The Channel Surfers

The Channel Surfers - Episode 65 - "Ecosystem Specialization: Why Generalists Are Getting Squeezed"

41 min · 9. juni 2026
episode The Channel Surfers - Episode 65 - "Ecosystem Specialization: Why Generalists Are Getting Squeezed" cover

Beskrivelse

On this episode of The Channel Surfers, Jeff and John opened their podcast by tackling the decline of the "generalist" partner model, where businesses try to be everything to everyone. They argued that market pressures from buyers, vendors, and AI are making this broad approach unsustainable. The core thesis is that partners must specialize to survive, focusing on specific outcomes, environments, and industries to create a differentiated and repeatable value proposition. The discussion then moved to defining specialization as doing fewer things with deeper execution and proof. This approach, they argued, helps build trust with buyers and enables more aligned co-selling. This led to a friendly debate about sales strategy, with one speaker championing deal velocity for consistent business, while the other advocated for a balanced pipeline that includes larger "whale" deals. Finally, they wrapped up the formal podcast with an actionable three-step plan for businesses looking to begin their specialization journey, emphasizing key metrics like win rates and time to first dollar. After the official sign-off, the conversation transitioned into a candid debrief where the co-hosts discussed their performance, how to better integrate sponsor commercials, and planned logistics for future recordings.

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Alle episoder

66 Episoder

episode The Channel Surfers - Episode 66 - "Building a Revenue Generating MSP Program with Jon Purcell" cover

The Channel Surfers - Episode 66 - "Building a Revenue Generating MSP Program with Jon Purcell"

In this episode, The Channel Surfers blends candid sales-shop talk with practical channel strategy and grounded AI insights. Jeff and John interview Jon Purcell, who runs Untapped Channel Strategy, to unpack how to de-conflict MSP and direct sales motions, compensate fairly, and leverage AI without the hype. Key threads: customer-first principles, smart comp plans, rules of engagement, AI as a productivity multiplier (not a magic replacement), and why MSP is a distinct economic model—not “cheaper VAR.” Key Discussion Points and Insights - Customer-first sales alignment - John’s guiding principle: do what’s best for the customer. When both direct reps and MSPs are involved, comp plans should ensure reps don’t fight over credit and customers aren’t forced into unnatural licensing choices. - Practical approach: “We’ll take care of our people on the back end.” Comp everyone involved so the customer can consume in the way their business needs. - Comp plans that reduce friction - Jon’s “50% commission on MSP-assisted deals” POV: Many reps will gladly accept a lower rate on low-effort MSP-driven volume if it frees time to build pipeline elsewhere. - Design for two motions: - MSP-focused partner managers measured on total MSP-sourced revenue. - Direct reps with clear rules of engagement and comp when their accounts transact via MSPs. - Predefine rules to avoid ad hoc decisions. Successes snowball; failures snowball faster. - Risk of organizational rumor spirals - Jeff likens unmanaged friction to a “boat taking on water.” John notes small comp conflicts can become “catastrophic” through whisper networks. Preempt with policy, clarity, and consistent execution. - AI in MSP and channel motions: helpful, not magical - Jon’s usage: - Research and pre-call prep: saved “days, if not weeks.” - Market monitoring and personal productivity: daily brief that prioritizes tasks and calendars. - Content drafting: Claude drafts LinkedIn posts; John still edits and schedules—human-in-the-loop is essential. - Enterprise constraints: - Vendor-side and large MSP stacks often lock down AI tools (Gemini, ChatGPT, Copilot), reducing them to basic chatbots. Unlocking compliance and data-access safely is key to useful outcomes. - Overhyped claims: - AI rarely “removes your job.” You can’t “open Claude and go to the beach.” It augments; it doesn’t replace skilled execution.

I går49 min
episode The Channel Surfers - Episode 65 - "Ecosystem Specialization: Why Generalists Are Getting Squeezed" cover

The Channel Surfers - Episode 65 - "Ecosystem Specialization: Why Generalists Are Getting Squeezed"

On this episode of The Channel Surfers, Jeff and John opened their podcast by tackling the decline of the "generalist" partner model, where businesses try to be everything to everyone. They argued that market pressures from buyers, vendors, and AI are making this broad approach unsustainable. The core thesis is that partners must specialize to survive, focusing on specific outcomes, environments, and industries to create a differentiated and repeatable value proposition. The discussion then moved to defining specialization as doing fewer things with deeper execution and proof. This approach, they argued, helps build trust with buyers and enables more aligned co-selling. This led to a friendly debate about sales strategy, with one speaker championing deal velocity for consistent business, while the other advocated for a balanced pipeline that includes larger "whale" deals. Finally, they wrapped up the formal podcast with an actionable three-step plan for businesses looking to begin their specialization journey, emphasizing key metrics like win rates and time to first dollar. After the official sign-off, the conversation transitioned into a candid debrief where the co-hosts discussed their performance, how to better integrate sponsor commercials, and planned logistics for future recordings.

