Building a successful partnerships function requires careful planning, strategic hiring, and clear performance metrics. For small and medium-sized businesses, the journey from a solo partnerships generalist to a specialized team follows a predictable evolution that aligns with business growth and partnership maturity.
The decision to hire your first partnership professional should be based on business readiness rather than arbitrary metrics like funding rounds or revenue milestones. Your company is ready when you have achieved product-market fit, have leadership buy-in that values partnerships and understands reciprocity, and can commit to a full-time dedicated resource. The earlier you hire after meeting these criteria, the better, as partnerships take time to develop and mature.
Attempting to split partnership responsibilities with other duties typically fails because those other tasks take precedence, and vital partnership foundation-building gets overshadowed. While some businesses attempt to start with part-time partnership resources, this approach rarely succeeds in establishing the momentum needed for program success. Your industry vertical also matters significantly. Companies in partnership-rich sectors like eCommerce find it easier to activate partnerships than those in less partnership-oriented industries.
Your first partnership hire must be a versatile generalist capable of building a program from scratch. While they will need to manage all partner types initially, having previous sales or account management experience is a major plus. This background gives them credibility with your sales team and helps them understand the sales process from lead to close.
Look for candidates who genuinely want to build a career in partnerships, not just someone looking for any job. This first hire could be on a pathway to becoming your Head of Partnerships as the team expands, so finding someone with long-term growth potential matters. They should be excited about the opportunity to build something from scratch and grow with the program.
The ability to work collaboratively with sales teams is absolutely essential. This role exists to serve the sales organization with qualified leads, so your partnership hire needs to understand sales priorities, speak their language, and build trust with account executives. If sales teams do not see partnership leads as valuable, the entire function fails.
Key characteristics to look for include:
Experience managing relationships where they do not control all variables is valuable, as partners are external entities requiring different management approaches than internal sales teams. Look for candidates who demonstrate proven achievement orientation in previous roles.
Partnership managers need to be measured at two fundamental levels: throughput of referrals and Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) that originated from partnerships. These metrics give you both leading indicators (referral volume) and lagging indicators (closed revenue) to assess program health.
Referral throughput measures how many qualified leads your partnership manager delivers to the sales team each month or quarter. Quality matters more than quantity here. Ten highly qualified referrals from trusted partners typically convert better than 50 cold introductions. Track not just volume but also lead quality scores and sales team feedback on referral readiness.
Partnership-sourced MRR tracks the total recurring revenue from customers who came through partnership channels. This demonstrates the true business impact of partnerships and justifies continued investment in the function. As this number grows, it validates both the program and your partnership hire effectiveness.
Broadly speaking, management needs to be able to compare the Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) of customers from partnerships versus other sources like paid advertising or direct sales. Calculate partnership CAC by dividing total partnership program costs (salary, tools, partner incentives) by the number of customers acquired through partnerships. In most cases, partnership-sourced customers should have a lower CAC than other channels, though they may take longer to develop.
Additional partnership performance metrics to track include:
For early-stage programs, set realistic expectations that partnerships require 6-12 months to gain momentum. Your first hire should focus on establishing processes, recruiting quality partners, and creating the foundation for scalable growth rather than hitting aggressive revenue targets immediately.
Several clear signals indicate when your solo partnership professional can no longer handle the workload alone. Watch for these expansion triggers:
When any of these triggers appear consistently for 2-3 quarters, it is time to add headcount.
At the small business stage, your partnership team consists of one full-time generalist managing all partner types and functions. This individual works across affiliates, referral partners, channel resellers, and any other partnership models relevant to your business. Their primary goal is generating qualified referrals and proving the partnership channel viability.
This generalist handles partner recruitment, onboarding, enablement, ongoing relationship management, and performance tracking. They build foundational program elements including partner agreements, commission structures, onboarding materials, and basic enablement resources. The role sits within the sales organization, reporting to a sales director or VP, ensuring tight alignment with revenue goals and access to sales resources.
Referral partnerships typically dominate at this stage because they are quickest to activate and require less training than reseller or integration partnerships. The partnership manager leverages existing sales relationships, identifying customers, vendors, and complementary solution providers who could refer business. Success depends on making partnerships reciprocal. Sending referrals to partners first builds trust and momentum.
The single partnership hire should focus on building a repeatable playbook that documents what works, what does not, and how to scale when resources expand. This documentation becomes invaluable when hiring the next team member.
As your partnership program matures, specialization by partner type becomes necessary. The medium-sized team typically includes three distinct roles, each managing a specific partner category with tailored strategies and processes.
This role manages content creators, bloggers, and influencers who promote your solution through digital channels. They focus on:
This role requires marketing savvy and the ability to create campaigns that give affiliates compelling content to share.
This role oversees resellers, distributors, and value-added resellers who sell your product directly to their customer base. Responsibilities include:
They need deep product knowledge and sales expertise to equip partners for successful selling.
This role manages trusted advisors, complementary service providers, and strategic allies who make qualified introductions to potential customers. This role emphasizes:
Strong relationship management skills are critical here because referral partnerships run on trust and reciprocity.
At this stage, consider adding a Partner Enablement Manager as your fourth hire. This role creates training programs, certification paths, partner education sessions, and ongoing learning that helps all partner types succeed. Centralized enablement ensures consistent partner experiences while allowing the specialized partnership executives to focus on recruitment and relationship management.
The team typically continues reporting within sales, though some organizations create a distinct partnerships department reporting to a VP of Partnerships who sits alongside sales and marketing leadership. This structure elevates partnerships strategic importance while maintaining cross-functional collaboration.