Role Purpose & Context
Role Summary
As our Head of Channel Sales Manager, you'll be running a key part of our indirect sales engine. Day-to-day, this means leading a team of Channel Account Managers (CAMs), making sure they're set up for success, and ultimately owning the channel revenue number for your patch – be that a specific region like EMEA or a particular partner segment. You'll sit at the intersection of our overall sales strategy and our partner ecosystem, making sure our partners are not just selling our stuff, but doing it well and profitably.
When you get this right, our channel revenue grows significantly, our partners feel valued, and our direct sales team sees the channel as a true accelerator, not a competitor. If it goes wrong, we'll see missed revenue targets, unhappy partners, and potentially a lot of internal conflict. The challenge here is balancing the needs of your team, our partners, and the wider business, often with conflicting priorities. The reward? Building a high-performing team and seeing your strategic decisions directly impact the company's top line.
Reporting Structure
- Reports to: VP of Channels & Alliances
- Direct reports: Typically 3-8 direct reports, which might include Senior Channel Account Managers or even other Channel Managers, leading a total team of 10-25 people.
- Matrix relationships:
Director of Channel Sales, Regional Channel Lead, Head of Partner Sales,
Key Stakeholders
Internal:
- VP of Channels & Alliances
- Regional Sales Directors (Direct Sales)
- Marketing Leadership
- Product Management
- Finance Business Partners
- Sales Operations
External:
- Strategic Partner Executives (CEOs, Sales Directors)
- Key Distribution Partners
- Industry Analysts
Organisational Impact
Scope: This role directly shapes our channel sales performance for a significant segment of the business. You'll influence how we go to market with partners, how we resolve conflicts, and how we invest our resources. Your decisions directly impact revenue growth, partner satisfaction, and the overall health of our indirect sales model. Get it right, and you're a hero; get it wrong, and it costs us millions in lost opportunity and partner churn.
Performance Metrics
Quantitative Metrics
- Metric: Total Channel Revenue (Regional/Functional)
- Desc: The overall revenue generated by partners within your assigned region or partner segment.
- Target: Achieve >95% of the annual revenue quota, aiming for 100%+.
- Freq: Monthly and Quarterly
- Example: Delivering £15M in channel-sourced revenue in Q3 against a £14M target, showing 107% attainment.
- Metric: Channel Contribution to Total Revenue
- Desc: The percentage of the company's total revenue that comes through your channel partners.
- Target: Increase channel-sourced revenue from 25% to 35% of total company revenue over 12 months.
- Freq: Quarterly
- Example: Seeing channel revenue grow from 28% to 32% of total company revenue in a single quarter.
- Metric: Partner ROI on MDF & Program Investments
- Desc: The return on investment for funds and resources we put into our partner programmes and Market Development Funds (MDF).
- Target: Demonstrate a >4x ROI on MDF and programme investments.
- Freq: Bi-annually
- Example: For every £1 we spend on MDF, we see £4.50 in partner-sourced revenue.
- Metric: Cost of Channel Sale (CCS)
- Desc: The cost incurred to generate £1 of revenue through the channel, including your team's salaries, programme costs, etc.
- Target: Reduce the Cost of Channel Sale by 10% year-over-year.
- Freq: Annually
- Example: Lowering CCS from £0.25 to £0.22 per £1 of revenue, indicating greater efficiency.
Qualitative Metrics
- Metric: Partner Programme Health & Satisfaction (PSAT)
- Desc: How happy and engaged our partners are with our programme, support, and overall relationship.
- Evidence: Consistently high scores (>8/10) in partner satisfaction surveys; partners actively participating in programme initiatives; unsolicited positive feedback from key partners; low partner churn rates for top-tier partners.
- Metric: Team Performance & Development
- Desc: The effectiveness and growth of your direct reports and the broader channel team.
- Evidence: Your team consistently hitting or exceeding individual quotas; strong retention rates for your CAMs; positive feedback from your team on your leadership and support; demonstrable career progression for individuals on your team; effective onboarding of new team members.
- Metric: Strategic Alignment & Execution
- Desc: How well your regional/functional channel strategy aligns with the broader company goals and how effectively it's being put into practice.
