overlap signals that feed co-sell Crossbeam, Pocus, Common Room
Cloud co-sell and marketplace Routing co-sell motions through hyperscaler marketplaces Tackle, Labra, Suger, Clazar

A worked example: a B2B software company running both resellers and technology partners started in a spreadsheet, then moved to a full-suite PRM once deal registrations outgrew manual tracking. They wired partner-overlap data from an ecosystem tool into the platform so that a partner’s account map drove which deals got registered, and they pushed qualified co-sell into their cloud marketplace through a co-sell layer. The point was not the logos they bought, it was that recruit, onboard, enable, and measure finally ran in one place with attribution intact.

Forecastable’s POV on partner relationship management

The position we hold is that partner relationship management is a motion you operate, and the platform is the place you operate it, in that order. Teams that buy a PRM platform expecting it to supply the program get an expensive roster. Teams that define the recruit-onboard-enable-measure motion first, then configure tooling to run it, get a program that produces. The software is leverage on a working motion, not a substitute for one.

The second conviction is that attribution is the spine of the whole discipline. Every other stage exists to produce partner-sourced and partner-influenced revenue, and if you cannot count that revenue, you cannot prove the program works. Instrument it from the first touch, report it next to direct pipeline, and the program earns its budget on evidence rather than on faith.

The third point is about focus. A program that tries to run every partner type at full depth on day one spreads its support too thin to activate any of them. Pick the motion that already produces, operate it well inside one system, and widen only when the first motion is proven. Restraint early is what makes scale possible later.

Forecastable is a partnerships operating platform; any third-party tools or platforms referenced here are independent third-party products, and naming them is not an endorsement of one deployment over another. Evaluate each against your own motion.

Frequently asked questions

What does partner relationship management mean?
Partner relationship management is both the discipline of recruiting, onboarding, enabling, and measuring partners and the software that runs it. It is the partner-side equivalent of how a CRM runs your direct sales motion.

Is partner relationship management the same as a PRM platform?
Not quite. The discipline is the operating model; the PRM platform is the system of record that holds the roster, deal registrations, content, and reporting. The platform runs the discipline, it does not replace the need for one.

How is partner relationship management different from CRM?
A CRM manages your direct relationships with prospects and customers. Partner relationship management handles the indirect motion: the partners who source, influence, and co-sell deals on your behalf, each with mechanics a CRM was not built to track.

When does a program need a PRM platform?
When deal registrations, onboarding steps, and reporting outgrow what a spreadsheet can hold reliably. If you cannot tell which partner sourced which deal without manual reconstruction, the program has outgrown manual tooling.

What is the first step in partner relationship management?
Define the motion: which partner type you recruit, what action you want, what they earn, and how you will measure it. Tooling comes after the motion is written down, never before.

Who owns partner relationship management internally?
Usually a partnerships or channel team, often led by a head of partnerships, with partner operations running the system and attribution. In a small program one person may own the whole motion until it grows.

What metrics prove partner relationship management is working?
Partner-sourced and partner-influenced revenue first, then leading signals like activation rate, registered deals, and time to a partner’s first deal. Signatures and logo counts are not outcomes.

Next step

If your partner program lives in a spreadsheet and you cannot name the partner-sourced number from memory, the move is to write down the recruit-onboard-enable-measure motion, instrument attribution, and only then choose the system to run it in.

Start your growth journey now to operate partner relationship management as a measurable motion, or get the broader orientation on partner technology and PRM for how the parts connect.

Uncover Your Growth Potential

Whether starting with a single sales team or a single partner, any co-sell motion can be live within 30 days.

Schedule a Discovery Call
Latest Insights
Three partnerships leaders scoring shortlisted partner relationship management software against a printed criteria sheet on a conference table, a monitor behind them showing a side-by-side feature matrix, deep navy and warm amber palette
  • Partner Tech & PRM
Alex Buckles

Best Partner Relationship Management Software: How to Pick

What does “best partner relationship management software” actually mean? Short answer: Best partner relationship management software is not a single product, it is the system that fits the specific partner motion you run. It is chosen by matching a platform’s real strengths, deal registration, attribution, enablement, and integration depth, to the program you operate, not […]

Read Article
A partnerships leader running a quarterly partner review with two managers, a wall monitor showing partner-sourced pipeline and a tier ladder, a printed best-practices checklist on the table being marked off, deep navy and warm amber palette
  • Partner Tech & PRM
Alex Buckles

Partner Relationship Management Best Practices for 2026

What are partner relationship management best practices? Short answer: Partner relationship management best practices are the operating habits that turn a partner program from a signed-logo list into a revenue motion, defining the partner job, activating fast, keeping enablement current, and instrumenting attribution before launch. They are about how you run the program day to […]

Read Article
A RevOps engineer and a partnerships manager configuring a partner relationship management platform on a large monitor, the screen showing automation rules wiring deal registration to the CRM, a printed integration map on the desk, deep navy and warm amber palette
  • Partner Tech & PRM
Alex Buckles

