¶ … Partnership or Alliance
At a recent conference, Acxiom Corporation Company Leader Charles D. Morgan said that constantly changing technology and the growing global landscape means successful companies must select the right partners and alliances to help achieve a true customer-centric enterprise.
In today's global marketplace, partnerships are becoming a major strategic move for many businesses. This paper discusses the elements of an effective partnership or business alliance in an effort to lay out the best business practices for forming one.
The pace of innovation today is too fast for any one company (especially technology company) to be all things to all customers. Last year alone, for example, the U.S. patent office awarded more than 16,000 patents to the top ten global high-tech companies for their innovations. Even a brief look at the industry's history reveals a graveyard of once successful companies that failed to adapt fast enough to industry changes. Despite its long record of success, IBM suffered a near-death experience in the early 90s. New leadership and a new strategy were instrumental in engineering IBM's turnaround, and so was the power of its alliances with more than 90,000 business partners.
Partnerships and Alliances
The term "partnership" is best defined as "collaborative activities among interested parties based on a mutual recognition of respective strengths and weaknesses for agreed-upon objectives developed through effective and timely communication." A "partnership" begins when groups with common objectives agree to undertake activities that build on one another's strengths, and help overcome weaknesses, for the purposes of implementing predetermined objectives that have been agreed upon by the groups involved.
Overcoming weaknesses may involve a sharing of expertise, knowledge or experience by one or more parties. The objectives are usually developed through a process of communication that is acceptable to all parties involved.
A business alliance is the highest form of contracting with another company. The alliance typically lasts for a significant period of time, usually from two to five years, with options for renewal. The alliance is a "joining together" of the two, in a business sense, where both companies work together to bring mutual gains and benefits to both organizations.
For successful alliances, it is very important that both parties involved agree and commit to a set of common elements of the partnership.
Key Elements of a Successful Partnership Design
Some of the key elements of successful partnerships and alliances include:
dedicated team -- Many partnerships are formed among organizations, but succeed because of individuals.
Strong leadership -- A successful partnership usually has a strong leader who orchestrates the partnership projects and goals with vision, energy, and enthusiasm.
Employee involvement -- The people directly affected by a partnership goal are usually the ones most willing and able to work for it.
A strong action plan -- Common agendas, joint decision-making, and mutual benefit constitute a partnership; money facilitates the projects.
Excellent support -- Senior-level support enables a partnership to operate easily within the rest of the organization and displays the organizations commitment to other partners and to the public.
Shared goals and responsibilities -- Groups must be willing to share responsibility and should enter partnerships with the intention of being an active part of the process.
Reasons for Failure
In many industries, alliances and partnerships suffer a high mortality rate for many reasons. These types of deals are often laid low by irreconcilable differences, which may not become apparent until the deal has been sealed. However, through careful planning, e-business partners can detect possible problems early in the game.
According to Tom Yamada, Business Development Director for Office.com, a major business-to-business portal for small business, a partnership should not be entered into without solid research and evaluation. Rather, the relationship should be formalized with rights and responsibilities clearly detailed so that each participant will understand its role in the partnership and act on it appropriately.
Companies doing business on the Internet regularly form partnerships and alliances to extend the reach of their services, to complement their services, or to add to their business model," Yamada says. "When these partnerships fail it's usually because expectations are not properly established from the start, there's a lack of communications and regular milestone meetings, or one partner changes its focus or goes out of business.
Amicable divorce is also fairly common, with both parties mutually agreeing to terminate when the partnership fails to achieve the desired results."
Responsibilities and goals must be worked...
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