Dell EMC unveiled a range of updates to its products and services during its Nov. 8 quarterly partner briefing, including changes to its tiered partner program.
In particular, the company has unveiled new target threshold numbers after three successful quarters of its new channel partner program that will come into effect on Feb. 2, 2018 for FY19. Dell EMC will be auditing all of its partners starting in December 2017 to see how they performed throughout the last 12 months and to determine where they will fall on the upgraded tiered scale.
While Dell EMC could not share Canada-specific figures, vice president of global channel programs, Kimberley DeLeon, provided the below example to show what changes were made to US-only partners:
US (Zone 1) – Path One
- Gold: $5 million USD revenue; $500,000 from services; must sell at least one portfolio
- Platinum: $25 million USD revenue; $2.5 million from services; must sell at least one portfolio
- Titanium: $50 million USD revenue; $5 million from services; must sell at least one portfolio
US (Zone 1) – Path Two
- Gold: $500,000 USD revenue; $60,000 from services
- Platinum: $15 million USD revenue; $1.5 million from services; must sell at least one portfolio/one client and one solution or two clients
- Titanium: $25 million USD revenue; $4 million from services; must sell at least one portfolio/one client and one solution or two clients
DeLeon told CDN that for more information, partners could find the new thresholds in the Requirements and Benefits Documents section on the company’s partner portal, which was made available as of Nov. 8.
However, there will be additional changes specifically to the services revenue threshold for partners in the US only, due to how Dell EMC applies discounts and reports revenue.
“There is a downstream effect to the services targets we originally set. By no means is this a signal that we are lowering the bar for attaching services. We’ve tailored details to your country zone that you can easily find your program requirements located in the benefits and requirements document on the partner portal [on Dell EMC’s website],” DeLeon explained.
In fact, she said 50 per cent of Dell EMC’s partners grew in the first half of the year, equaling approximately 20,000-plus net new customers and showing that the company’s partners “have been taking advantage of [Dell EMC’s] new business incentives,” DeLeon added.
Dell EMC also rolled out a new services accelerator, which gives partners 1.25 credits towards climbing the tiered partner program for every dollar of services revenue that they sell.
“For our partners selling a lot of services, this accelerator can help them achieve a higher tier, which is exactly what we want them doing,” DeLeon said to CDN. “We want every partner reaching a maximum tier and to do so by selling a ton of services. We want them to double down on services, and if they do so, they will be rewarded with the ability to rise up the tiers even faster.”
She continued to explain the reasoning behind maintaining two paths for the tiered partner program, one of which is heavier in revenue and lighter on training and number of lines of business required to sell.
Overall, the company’s global channels business was up by double digits in the first half of the year, global channel chief John Byrnes said during the earnings call, and distribution was up 11 per cent. Dell EMC has been gaining shares on its market competitors, and registered more deals – 140,000 new deal registrations per quarter – than it ever has before.