- Evidence: Your quarterly business reviews (QBRs) with the VP of Channels consistently show progress against strategic objectives; your team's activities are clearly linked to top-level company priorities; successful launch of new partner initiatives; proactive identification and mitigation of channel risks.
- Metric: Internal Stakeholder Collaboration
- Desc: Your ability to work effectively with other internal teams, particularly direct sales, marketing, and product.
- Evidence: Positive feedback from other department heads on your collaborative approach; minimal escalations of channel conflict to senior leadership; joint marketing campaigns with clear ROI; successful co-selling motions with the direct sales team.
Primary Traits
- Trait: Influential (Not Authoritative)
- Manifestation: You're the sort of person who can get a partner's CEO to shift their strategy to include more of our products, even though you don't sign their paycheque. You'll be mediating tricky situations between your team, direct sales, and partners, needing to gently steer everyone towards a common goal. It's about winning hearts and minds, not just giving orders.
- Benefit: At this level, you're not just influencing individual partners, but entire partner organisations and your own team. Your success in hitting your regional or functional channel number relies entirely on your ability to convince a diverse group of independent businesses and internal stakeholders to prioritise our objectives. Without strong influence, your programmes won't get off the ground, and your team won't have the backing they need.
- Trait: Decisive (Under Ambiguity)
- Manifestation: When a major partner isn't performing, you'll make the tough call to put them on a performance improvement plan, or even terminate the relationship, knowing it'll cause ripples. You'll have to quickly arbitrate channel conflicts that your team can't resolve, often with incomplete information, and stand by your decision. It's about cutting through the noise and making the call that's best for the business, even if it's unpopular.
- Benefit: The channel is inherently messy. You'll face complex situations with no clear-cut answers, from partner disputes to resource allocation decisions. Indecision at this level can paralyse your team, erode partner trust, and ultimately cost us revenue. We need someone who can weigh up imperfect information, make a call, and own the outcome, keeping the integrity of the programme intact.
- Trait: Accountable (For an Indirect Number)
- Manifestation: You'll stand in front of the CRO and own the channel revenue number for your region, even if a major partner's poor performance was the primary cause of a miss. You'll proactively flag risks in your team's partner forecasts, rather than hoping they'll magically fix themselves. You'd never publicly blame a partner or your team for a failure; you'd take responsibility and focus on the fix.
- Benefit: You're responsible for a significant P&L. The executive team needs to know there's one person who owns that number, regardless of how many external parties are involved. Demonstrating unwavering accountability, even for outcomes you don't directly control, builds the trust and credibility necessary to secure continued investment and autonomy for your channel organisation.
Supporting Traits
- Trait: Politically Astute
- Desc: You'll be navigating the often-tricky dynamics between the direct sales team, your channel team, and various internal departments. It means understanding unspoken rules and knowing how to get things done without stepping on too many toes.
- Trait: Empathetic
- Desc: You genuinely understand a partner's business model, their cash flow challenges, and what truly motivates them beyond just margin. This helps you design programmes and resolve issues in a way that resonates with them.
- Trait: Resilient
- Desc: Things will go wrong. A star partner might get acquired, a major deal will fall through, or an event will flop. You'll need to bounce back quickly, learn from it, and keep your team motivated.
- Trait: Financially Literate
- Desc: You'll need to understand concepts like contra-revenue, partner profitability, and deal margin analysis. This isn't just for the CFO; it helps you make better strategic decisions about where to invest our channel resources.
Primary Motivators
- Motivator: Building and Leading High-Performing Teams
- Daily: You'll spend a good chunk of your week coaching your CAMs, helping them strategise on tough partner accounts, and celebrating their wins. You'll genuinely enjoy seeing people on your team develop and hit their targets.
- Motivator: Strategic Impact & P&L Ownership
- Daily: You'll be constantly thinking about how to optimise your regional channel strategy, identifying new market opportunities, and making decisions that directly impact your P&L. You'll get a buzz from seeing your strategic plans turn into tangible revenue.
- Motivator: Solving Complex Ecosystem Challenges
- Daily: The channel is rarely straightforward. You'll be tackling tricky partner conflicts, figuring out how to scale enablement across diverse partner types, or designing new incentive models. If you enjoy untangling complex problems with many moving parts, you'll love this.
