Ten Challenges That Keep Channel Chiefs Up at Night

Channel chiefs have limited insight as to what products are selling, who is buying them and in what quantities. Consequently, they go into business decisions pertaining to revenue recognition, estimates for reserves, sales commissioning and sales forecasting partly blind.

Designing infrastructure to retrieve and extract unstructured data feeds in different formats from hundreds of thousands global tier-one and tier-two partners is a considerable technical challenge.

Synthesizing and cleaning partner data without an accurate, current and validated master data file across the channel network is extremely difficult.

Reseller or end-user names on transactions are often not properly assigned to the correct partner and, therefore, may adversely affect partner incentive and sales commissions.

Persuading hundreds of thousands of non-incentivized partners to provide high-quality transaction data and fully comply with reporting requirements is a tall order.

According to Zyme Solutions, incentive payments account for more than $50 billion of the $1 trillion in sales that flow through the high-tech channel each year. But due to manual or disparate IT systems involving payment validation, high-tech companies may overpay incentives by as much as 15 percent.

Due to the sheer volume of channel sales performance data, channel chiefs need insight into sales activities, inventory levels and country-level performance to make better decisions faster.

Most channel chiefs have no real idea how they are doing compared with how competitors are faring.

Many chief financial officers and controllers are forced to recognize revenue using incomplete, inaccurate or low-quality data, which often results in incorrect financial reporting and imperfect sales execution, commissioning, credit assignments and planning.

Channel chiefs need to justify market development funds allocation. That’s difficult to do without any tools that allow them to see how well programs are working across different market segments.