Steve's Small Biz Podcast

Steve's Small Biz Podcast


Key Partners

January 24, 2020

In business, your key partners are the relationships that your business has
with other businesses to ensure your business model will be successful.

The most obvious key partnerships are related to your supply chain. When you
think about it, most companies are simply a link in a much larger value chain.

We often think of our customers as end-users of our products and services, but in
reality, our customers are most often simply the next link in the chain. To our
customers, we are their key partners. Without what we sell to them, they could
not produce their output.

Let’s consider buying a new car. There are literally thousands of key partnership relationships that made the car happen. If you are the car manufacturer, your key partners are the companies that make the tires, rims, and brakes. Moreover, if you are the tire company, you have key partnerships with rubber suppliers and the steel company that supplies you with the steel cords used to manufacture tires. Each link in the supply chain has key partners that help the company do what it does.

Types of Partnerships

Key partners are not restricted to just supply chain partners. Key
partnerships can fall into one of four broad categories.

1. Strategic alliances between non-competitors– As the name implies, this is a
strategic partnership between non-competitors. For example, your business may
choose to partner with a manufacturing company to produce a sub-assembly. The
tire company and the car manufacturer are not competitors. While the car
company could choose to be vertically integrated and manufacture its own tires,
it is far more efficient to contract with a tire manufacturer to source its
tires. Another great non-competitor strategic alliance was when Edger Thompson,
president of the Pennsylvania Railroad partnered with
Andrew Carnegie of Carnegie Steel to create its railroad tracks.
 

2. Coopetition– This is the strategic partnership
between direct competitors. For example, as an oil and gas guy, it is not very
efficient for every oil and gas company to try to sway public opinion about
fracking. Instead, many oil and gas producers pooled their money to create a
series of public service announcements (PSA) to debunk many of the claims that
fracking technology is bad for the environment and is responsible for polluting
water supplies. While the oil and gas companies are in direct competition with
each other, that does not mean that they may not have a key partnership with
other oil and gas companies to cooperate on some things.

3. Joint Ventures to develop new businesses– This is where
two companies combine their technology to create a new business. For example,
Google had a robust internet delivery mechanism, while NASA had a defense
mapping database with images of the planet. Through a joint venture, they
created Google Earth.

4. Buyer-supplier relationships– Last but not least is the
buyer-supplier relationship. Key partners in a buyer-supplier relationship can
build mutually beneficial and reliable relationships with Porter’s five forces.

There is a bit of a distinction that can be made between a simp...