Potential Demotivators
Honestly, this role isn't for everyone. You'll spend a lot of time mediating internal politics and external partner demands, which can be exhausting. The 'urgent' request from a partner executive that disrupts your Thursday might get deprioritised by your own leadership on Friday. You'll design brilliant programmes that sometimes fall flat because partners don't adopt them, or because internal teams don't support them. If you need every piece of your strategic work to be perfectly executed and yield immediate, predictable results, you'll struggle here. The reality is messier than the job posting suggests, and you'll need a thick skin and a long-term view.
Common Frustrations
- The 'Partner Mirage': Spending months recruiting and onboarding a partner who says all the right things, only for them to become 'shelf-ware' and generate zero revenue.
- Internal Channel Conflict: The endless, soul-crushing battle with the direct sales team over a single deal, where the 'Rules of Engagement' are 'creatively interpreted' to benefit the direct rep.
- Fighting for Scraps: Constantly having to justify your team's existence and fight for marketing, enablement, and headcount resources against the larger, more politically powerful direct sales organisation.
- The Attribution Nightmare: A deal closes and five different people claim they influenced it. You know your partner sourced it, but proving it in the CRM is a forensic investigation.
- Herding Cats: Your success is 100% dependent on the performance of hundreds of non-employees who you can't fire, train directly, or compel to do anything.
- Brand Damage Control: A partner misrepresents our product, makes promises we can't keep, or behaves unethically, and you're the one who has to clean up the mess with the end customer.
- The MDF Black Hole: Approving thousands in MDF for a partner's 'lunch and learn' or golf event and getting a list of 10 low-quality leads and a pile of receipts in return.
What Role Doesn't Offer
- A quiet, predictable work environment with minimal conflict.
- Direct control over every aspect of sales execution.
- A role where you can avoid internal politics or difficult conversations.
- A guaranteed 9-to-5 schedule; sometimes partner issues or internal deadlines mean late nights.
- A role where you only focus on strategy without getting into the operational weeds.
ADHD Positives
- The fast-paced, varied nature of managing a channel team and diverse partner relationships can be highly engaging, providing constant new challenges and problems to solve.
- The need for quick, decisive action in ambiguous situations can play to strengths in rapid problem-solving and thinking on your feet.
- Leading a team means you can delegate routine tasks, freeing you up for more strategic, high-impact work that requires intense focus.
ADHD Challenges and Accommodations
- Managing multiple partner relationships, internal stakeholders, and team members can lead to context-switching fatigue. We can help by providing tools for structured task management and clear communication protocols.
- The need for consistent, detailed follow-up on partner programmes and team performance might be challenging. We encourage the use of CRM/PRM automation and dedicated admin support for reporting.
- Dealing with repetitive internal processes or extensive documentation might be less engaging. We'll explore ways to automate these where possible and ensure support is available.
Dyslexia Positives
- This role often requires strong verbal communication, negotiation, and strategic thinking, which are common strengths for individuals with dyslexia.
- The ability to see the 'big picture' of the channel ecosystem and identify patterns in partner performance can be a significant advantage.
- Problem-solving in complex, multi-faceted scenarios is a core part of the job, playing to strengths in lateral thinking.
Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations
- Extensive report writing, detailed email communications, and documentation are part of the role. We offer access to proofreading software, dictation tools, and support for drafting key documents.
- Processing large amounts of written partner agreements or programme guidelines might be time-consuming. We can provide tools for text-to-speech and offer support for reviewing complex documents.
- Organising and tracking numerous written tasks for your team and partners might be challenging. We use visual project management tools and encourage verbal check-ins alongside written updates.
Autism Positives
- The ability to identify and implement logical structures for partner programmes and 'Rules of Engagement' can be a real asset, bringing clarity to a complex area.
- A strong focus on data and metrics to drive channel performance and validate partner ROI is crucial and can play to strengths in analytical thinking.
- The role requires deep expertise in the channel domain, allowing for specialisation and mastery of complex systems.
Autism Challenges and Accommodations
- Navigating nuanced social dynamics and unspoken political currents between direct sales and channel teams can be challenging. We provide clear frameworks for conflict resolution and encourage direct, transparent communication.
- Unexpected changes in partner strategy or internal priorities might be unsettling. We aim for clear communication of changes and provide structured planning tools.
- Extensive networking and informal social interactions are common in channel sales. We support structured introductions and focus on professional, task-oriented interactions rather than purely social ones.
