The first half of 2024 has seen major enterprise SaaS players like Salesforce reporting declining sales, reflecting the broader challenges businesses have collectively faced this year. Working against influences like high interest rates, the economic uncertainty of an election year, and existential questions surrounding the future impacts of AI, IT leaders are tightening their budgets.

Amidst such challenges, strategic partnerships play crucial roles in opening new revenue streams and enhancing software offerings – even longtime rivals Apple and Meta have recently flirted with the idea. Microsoft has long been an exemplar of this strategy, going so far as to claim that 95% of its commercial revenue is generated through partnerships.

A recent Forrester study supports this, with over half of surveyed companies reporting that partnerships generate 20% of their overall revenue.

The most lucrative partnerships are those that have invested time, money, and resources into comprehensive enablement processes including training, tools, knowledge, and support. But resource limitations dictate that not all partners are treated equally when it comes to enablement. Consequently, larger, top-tier partners get personalized, often hands-on support, while smaller, long-tail partners are more likely to be directed toward self-service portals or waiting on unfulfilled IT support tickets. This disparity hinders growth for both partners.

Luckily, generative AI makes it possible to provide tier-one treatment to long-tail partners affordably. Here’s how.

Personalize and Precipitate Partner Onboarding

Increase Implementation and Sales

Decrease Churn

AI may not yet be ready to be an assistant taking on our working tasks, but it is perfectly suited as an agent that can cater to the needs of long-tail partners.