Developing a Partnership Onboarding Process

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Summary

Developing a partnership onboarding process involves creating a structured approach to welcome, align, and set expectations with new partners or collaborative clients. This process helps ensure both parties are positioned for a successful and productive relationship right from the start.

  • Start with alignment: Begin by understanding shared goals, roles, and responsibilities during a kickoff meeting to ensure everyone is on the same page.
  • Customize processes: Design tailored strategies and workflows that align with the partner's unique needs, priorities, and goals to establish a strong foundation.
  • Set clear milestones: Define measurable success criteria and next steps to track progress and maintain focus on achieving mutual objectives.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Jacob Bowman

    Founder & CEO @ OutboundLeads.com | 1,000+ Leads Every Month Across Our Agency 📈

    6,180 followers

    "You guys are completely different from the last agency we worked with" Had a client kick-off call yesterday that reminded me why thorough onboarding matters. This prospect came to us after their previous outbound agency failed to deliver results. Interestingly, they didn't mention the failed partnership during discovery - it only came up during kick-off. Here's what we covered in our standard onboarding process: 1. Call Handoff Protocol Design Since we're booking meetings on their behalf, we mapped out: • Lead qualification criteria • Handoff timing and process • Context sharing between teams • Follow-up responsibility ownership 2. Post-meeting Follow-up Strategy For prospects who ghost after initial interest: • Their internal tea will handle phone follow-ups • We provide complete context: lead magnet interactions, email history, engagement patterns • Coordinated multi-touch approach without overlap 3. Objection Handling Framework We proactively identified: • Common objections specific to their industry • Pre-meeting concerns that kill bookings • Response strategies for each scenario • Team training on objection handling 4. Brand-aligned Copy Development Instead of templates, we: • Analyzed their existing messaging for tone and positioning • Developed new copy that matches their voice • Ensured alignment with their value proposition 5. Angle Testing Strategy Rather than super generic outreach, we designed: • 4 distinct testing angles based on different pain points • Hypothesis for why each angle might resonate • Testing methodology and success metrics • Optimization plan based on early results Halfway through the call, our client stopped us and said "You guys are completely different from the last agency we worked with." They were impressed by: • The depth of our research and preparation • Our strategic approach to testing angles vs. generic copy • The thoroughness of our onboarding process • Our willingness to push back when they instincts conflicted with best practices By the end of the call, they felt genuinely optimistic about the campaign's potential. The difference between average and exceptional service delivery isn't the tactics you use - it's the systems you build around client success. Most agencies focus on getting clients. Elite agencies focus on keeping them successful.

  • View profile for Kristi Faltorusso

    Helping leaders navigate the world of Customer Success. Sharing my learnings and journey from CSM to CCO. | Chief Customer Officer at ClientSuccess | Podcast Host She's So Suite

    57,235 followers

    I improved retention and onboarding success by making a change to the first step in the onboarding process. A few years (and a few companies) ago, I made a small tweak to the way we onboarded new customers—a tweak that ended up making all the difference. We stopped diving headfirst into the technical implementation. Instead, we started with what I called a Partnership Kickoff. This one shift transformed the customer experience, boosting retention and improving onboarding success rates. Here’s why: The Partnership Kickoff brought intention to the relationship right from day one. Instead of rushing to “get things done,” we: 1️⃣ Engaged all the key stakeholders in the partnership 2️⃣ Discussed goals and confirmed success criteria upfront 3️⃣ Set proper expectations on BOTH sides 4️⃣ Clarified roles and responsibilities for onboarding and beyond 5️⃣ Created space to ask questions and address concerns This wasn’t just a feel-good meeting. It was about getting ahead of risks, ensuring alignment, and setting the stage for success. Here’s the secret sauce: ⚫️ Set expectations early Sales aligned on the importance of this meeting, and CSMs communicated the who, what, and why in their first email. ⚫️ Use a New Customer Intake Form We asked customers to provide key information upfront—no assumptions or overreliance on Sales handoffs. ⚫️ Prep the right way Sending the kickoff deck in advance meant our meeting focused on conversation, not presentations. ⚫️ Lead with goals and expectations Capturing customer goals was the priority, setting the tone for how we’d measure success. ⚫️ Clarify next steps We left every kickoff aligned on what happens next and who’s doing what. The result? Customers felt heard, understood, and set up for success. It wasn’t magic, but it sure felt like it. That small change? It delivered BIG impact—the kind every CS leader dreams about. Are you being intentional about how you’re starting your partnerships? If not, maybe it’s time to rethink step one. ________ 📣 If you liked my post, you’ll love my newsletter. Every week I share my learning, advice and strategies from my experience going from a CSM to CCO. Join 12k+ subscribers of The Journey and turn insights into action. Sign up on my profile.

  • View profile for Gabe Rogol

    CEO @ Demandbase

    15,062 followers

    In the last year, Demandbase has cut our TTV (time to value) by 55%. How? Our onboarding leader Graham Grome redesigned our onboarding process around 6 core principles: 1. Start Onboarding During the Sales Process Onboarding doesn’t start with the onboarding kick-off meeting, it starts with the first conversation with the customer. The very first interaction begins the process of understanding needs, roles and responsibilities, and timelines. Through the sales process the scope plan is in development and it is essential that this is handed off to CX and the onboarding team (and that pre-Sales resources stay involved) after the deal is closed. 2. Ground in Strategy to Generate a Value Roadmap Even with the scope in place, it’s critical to begin with strategy in onboarding (not dive into tactics and tasks). You need to know what the business outcomes the customer wants to achieve and the path to get there. That is why we begin with GTM Strategy Discovery sessions and deliver a Value Roadmap with clear now, next, and later actions that align to the customer’s GTM goals. 3. Tailor Configuration to Outcomes Every onboarding should be tailored to customer priorities. No two GTM’s are the same, being flexible in configuration is really important. Out-of-the box will not grow with your goals. We keep projects moving on target, surface risks early, and ensure that platform configuration supports business outcomes, not just your setup. The goal is to help you drive measurable value as quickly as possible. 4. Bring Customer Success into Onboarding As you grow, Onboarding and Customer Success become specialized functions. To maintain a “zero hand-off” approach make sure to include the Customer Success team members who will work with the customer moving forward through the onboarding process. 5. Make sure you leave Onboarding with a Value Measurement Plan You cannot show value without it. Every customer leaves onboarding with a Value Measurement Plan aligned to their objectives, so progress and impact are clear from day one. 6. Measure CSAT Post Onboarding It all sounds good, but how do you know it’s actually happening and where the process can improve? Customer Satisfaction (CSAT) surveys. Feedback on onboarding has to be operationalized, it’s too important to have any blind spots or to stagnate as customer needs evolve. ——— Customers have more options than ever, they are under pressure to justify their spending, they want results now (as they should!), and they know new AI-driven solutions are coming out every day. If you don’t adapt your onboarding to meet these demands, you will be in a world of hurt on churn.

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