Sensory Considerations
Our main office environment is a typical open-plan space, which can sometimes be a bit noisy with conversations and phone calls. However, we offer noise-cancelling headphones, quiet zones for focused work, and the flexibility for hybrid working (usually 2-3 days in the office, the rest remote). Social interactions are frequent, both internally and with partners, often involving video calls or in-person meetings. We'll work with you to ensure your environment supports your best work.
Flexibility Notes
We believe in flexibility where possible. While this is a leadership role with significant responsibilities, we're open to discussing flexible working patterns, compressed hours, or adjustments to your in-office presence to support your well-being and productivity. We value output and impact over strict adherence to traditional work models.
Key Responsibilities
Experience Levels Responsibilities
- Level: Head of Channel Sales Manager (L5)
- Responsibilities: Lead, mentor, and develop a team of Channel Account Managers (CAMs) or other Channel Managers, ensuring they have the skills and resources to hit their individual and team targets. This means regular 1:1s, performance reviews, and career pathing discussions.
- Own the regional or functional channel sales target (e.g., EMEA, SMB partners), accountable for delivering the quarterly and annual revenue numbers. You'll be the person presenting these numbers to the VP of Channels.
- Design and implement regional partner programmes and incentives that align with the overall channel strategy, making sure they motivate partners and drive profitable growth. This could involve tweaking MDF programmes or creating new SPIFFs.
- Arbitrate complex channel conflicts and 'Rules of Engagement' disputes that your team can't resolve, making tough calls that balance partner satisfaction with business integrity. It's rarely easy.
- Develop and maintain executive relationships with key strategic partners in your region, acting as an escalation point and ensuring joint business plans (JBPs) are on track.
- Manage the channel budget for your area, including Market Development Funds (MDF) and enablement investments, making sure we're getting a solid return on our spend. You'll be scrutinising those receipts.
- Work closely with regional direct sales leadership, marketing, and product teams to ensure channel alignment and identify co-selling opportunities. This often means being the diplomat between different internal priorities.
- Analyse channel performance data to identify trends, opportunities, and areas for improvement, then translate those insights into actionable plans for your team and partners.
- Supervision: You'll report to the VP of Channels & Alliances, with monthly strategic alignment meetings. For the day-to-day, you're pretty much autonomous, expected to run your part of the business independently. You'll be providing significant supervision and guidance to your direct reports.
- Decision: You have full authority over your team's day-to-day operations, partner selection within defined criteria, and budget allocation up to £500K for programme initiatives and MDF. Hiring and firing decisions for your direct reports are yours, with HR and VP approval. You'll consult with the VP of Channels on major strategic shifts or programme changes that impact other regions.
- Success: Success looks like consistently hitting or exceeding your regional/functional channel revenue targets, building a highly motivated and effective channel team, and having strong, profitable relationships with our key partners. You'll be seen as a trusted leader, both internally and externally, who can navigate complexity and drive results.
Decision-Making Authority
- Type: Partner Programme Design & Incentives
- Entry: Follows existing programme guidelines; escalates any proposed changes.
- Mid: Proposes minor adjustments to incentives for specific partners; seeks manager approval.
- Senior: Designs and proposes new regional incentives or programme tiers; requires Director/VP input and approval.
- Type: Budget Allocation (MDF & Programme Spend)
- Entry: Processes MDF requests within strict guidelines; no allocation authority.
- Mid: Approves individual MDF requests up to £5K.
- Senior: Allocates MDF within a defined partner portfolio up to £50K; recommends larger programme spend.
- Type: Channel Conflict Resolution
- Entry: Escalates all conflicts to Channel Account Manager.
- Mid: Resolves routine conflicts based on 'Rules of Engagement'; escalates complex cases.
- Senior: Arbitrates complex conflicts between partners or direct sales; consults Director on high-stakes disputes.
- Type: Team Hiring & Performance Management
- Entry: No direct reports; participates in interview panels.
- Mid: Provides informal feedback to juniors; no hiring or formal performance management.
- Senior: Mentors 1-2 junior CAMs; provides input on performance reviews.
