VB: Now that you have reached the milestone of consolidating the former iForce partner programs, what basically has been accomplished?
Cate: We have launched the basic frameworks of the program--the boring stuff, such as membership requirements, competency requirements and the nuts and bolts of what you need to have a good, solid operational program. To be honest, we are at various stages of completion of that around the world. It is safe to say that we have officially launched the framework for Sun Partner Advantage globally. Now the fun part begins where we actually start to build in advantages for the partners who are at the new Sun Partner Advantage levels.
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| "We built the Sun Partner Advantage architecture on top of our four business units," says Sun's Bill Cate. |
I want to be clear: All partners participate with Sun in all of our accounts. If we have a very large Sun account in the Americas that may be classified as one of our top 100 accounts, we definitely want partners there, but it will be truly based on their value add to that account. Where we are compensating more heavily is in our portfolio and territory accounts, where we have less or no Sun coverage. We have sales teams that will go there with the partner, but much fewer resources. In those cases, the up-front transaction margin is typically better, and the back-end rebates paid are much higher as well.
VB: How much higher?
Cate: It really depends on the program or initiative. For instance, a storage program has probably two times more back-end rebate rewards than selling the same storage product into a large existing Sun account. In some cases, if it's a brand-new customer that the partner brings to Sun, the rebate [can be] 10 times. It's all around the philosophy that we don't expect partners to go into markets without us. It's our job to stimulate demand, but as they invest resources and help us grow in those accounts, we want to pay them more. That's the philosophy of the SPA in the Americas.
VB: What about the front-end margins in the different types of accounts?
Cate: Front-end margin [and market development funds] is the same everywhere, but when you get into reality and you go into a large account and large end user discounts are already negotiated and competition is heavy, by most accounts the transaction margin becomes squeezed. Partners who engage with us through the teaming process have to be recognized with some margin protection. That's where the value portion comes in. When resellers and global systems integrators are participating with Sun, or if we are participating with them, we are doing it because they bring something to the table that we don't do very well. So transaction-wise, we will try to protect the basic transaction margin through teaming and registration processes, and in some cases we will try to compensate more in the transaction margin, depending on the types of value. We are trying to be more specific about what types of value we are willing to pay more for. It's a very difficult discussion to have. We are trying to work on some clear guidelines for our partners and our sales organization on the kinds of value we are willing to pay more for. Starting in our fiscal year 2008, which is in July, you will see a little more discipline in the kinds of guidelines our sales organizations would use when trying to determine what value really is.
NEXT: Specifics on guidelines already in place.