Partner Relationship Management Platform: What to Know

What is a partner relationship management platform? Short answer: A partner relationship management platform is the configurable system that runs an entire partner motion, recruiting, onboarding, enablement, deal registration, and reporting, and connects to the rest of your go-to-market stack. It is more than a portal: it is the place you operationalize the partner program […]

Read Article
A head of partnerships and a RevOps lead comparing partner relationship management software on a shared monitor, the screen showing a feature matrix of deal registration, onboarding, and reporting, a printed requirements checklist between them, deep navy and warm amber palette
  • Partner Tech & PRM
Alex Buckles

Partner Relationship Management Software: A Buyer’s Guide

What is partner relationship management software? Short answer: Partner relationship management software is the system of record for running a partner program, recruiting, onboarding, enabling, registering deals, and reporting partner-sourced revenue in one place. It does for the indirect motion what a CRM does for direct sales, so partner work stops scattering across spreadsheets and […]

Read Article
Logo — It’s All AboutThe Team

Quick Links

  • Who We Serve
  • Solutions
  • Resources
  • Pricing
  • Our History

Social Media

  • Linkedin

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Quick Links
  • Who We Serve
  • Solutions
  • Resources
  • Pricing
  • Our History
Social Media
  • Linkedin
Legal
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

Stay ahead on ecosystem-led growth

Logo — It’s All AboutThe Team
© 2025 Forecastable. All rights reserved.
Book Your Strategy Call
Request Enrollment Details

[contact-form-7 id=”dfbeed3″ title=”Request Enrollment Details”]

Mollie Bodensteiner

Revops Advisory
  Mollie Bodensteiner is an experienced operations professional with a demonstrated track record of utilizing technology to support operational processes that drive performance and innovation. She currently is the Vice President of Operations at Sound and owns go-to-market agency, MB Solutions. Mollie has previously held operations leadership roles at Deel, Syncari, Corteva and Marketo. She has over 14 years of experience in both B2C and B2B operations and technology. When she is not working, Mollie enjoys spending time with her husband, three small children, and two large dogs. Childhood Career/Dream: Growing up in the age of Disney and Nick@Nite I always wanted to be a child actor (good thing that never was actually pursued 🙂 Favorite Win: I am not sure I have a specific “win” but I think I get the most joy and excitement from coaching others and watching them hit major milestones in their career. The first time you get to promote someone on your team or watch them lead a major project – are always career highlights! Personal Fun Facts: Favorite Song: If it’s love, Train Favorite Movie: Good Will Hunting Favorite Meme: Disaster Girl
Forecastable resources: Co-Sell Orchestration Platform · All Use Cases · Live in 30 Days · Co-Sell Playbook

Kelsey Buckles

Director of Operations

 

My journey from Education to Operations has equipped me with a unique perspective and skill set that perfectly aligns with Forecastable’s mission to help businesses improve sales collaboration through partner co-selling strategies.

At Forecastable, I am passionate about empowering teams and organizations to unlock the full potential of strategic partnerships. By leveraging my expertise in communication, leadership, and operational efficiency, I contribute to creating seamless co-selling processes that align with business goals and deliver exceptional results.

The intersection of my educational foundation and operational experience fuels my dedication to fostering alignment, building trust, and enhancing collaboration between partners. I am driven by the opportunity to contribute to a platform that not only optimizes sales strategies but also strengthens relationships that lead to long-term growth.

Paul Jonhson

Chief Technology Officer (Co-founder)

 

Paul Johnson has 20+ years of software development and consulting experience for a variety of organizations, ranging from startups to large-enterprise organization with highly-complex needs.

Mr. Johnson has a long track record of successful technology deployments.
This, combined with his deep passion for machine learning and exceptional user experience design, allows him to lead our technical direction from the front with confidence.

Alex Buckles

Product, Partnerships, and Value Engineering (Co-founder)

 

After serving in The United States Marine Corps, Alex Buckles spent the next two decades as a student of revenue production and an advocate for innovation.

Along the way, he has helped numerous companies achieve double and triple-digit growth by crafting and executing high-performing go-to-market strategies, with co-selling at the center of each.

As a once-advanced technical marketer, an expert sales & partner professional, and a strong customer success advocate, Mr. Buckles understands the impact of these functions aligning not only on revenue production, but on the day-to-day execution of the go-to-market strategy. This concept of revenue-team alignment is what quickly became the foundation of Forecastable back in January of 2018.

In his free time, you’ll find him spending quality time with his children, one of whom is on the autism spectrum. 1 in 36 children in the U.S. are on the spectrum and boys are four times more likely to be diagnosed than girls.

With that in mind, Mr. Buckles plans on dedicating the rest of his life serving those living with autism, through his organization Pathways for Autism. From his perspective, there must be a scalable and financially self-sustaining infrastructure established to put as many individuals with autism as possible on a path towards complete independence as adults.