ID:
Tool: Partner Recruitment Assistant
Benefit: Use an AI agent to scan LinkedIn, industry websites, and databases to identify potential partners that fit your Ideal Partner Profile (IPP) for your region. The AI can then draft personalized outreach emails to key contacts, referencing their specific market focus or recent wins. This means your team spends less time sifting and more time engaging qualified prospects.
ID:
Tool: Predictive Partner Scoring & Risk Alerts
Benefit: Leverage AI to analyse CRM and PRM data (pipeline, deal size, close rate, enablement activity) to generate a predictive 'health score' for each partner in your portfolio. This flags at-risk partners for intervention before they churn and identifies high-potential partners deserving more investment. You'll get proactive alerts, not reactive surprises.
ID:
Tool: QBR & JBP Content Generator
Benefit: Use a generative AI tool connected to your BI platform to auto-generate the first draft of a partner's Quarterly Business Review (QBR) deck or a Joint Business Plan (JBP) summary. It can pull key charts, summarise performance against goals, and suggest talking points for the upcoming quarter. This shaves hours off preparation for your team and ensures consistency.
ID:
Tool: Channel Conflict Resolution Bot
Benefit: Deploy an internal AI chatbot trained on your 'Rules of Engagement' (ROE) document. When a direct rep or partner has a question about deal ownership or account protection, they can ask the bot first, reducing escalations to your team and providing instant, consistent answers. This frees up your CAMs to focus on selling, not arbitrating.
15-25 hours weekly across your team and yourself
Weekly time savings potential
You'll typically use 2-3 core AI tools, often integrated into your existing CRM/PRM, with a monthly investment of roughly £50-£200 per user.
Typical tool investment
Competency Requirements
Foundation Skills (Transferable)
Beyond the technical stuff, you'll need a solid set of 'human' skills to lead a team and manage complex partner relationships. These are the bedrock of effective channel leadership.
- Category: Communication & Influence
- Skills: Executive Communication: Presenting complex channel strategies and performance updates to senior leadership (VP, CRO) with clarity and confidence, answering tough questions on the fly.
- Negotiation & Persuasion: Securing favourable terms with partners, resolving high-stakes conflicts, and influencing internal stakeholders without direct authority.
- Team Leadership & Coaching: Clearly articulating vision, setting expectations, providing constructive feedback, and developing your team members' skills and careers.
- Cross-functional Diplomacy: Building consensus and fostering collaboration between your channel team, direct sales, marketing, and product, often bridging different priorities and perspectives.
- Category: Strategic Thinking & Problem Solving
- Skills: Channel Strategy Development: Translating high-level company goals into actionable regional or functional channel strategies, identifying market opportunities and competitive threats.
- Complex Problem Resolution: Diagnosing root causes of channel underperformance, partner churn, or internal friction, and designing effective, sustainable solutions.
- P&L Management & Financial Acumen: Understanding the financial levers of your channel business, managing budgets (MDF, programme costs), and driving profitable growth.
- Risk Management: Proactively identifying potential channel conflicts, partner viability issues, or market shifts, and developing mitigation plans.
- Category: Adaptability & Resilience
- Skills: Navigating Ambiguity: Making informed decisions and providing clear direction to your team even when faced with incomplete information or rapidly changing market conditions.
- Change Leadership: Guiding your team and partners through strategic shifts, new programme launches, or organisational changes with a positive and proactive approach.
- Emotional Intelligence: Managing your own reactions to setbacks and pressure, and understanding the motivations and concerns of your team members and partners.
Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)
You'll need a deep understanding of how channel sales actually works, from programme design to conflict resolution. This isn't theoretical; it's about practical application at a leadership level.
Technical Competencies
- Skill: Partner Program Architecture (Strategic)
- Desc: You'll be designing and optimising multi-tier partner programmes (e.g., Registered, Silver, Gold, Platinum) for your region/segment, defining specific requirements (revenue, certifications, business plan) and benefits (discounts, MDF, dedicated support) that truly motivate desired partner behaviour and drive profitability. This isn't just tweaking; it's about strategic overhaul.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: Channel Conflict Management (Advanced Arbitration)
- Desc: Developing, enforcing, and often arbitrating complex 'Rules of Engagement' (ROE) to mitigate friction between the direct sales force and partners, or between competing partners within your region. This includes managing deal registration systems and leading arbitration processes for high-stakes disputes.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: Joint Business Planning (JBP) & QBR Leadership
- Desc: Leading the formal, collaborative process to build strategic growth plans with top-tier partners in your portfolio, including mutual commitments, marketing plans, sales targets, and enablement goals. You'll be running the Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) at an executive level, holding partners accountable and driving future growth.
