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Grow
Your Business with Smart Marketing Alliances
By
Ed Rigsbee, CSP
(
520 words)
An
Alliance
Jumpstart
In
most Smart Marketing Alliances
you will either be the provider of a product/service or the provider of
sales/distribution capabilities. Either of the two necessary components of
your marketing alliance, will be the core competency you bring to the
relationship. Pulling together competencies from two companies really does
deliver more combined opportunity than would be available singularly.
This
competency is one of your assets. While assets usually take three
basic forms; physical (equipment, cash, or hard product), intellectual
(service capability, market knowledge, or product development capability),
and brand identity (brick and mortar location, product/service positioning
within the consciousness of the marketplace, or reputation) — many fail
to have actual dollar values assigned to them. You do want a mutually
beneficial alliance, don’t you?
Giving
and Receiving Equal Value
In
successful alliances, usually each partner brings approximately equal
value to the alliance relationship. If there is an imbalance, so should be
the commensurate reward. The challenge for you is determining the value
you are bringing into the relationship. And also to be certain that you
are not giving away value without getting something in return.
Additionally,
it is important for you to consider the implications to your company that
comes with alliance relationships. Some of the implications that might
drive the necessity for organizational change on your side include:
-
Need
for openness and transparency
-
Need
to consider how your actions affect your partner
-
Need
to make adjustments in your organization to allow integration with
your partner
This
is the reason that it is crucial to the success of your marketing alliance
that you select your partner well rather than jump at the first
opportunity that presents itself.
An
Organization’s Alliance Capability
You
must be certain first about your alliance capability; meaning your
organization’s ability to implement and maintain an alliance
relationship. Some of the key competencies within your organization that
you will want to explore are:
-
Show
a solid commitment to your alliance by assigning a champion to oversee
the total success of the alliance as opposed to only being concerned
with how well your company is represented in negotiations.
-
Focus
and flexibility might at first glance seem diametrically opposed to
one another however it is the focus that allows you to monitor when
there is a need for flexibility and just how much.
-
Communication
is the silent killer—lack of quality communication that is. Most of
the alliance failures are detected back to communication problems.
There must be systems and capabilities in place for a 360 style
communication mechanism where everyone involved in the alliance has
the ability to communicate with anyone else, regardless of which
partner employs them and hierarchical challenges.
The
above are not your exclusive challenges in building your Smart
Marketing Alliance yet covering these bases gives you a great start.
You deserve to create synergistic bliss for one another in an alliance
relationship regardless of your contribution; the product or the market
control. Be smart in your alliance partner selection. Be smart in your
alliance development and implementation. Be smart in maintaining a healthy
and profitable alliance relationship.
To
access helpful additional information from Ed Rigsbee at no charge,
please visit www.rigsbee.com/downloadaccess.htm.
Copyright
© 2008 Ed Rigsbee
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Ed
Rigsbee has been fumbling, bumbling, and stumbling his way through the
organizational mazes of for-profits and non-profits for over four decades.
For the last two decades, Ed has been an observer, researcher, and
teacher; helping organizations of all sizes to build successful internal
and external collaborative relationships. Ed travels internationally to
deliver keynote presentations and workshops on profitable alliance
relationships. In addition to serving as the president of Rigsbee Research
Consulting Group, Ed also serves as the executive director of a public
charity (501 c 3). Ed has authored three books and over 1,500 articles
helping organizations to take full advantage of their potential. Contact
Ed, get additional (no charge) resources, and sign up for his
complimentary weekly Effective
Executive eLetter at www.Rigsbee.com
and visit www.youtube.com/partneringalliances
to view Ed’s videos.
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