What is a channel partner motion — and when does it actually make sense for B2B SaaS?
Direct Answer
A channel partner motion is revenue generated through third parties — resellers, cloud marketplaces, system integrators, MSPs, or referral agencies — instead of your direct sales team. In B2B SaaS it actually makes sense in three situations: you have hit roughly $10M ARR direct and need geographic or vertical reach your AEs cannot cover, your buyers already commit cloud spend on AWS or Azure and prefer to procure through a marketplace, or implementation services are a heavy part of the purchase decision and you need SI muscle to land enterprise deals.
Outside those three, channel is usually a distraction.
TL;DR
- Channel motion = ARR booked through partners on partner paper, not your AEs on your paper.
- Four real motions exist — Marketplace, VAR/Reseller, System Integrator, Referral/Agency — and they have radically different economics.
- Cloud marketplaces are the hot 2024-2027 channel — Bessemer 2024 reports 22 percent of B2B SaaS ARR above $50M now flows through AWS, Azure, GCP, or AppExchange.
- Mature programs add 20-40 percent to total ARR with 30-50 percent lower CAC but 10-30 percent lower margin per Partnered.com 2024.
- Channel is a trap pre-PMF, as a demand-gen substitute, or when partner economics directly compete with your AEs.
The 4 Channel Motions Plus When Each Wins
Not all channel is the same — confusing these four motions is how RevOps leaders burn 18 months and end up with three partners and no pipeline. Here is the honest comparison.
| Motion | How Customer Buys | Partner Take | Best Fit | Real Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marketplace | Customer purchases through AWS, Azure, GCP, or AppExchange using committed cloud spend | 3-15 percent listing fee | Mid-market and enterprise buyers with existing cloud commits to burn down | Crowdstrike doing $1B-plus through AWS Marketplace by 2024 |
| VAR / Reseller | Partner buys wholesale, marks up, signs the customer on their paper | 20-40 percent off list | International expansion, regulated markets where local entity is required | Crayon reselling Microsoft across EMEA |
| System Integrator | SI sells your software alongside a six- or seven-figure implementation project | 10-25 percent margin or rebate | Enterprise where implementation is the actual buying decision | Salesforce plus Accenture for Fortune 500 CRM rollouts |
| Referral / Agency | Partner introduces, you close, partner earns commission | 10-30 percent of first-year ACV | Capital-light reach into SMB and mid-market segments | HubSpot Solutions Partners delivering roughly 40 percent of HubSpot net new ACV per OpenView 2024 |
The marketplace motion is the one most RevOps teams are under-investing in right now. Bessemer's 2024 Channel Report found that of B2B SaaS companies above $50M ARR, 22 percent of revenue now flows through cloud marketplaces — up from 9 percent in 2022. The mechanism is simple: enterprise buyers have already committed millions to AWS or Azure and procurement gets way easier when they can apply that spend against your SaaS contract.
You give up 3-5 percent to AWS, but you close 30-40 percent faster and dramatically expand the buyer pool.
When Channel Is a Trap — The 3 Anti-Patterns
Channel programs fail roughly 70 percent of the time per Pavilion's 2024 RevOps survey, and the failures cluster around three patterns.
Anti-pattern 1: building channel before product-market-fit. If your founders cannot consistently close direct deals, partners absolutely cannot. Partners do not generate demand for unproven products — they monetize demand that already exists. When you sign 20 partners pre-PMF, you get 20 partners who never sold anything and a quarterly QBR slide deck that lies to your board.
Wait until you have 50-plus direct logos and a repeatable pitch the partner can copy.
Anti-pattern 2: using channel to escape needing demand generation. Founders often pitch channel as "free distribution" — sign partners, they bring customers, no SDR team required. This is fantasy. Even mature channel programs require co-marketing investment, partner enablement headcount of roughly one channel manager per 10-15 active partners, and your own demand-gen engine to feed partner-sourced opportunities.
Channel amplifies demand. It does not create it.
Anti-pattern 3: partner economics that compete with your AEs. If a partner can sell the same deal at a 30 percent discount that your AE quotes at list, the AE will lose every deal once the customer figures it out — and the customer always figures it out. The fix is segmentation by deal size, geography, or vertical, plus deal-registration rules that lock the first partner to the opportunity for 90-120 days.
Without that, channel conflict will torch both motions inside a year.
Channel CAC vs Direct CAC — The Real Unit Economics
The pitch deck math for channel is always "lower CAC, higher margin." The reality is more nuanced and varies dramatically by motion type.
Per Partnered.com's 2024 Cloud Marketplace Benchmarks and Crossbeam's 2024 Ecosystem-Led Growth Report, channel-sourced deals show CAC roughly 30-50 percent below direct CAC. The savings come from removing the SDR layer — partners bring qualified opportunities, not cold leads — and from shorter sales cycles when an existing trusted partner is in the room.
A direct enterprise deal that takes nine months can close in five through an SI relationship.
But gross margin is 10-30 percent lower because partners take their cut. Marketplace deals lose 3-5 percent to AWS or Azure, plus 5-10 percent if a co-sell partner is involved. VAR deals lose 20-40 percent in wholesale discount.
SI deals split somewhere in between. Net LTV-to-CAC is typically better than direct for marketplace and referral motions, roughly equivalent for SI, and noticeably worse for pure VAR — which is why pure-VAR is usually reserved for geographies you cannot legally operate in directly.
The tool stack to run this is small and mostly knowable. Crossbeam at $30-80K per year handles partner data sharing — overlap analysis to see which of your prospects are partner customers and vice versa. PartnerStack at $25-100K per year runs the partner portal, deal registration, and commission payout for referral and reseller programs.
Reveal offers CRM-to-CRM ecosystem mapping. Cloud marketplace portals (AWS, Azure, GCP, Salesforce AppExchange) are free with a marketplace listing — your only cost is the engineering work to integrate billing and metering.
Frequently Asked Questions
Crossbeam vs PartnerStack — which do we need first? Different jobs. Crossbeam tells you which of your prospects overlap with partner customers so reps can ask for warm intros — start here if you already have 20-plus active partners. PartnerStack runs the actual partner portal, deal registration, and commission payouts — start here if you are formally launching a referral or reseller program from zero.
When should we list on AWS Marketplace? As soon as you have one mid-market or enterprise customer asking to procure through their AWS commit. Listing is mostly engineering work (metering integration) and unlocks every other AWS-native buyer. Listing pre-emptively without buyer pull is fine but rarely produces inbound for 12-plus months.
Can we run channel and direct without conflict? Yes, but only with hard segmentation rules — for example direct AEs own deals under $50K and over $500K, channel owns the middle — plus 90-day deal registration locks and clear comp rules where AEs are credited (sometimes at half rate) on channel-sourced deals in their territory.
Sources
- Bessemer Venture Partners — 2024 Channel and Cloud Marketplace Report
- Partnered.com — 2024 Cloud Marketplace Benchmarks
- Crossbeam — 2024 Ecosystem-Led Growth Report
- Pavilion — 2024 RevOps Leaders Survey
- HubSpot Solutions Partners — Official Program Documentation (2024)
- OpenView Partners — 2024 SaaS Benchmarks Report
- AWS Marketplace — Seller Operational Guide (2024)
- Tackle.io — 2024 State of the Cloud Marketplace Report