- Level: Advanced
- Skill: Market Development Funds (MDF) & Co-op Strategy (P&L Focused)
- Desc: Owning the allocation, management, and rigorous measurement of the ROI for MDF and co-op funds provided to partners for demand generation activities across your region. This involves reviewing proposals, validating proof-of-performance, and understanding the contra-revenue accounting principles that Finance cares deeply about.
- Level: Advanced
- Skill: Partner Value Proposition & Recruitment (Strategic Fit)
- Desc: Articulating a compelling 'Why Partner?' message that goes beyond margin, focusing on technology differentiation, support, and joint market opportunity. You'll oversee and refine the targeted recruitment methodology to find and onboard partners who fit the Ideal Partner Profile (IPP) for your market, ensuring strategic alignment and long-term viability.
- Level: Advanced
Digital Tools
- Tool: Impartner / ZiftONE / Allbound (PRM)
- Level: Strategic
- Usage: Defining PRM workflows for partner onboarding and deal registration, analysing performance dashboards for your region, ensuring data governance, and championing integration with other business systems to get the full picture of partner performance.
- Tool: Salesforce (Sales Cloud & Partner Community)
- Level: Architect
- Usage: Defining the CRM strategy for your channel segment, approving custom fields and objects for partner data, and ensuring seamless integration with PRM to provide a single source of truth for all partner interactions and pipeline.
- Tool: Tableau / Power BI / Looker (BI & Analytics)
- Level: Strategic
- Usage: Defining the key channel KPIs for executive dashboards, presenting data-driven business cases to the VP of Channels or CRO, and using insights to model future growth scenarios for your region.
- Tool: Anaplan / Pigment / Advanced Excel
- Level: Expert
- Usage: Owning the financial model for your channel business segment, running complex scenario analyses for different programme structures or incentive models, and presenting the financial plan and budget to the Finance team and VP of Channels.
- Tool: Highspot / Seismic (Sales Enablement & LMS)
- Level: Strategic
- Usage: Setting the regional partner enablement strategy, approving budget for content development, and aligning the content roadmap with product launches and sales priorities to ensure partners have what they need to sell effectively.
Industry Knowledge
- Area: Channel Sales Models & Go-to-Market Strategies
- Desc: Deep understanding of various channel models (e.g., reseller, referral, MSP, OEM, distribution) and how to adapt our go-to-market strategy to each, optimising for reach and profitability.
- Area: Sales Compensation & Incentive Design
- Desc: Knowledge of how to design effective sales compensation plans for your team and incentive programmes (SPIFFs, rebates) for partners that drive desired behaviours and align with business objectives.
- Area: Legal & Contractual Aspects of Partnering
- Desc: Familiarity with common legal clauses in partner agreements, understanding terms around intellectual property, liability, and termination, to protect the company's interests.
Regulatory Compliance Regulations
- Reg: GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation)
- Usage: Ensuring your team and partners handle customer and prospect data in compliance with GDPR, particularly concerning lead sharing, marketing activities, and data storage. You'll need to understand the implications of non-compliance for the business.
- Reg: Competition Law / Antitrust Regulations
- Usage: Understanding the basics of competition law to avoid practices like price fixing or market allocation with partners, which could lead to significant fines and reputational damage. Knowing when to consult legal counsel.
Essential Prerequisites
- Proven track record of 10+ years in channel sales, with at least 3-5 years in a Senior CAM or Channel Lead role, demonstrating consistent over-attainment of revenue targets.
- Demonstrable experience managing and developing a team of sales professionals, including performance management, coaching, and career development.
- Deep understanding of partner programme design, including incentive structures, MDF management, and conflict resolution mechanisms.
- Experience owning a significant revenue target (e.g., £5M+) for a channel segment or region.
- Strong analytical skills, capable of interpreting complex channel data and translating it into actionable strategies.
- Excellent communication and presentation skills, comfortable engaging with C-level executives both internally and externally.