9. juni 202641 min
episode The Channel Surfers - Episode 64 - "Building AI Revenue Engines Through Partnerships, Advisory Leadership, and Execution cover

The Channel Surfers - Episode 64 - "Building AI Revenue Engines Through Partnerships, Advisory Leadership, and Execution

On this episode, John McCabe and Jeff Lennon sit down with guest Joe Cellucci, operator, advisor, and co-founder of 215 Advisory—for a candid, operator-minded conversation about AI in go-to-market, revenue operations, and channel strategy. The trio cut through hype to focus on execution, governance, and context, blending practical mechanics with humor and straight talk about what actually moves the needle for SMB and mid-market organizations. Core Themes and Insights - AI hype vs. operating reality - Most companies don’t “fail at AI” because tools are bad; they fail due to weak operating models: fuzzy priorities, poor governance, and lack of disciplined execution. AI exposes these weaknesses rather than fixing them. - The “squirrel and nut” moment: scattershot point solutions (especially top-of-funnel gizmos) justified by highlight reels instead of end-to-end business cases. Senior leaders end up playing whack-a-mole, fragmenting operating models and budgets. - From prompt engineering to context engineering - Joe’s thesis: The advantage isn’t better prompts—it’s better context. Encode organizational nuance, workflows, data realities, and objectives so AI augments real work. - DIY trend: Internal builds are booming because outsiders often lack the necessary context and don’t ask the right questions. Operators find internal solutions faster to fit their reality. - Caveat: DIY can work “inside the bubble” but risks blind spots without external guardrails, broader pattern awareness, and quality controls. - Build vs. buy in the AI era - AI lowers the barrier to building, reigniting the classic build vs. buy debate. - Some software categories will be displaced by bespoke builds; however, new needs arise: governance, evaluation, guardrails, and assurance layers to validate outputs and behavior across the AI lifecycle. - The operating blueprint matters—more than ever - Speed tempts leaders to skip fundamentals. Joe’s provocation: “Late to what?” Don’t chase FOMO. Proper sequencing—problem definition, business case depth, governance, and measurement—prevents fragmentation and wasted spend.

2. juni 202637 min
episode The Channel Surfers - Episode 63 - "Building an Ecosystem GTM That Actually Scales" cover

The Channel Surfers - Episode 63 - "Building an Ecosystem GTM That Actually Scales"

In this episode of The Channel Surfers, host John McCabe and Jeff Lennon introduce this fast-paced, candid conversation tackles the real mechanics of ecosystem go-to-market (GTM)—what it actually means in the field, how to orchestrate multiple partners around a single customer, and how to avoid “ecosystem theater” (great logos and decks, zero execution). The hosts blend humor and practitioner grit—think mic checks, coffee that stays hot “too long,” and “first time, long time”—with hard-nosed guidance on roles, cadence, integrations, incentives, and the weekly rhythms that make partner motions work. They close the loop with a pragmatic 90-day plan, pipeline ops anecdotes, and a sponsor segment that hits a real friction point: paying partners fast. Core Theme: Stop Performing, Start Executing - Ecosystem ≠ more partners. It’s multiple partners coordinating around one customer to accelerate deals and deliver outcomes. - Field motion beats theater. Marketplaces and polished decks don’t sell on their own; orchestration across sales teams, alliances, and services does. - Ecosystem GTM = operating system. Treat it as a system of processes, roles, cadences, integrations, attribution, and metrics—not a philosophy or one-off playbook. - AI can help with design and analysis, but execution wins. If reps don’t know what to do “on Tuesday morning,” the strategy dies. Orchestration: Conductor, Not Coordinator - Assign a single owner for orchestration in complex deals with 3–6 partners. - Align roles, timing, integrations, and communications so the customer experiences one seamless solution. - Weekly co-sell reviews are non-negotiable. Communication, trust, nearbound motions, and shared definitions for contribution keep the motion alive. - Define contribution and credit clearly to avoid “everyone’s job, no one’s job.”

26. mai 202643 min
episode The Channel Surfers - Episode 62 - "From Accounting to CRO - Neal Dooly's Channel Journey" cover

The Channel Surfers - Episode 62 - "From Accounting to CRO - Neal Dooly's Channel Journey"

This episode of Channel Surfers features co-hosts John McCabe and Jeff Lennon in conversation with Neil Dooley, founder of Successful Selling Advisory and a data-driven fractional Chief Revenue Officer (CRO). The discussion is a candid and practical exploration of building and managing successful B2B SaaS revenue models, with a specific focus on sales forecasting, the role of fractional executives, and how to integrate a partner channel program into a company's core operations. The tone is conversational and professional, with Neil providing direct, experience-based insights from a CRO's perspective. Major Takeaways - Revenue is a Business-Wide Issue: Revenue challenges are not isolated to the sales department. A holistic view, integrating financial discipline with sales strategy, is crucial for sustainable growth. - Be Pragmatic and Start with an MVP: Don't wait for perfection. Build a lean, focused channel program and set realistic timelines. A nine-month timeline to see repeatable success is a reasonable expectation. - Data is Your Map: When a program is stuck, use data to diagnose the problem objectively. Metrics like Partner CAC vs. Direct CAC, win rates, and deal velocity can prove the channel's value and secure internal buy-in. - Integrate, Don't Isolate, the Channel: For a partner program to succeed, it must be treated as a core revenue function, fully aligned with CRO goals and equipped with the necessary resources and enablement. - AI is a Tool, Not a Replacement: Modern AI tools can offer sophisticated insights, but they cannot replace the human elements of trust, relationship-building, and expert advisory, which remain irreplaceable in sales. - The Power of a Hybrid Skill Set: Combining a deep understanding of finance with hands-on sales and channel experience provides a unique and powerful perspective for driving

19. mai 202642 min