GoldenOar Founder John Ochinero releases "Ten Rules for Effective Channel Management" Provides Insight to Technology Vendors Penetrating the North America Market.

May 25, 2006 (PRLEAP.COM) Entertainment News
Off-shore and domestic technology vendors are keenly interested in "Rules of Thumb" to keep in mind when developing and growing a sales channel in North America. The more diversified your channel portfolio, the more complex the management strategy. But these are the lessons I would use as guidance as you navigate the channel:


TEN RULES OF CHANNEL MANAGEMENT

1. Enhance Your Channel Portfolio

Vendors benefit from having a strong and diversified channel portfolio. A diversified channel network ( e.g. Retail, Mass Merchant, OEM, Distribution, VAR, etc.) increases your marketplace, contributes to a more stable sales forecast, provides for additional feedback from the buying public, strengthens your product offerings, and increases your personnel resourcefulness and more.

2. Don’t Tear Down One Channel to Build Another

The market highway is littered with companies that decided to switch from one type of channel network to another (e.g. two-tier distribution to a direct to reseller channel). Add channels, do not swap channels. Have a clear goal for adding the new channel and be prepared to explain it to your existing sales network. A good time to add a channel is in the introduction of a new product line that is ideally suited to the new channel.

For example: If your organization is currently marketing a consumer product through the mass merchant channel (e.g. Costco, WAL*MART, Best Buy, etc.) an ideal scenario of when to add a new channel would be when you introduce a more sophisticated technology to the market. In this example, the mass merchant network will understand the addition of a VAR/ Solution Provider network.

3. There Are Different Services for Different Channels

When adding a new channel, don’t expect to port over the set of company policies that have been developed for your existing network. Different channels require different terms, return policies, support programs, CO-OP/MDF, etc.

Additionally, be prepared to make appropriate changes to your organization’s internal policies.

Example: I am intimately familiar with an organization that for years marketed direct to Enterprise. Purchase Orders from companies such as Boeing had been tracked by the vendor through the quote process so that when the P.O. came through it’s a done deal-that is,” the cash is in the bank”. The vendor’s sales people received 50% of their commission upon order confirmation and 50% upon shipment.

When the vendor added a two-tier distribution network they kept the same commission policy. Naturally, sales people were submitting inflated purchase orders from distributors. It took the Vendor months to appreciate that commissions were being paid for product that was never going to ship. Result: and the compensation plan was changed to reflect an emphasis on order shipment and payment for this sales group.

4. Pricing

Marketing and sales managers have spent years in accumulated hour’s fine-tuning their pricing strategy. The introduction of the spreadsheet made it faster and easier but not less excruciating and thankless. The debate between volume-based vs. channel-based pricing strategy will roar on for eternity. However, when developing pricing strategy several factors should be considered with regard to a specific channel: competition, brand “push” vs. brand “pull”, product support requirements and market penetration goals. All of these are more fully developed in my upcoming book but there are two numbers that are always the most important 1) Vendor Profitability 2) End User Price.

5. Bill Backs

Further to our pricing discussion, never build in the ability to “Bill Back” a Channel Partner due to unfulfilled volume commitments, lack of supporting documents for MDF or CO-OP or any other reason. You will never get it and it will just build resentment. Discounts to the Channel Partner’s invoice should be based on results not expectations. It is far better to provide a rebate to Channel Partners that achieve specific volume levels. This goes directly to the Channel Partner’s bottom line.

6. Return for Credit

When a Channel Partner has inventory that is not selling I have three words for you: “Take It Back”. Depending on your expected “sell through” for a specific SKU this decision to “rotate” for faster moving inventory should be implemented as painlessly to the relationship as possible. Whether or not the purchase was made in good faith-I have seen instances where Channel Partners submitted P.O.’s just to win a contest-take the product back, issue the credit and move on.

7. Manufacturer Representatives

The use of Manufacturer Representatives can be invaluable. Professional Manufacturer Representatives can raise the visibility of your company and product to the prospective account but also provide the vendor with eyes and ears in the field once the account is signed. However, two rules should be adhered to when working with Manufacturer Representatives 1) The agreement should be “Account” and not “Territory” based and 2) The word “Exclusive” should never be used in the agreement.

8. Channel Prospecting

When developing your channel prospect list you will be interested in sorting by such items as market penetration, category expertise, competitive vs. complementary vendors, geographical locations covered, etc. However, except in rare circumstances the most important factor you should be interested in is financial stability. If the account is financially unstable it will in all likelihood be a constant time drain on your sales and financial resources and always carry the threat of the most feared words in the vendor’s vernacular “Bad Debt”.

9. Defectives and Crises Management

By “defectives” I am not referring to the isolated lemon, I am referring to that hot call from a Channel Partner telling you that there is a potential defective manufacturing run. Jump on that problem without hesitation: 1) Stop all shipments of that SKU 2) Arrange for the immediate return-overnight delivery if possible-of a significant percentage of the shipment in question (2-5%) for evaluation. Further, depending on the technology and Channel Partner relationship, fly out a technical team directly to the partner location. If you start worrying about the cost of taking prompt and high-impact action then defective product is probably the least of your organization’s concerns.

10. Leads-Feed the Lions

When talking with a channel prospect it will not take long before they ask the following question “How do you handle leads?” I have a simple answer for you “We feed the lions”. The clear meaning is that the Channel Partner that takes the lead, immediately contacts and closes the prospect can expect more leads. Here is a follow-up rule that will earn you major loyalty points with a Channel Partner:

The Channel Partner should know that once they have made a good faith effort to have the prospect become involved with your offerings; to no avail, they are free to sell whatever product-even a competitor’s- to the lead you provided. This demonstrates to the Channel Partner that you care about their business.


Conclusion

The above rules are meant as basic guidelines with regard to working with Channel Partners. These rules come from decades of experience and lessons learned from successful and less than successful channel development efforts. The one overriding rule to remember is that a successful Channel Partnership requires that both parties have goals and business practices that compliment each other because no written agreement will keep a relationship together that is destined to break apart.


About the Author

John Ochinero is CEO of GoldenOar and is the founder of three technology companies where he served as the executive vice president of sales and marketing. Each company evolved to become a Billion dollar organization. John is a frequest speaker to technology professionals in Taiwan, Korea, China, Europe and North America. Please contact John Ochinero at jochinero@goldenoar.com or 415-217-9227.