Career Pathway Context
To step into this Head of Channel Sales Manager role, you'll typically have already proven yourself as a high-performing Channel Lead or a Senior Channel Account Manager who has started to take on informal leadership responsibilities. You'll have a solid understanding of the full partner lifecycle and a track record of driving results through indirect channels. This isn't an entry-level management role; it's for someone ready to take on significant P&L and team leadership.
Qualifications & Credentials
Emerging Foundation Skills
- Skill: Ecosystem Orchestration & Platform Strategy
- Why: The shift from simple 'channel partners' to complex 'ecosystems' means managing a much broader range of relationships (tech alliances, service partners, ISVs) that integrate to deliver customer value. You'll need to think beyond traditional reseller models.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Platform Business Models', 'description': 'Understanding how companies build and monetise platforms, and how partners integrate into these platforms to create network effects.'}, {'concept_name': 'Co-innovation & Joint IP Development', 'description': 'Moving beyond just reselling to actively collaborating with partners on new solutions or intellectual property.'}, {'concept_name': 'Ecosystem Mapping & Value Chain Analysis', 'description': "Identifying all players in the customer's journey and understanding how different partners contribute value at each stage."}, {'concept_name': 'API Economy & Integrations', 'description': 'Understanding how technical integrations enable seamless data flow and joint solutions between partners.'}]
- Prepare: This quarter: Read 'Platform Revolution' or 'The Business of Platforms' to grasp the fundamentals.
- Next 6 months: Identify 2-3 non-traditional partners (e.g., tech integrators, advisory firms) in your region and explore potential co-innovation opportunities.
- Next 12 months: Develop a small 'ecosystem' pilot project with a key tech alliance partner, tracking joint customer wins.
- Ongoing: Network with leaders in platform businesses and tech alliances to learn best practices.
- QuickWin: Start by mapping the current ecosystem around our product for your region—who are the adjacent tech players, who influences our customers, and who could we partner with beyond traditional resellers? No approval needed, just observation.
- Skill: Advanced Channel Data Modelling & Predictive Analytics
- Why: Basic reporting isn't enough anymore. Competitors are using sophisticated models to predict partner churn, optimise MDF spend, and identify high-potential partners. You'll need to lead the charge in using data to drive truly strategic decisions.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Predictive Partner Health Scoring', 'description': 'Using machine learning to forecast partner performance and identify early warning signs of disengagement or churn.'}, {'concept_name': 'MDF ROI Optimisation Models', 'description': 'Advanced statistical methods to determine the most effective ways to allocate Market Development Funds for maximum return.'}, {'concept_name': 'Partner Lifetime Value (PLTV) Calculation', 'description': 'Estimating the total revenue and profit a partner will generate over the entire course of the relationship.'}, {'concept_name': 'Attribution Modelling for Indirect Sales', 'description': "Sophisticated models to accurately credit partners for their influence on deals, moving beyond 'first touch' or 'last touch'."}]
- Prepare: This month: Work with Sales Ops or a data analyst to understand the current limitations of our channel reporting.
- Next 3 months: Take an online course on 'Applied Predictive Analytics for Business' (e.g., Coursera, edX).
- Next 6 months: Propose a pilot project to implement a basic predictive partner health score using existing data.
- Next 12 months: Lead the development of an MDF ROI optimisation framework for your region.
- QuickWin: Challenge your team to identify 3 'at-risk' partners using current data and qualitative insights. Then, use that list to validate a simple predictive model you build with Sales Ops.
Advancing Technical Skills
- Skill: Advanced PRM & CRM Configuration & Integration
- Why: As our channel grows and becomes more complex, you'll need to define how our PRM and CRM systems are configured to support new programmes, track new metrics, and integrate seamlessly with other business systems. This isn't just about using the tools; it's about shaping them.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Data Model Design for Partner Ecosystems', 'description': 'Designing how partner data, deal registrations, and programme activities are structured within CRM/PRM for optimal reporting and automation.'}, {'concept_name': 'Workflow Automation for Partner Lifecycle', 'description': 'Automating partner onboarding, enablement paths, and performance management processes within the PRM.'}, {'concept_name': 'API Integrations with BI & Marketing Automation', 'description': 'Understanding how to connect PRM/CRM data to BI tools for advanced analytics and to marketing platforms for automated partner communications.'}, {'concept_name': 'Security & Data Governance for Partner Portals', 'description': 'Ensuring partner data is secure and access is controlled, especially for sensitive information like deal registrations and incentives.'}]
- Prepare: This month: Work closely with Sales Ops and IT to understand our current CRM/PRM architecture and any planned upgrades.
- Next 3 months: Get certified in advanced administration for our core PRM (e.g., Impartner Admin Certification) or Salesforce Partner Cloud.
- Next 6 months: Lead a project to optimise a specific PRM workflow (e.g., deal registration approval process) for your region.
- Next 12 months: Define requirements for a new PRM/CRM integration project based on your strategic needs.
- QuickWin: Identify one manual process in our current PRM/CRM that causes your team pain, and propose an automated solution using existing features. Even a small win builds momentum.
Future Skills Closing Note
The future of channel sales leadership isn't just about managing people; it's about strategically leveraging technology, data, and a broader ecosystem perspective. Those who embrace these shifts will be the most successful.
Education Requirements
- Level: Minimum
- Req: Bachelor's degree in Business, Marketing, Sales, or a related field.
- Alts: We're pragmatic. If you've got 15+ years of demonstrable, progressive experience in channel sales leadership, including significant P&L ownership and team management, we'll absolutely consider that as equivalent to a degree.
- Level: Preferred
- Req: Master's degree (e.g., MBA) or equivalent advanced professional qualification.
- Alts: An MBA is nice to have, but not a deal-breaker. If you can show us you've got the strategic chops and business acumen through your career experience, that's what truly matters.
Experience Requirements
You'll need roughly 12-16 years of progressive experience in sales, with a minimum of 7-10 years specifically in channel sales roles. This must include at least 3-5 years in a leadership position where you've directly managed a team of Channel Account Managers or other sales professionals, and held P&L responsibility for a significant channel segment or region. We're looking for someone who has designed, launched, and managed partner programmes, navigated complex channel conflicts, and consistently delivered against ambitious revenue targets. You should have a proven track record of developing and retaining talent within your teams.
Preferred Certifications
- Cert: Certified Channel Professional (CCP)
- Prod: Channel Institute or similar industry body
- Usage: Demonstrates a comprehensive understanding of channel best practices, programme design, and partner management strategies at a leadership level.
- Cert: Salesforce Administrator Certification (or similar CRM/PRM)
- Prod: Salesforce (or relevant PRM vendor)
- Usage: Shows a deeper understanding of how to configure and optimise our core sales and partner management systems, which is crucial for strategic decision-making and team efficiency.
Recommended Activities
- Regularly attend industry conferences (e.g., Channel Partners Conference & Expo, Canalys Forums) to stay abreast of market trends and network with peers.
- Participate in leadership development programmes focused on coaching, change management, and strategic influence.
- Join professional channel associations or peer groups to share insights and best practices.
- Take online courses or workshops on advanced data analytics, AI in sales, or ecosystem strategy to future-proof your skills.
Career Progression Pathways
Entry Paths to This Role
- Path: From Senior Channel Account Manager (L3) or Channel Lead (L4)
- Time: 3-5 years as a Senior CAM/Lead
- Path: From Direct Sales Manager/Director
- Time: 5-7 years in direct sales management, with some exposure to channel
- Path: From Sales Operations / Business Development Manager (with Channel Focus)
- Time: 5-8 years in Sales Ops/BD, with significant exposure to channel analytics or strategy
Career Progression From This Role
- Pathway: VP of Channels & Alliances
- Time: 3-5 years in this role
Long Term Vision Potential Roles
- Title: Chief Revenue Officer (CRO)
- Time: 5-10 years post-VP of Channels
- Title: Chief Business Officer (CBO) / Head of GTM
- Time: 7-12 years post-VP of Channels
- Title: General Manager / Managing Director (for a Business Unit)
- Time: 6-10 years post-VP of Channels
Sector Mobility
The skills you'll develop here—strategic partner management, P&L ownership, team leadership, and complex ecosystem orchestration—are highly transferable. You could move into similar channel leadership roles in different industries (e.g., SaaS, hardware, consulting), or even transition into general sales leadership, business development, or strategic alliance roles within other technology companies. Your understanding of indirect sales models is a valuable asset across many sectors.
How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development
DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis
Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.
Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.
DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway
Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).
Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.
DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning
Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.
Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."
DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment
Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.
Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.