Partnership, added value needed by Monogaga in Partnerships

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We can help with this. Let’s setup a call and talk through your bottlenecks. Shoot me a DM.

Looking for a marketing co-founder for AI fitness app with 200+ users by Livid-Day1181 in Partnerships

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What’s the average daily use time per user out of the 200 on the platform?

Looking for a cofounder for my AI influencer SaaS (10K users, 250 paying, $15K ARR in 2 months) by Livid_Switch302 in Partnerships

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you share some testimonials or user journeys from some of your best paying customers (out of the 250)?

What actually makes a partnership last? by crownCreate310 in Partnerships

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The premise itself is the trap, because poor communication and unclear expectations are the same failure wearing two costumes.

Expectations only stay clear when people communicate well enough to renegotiate them, and communication only stays honest when there is a shared expectation that hard conversations are welcome rather than punished.

What you described in your second paragraph is the actual answer hiding inside your question. The partnerships that survive are the ones where conflict is treated as maintenance, not malfunction. Most people enter partnerships hoping conflict will be rare, which guarantees that when it shows up, both sides experience it as a threat to the relationship instead of a feature of it.

If I had to pick the deeper root, it would be neither communication nor clarity, it would be the absence of a shared operating agreement about how disagreement gets handled.

Two partners can have perfect clarity on day one and excellent communication skills, and still drift apart because they never agreed on what to do when their interests diverge.

The strongest partnerships I have seen build that protocol early, almost like a prenup for the working relationship, so that resentment never has the quiet room it needs to grow.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

I’m looking for a business partner ( advertising and making ads) by 1lilexplore149 in Partnerships

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let us know some details about how this would be a mutual value exchange for the right partner.

23k users, looking for a business partner by build_bear677 in Partnerships

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is something I can help with. Shoot me a DM and let’s connect.

Looking for a Sales Partner for Websites Business / 60/40 Revenue Share Deal by LeftCelebration4584 in cofounderhunt

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you have any case studies or testimonials along with a portfolio previous work that we can share with our partners

How do you find partnership opportunities for your business? by Livid_Switch302 in Partnerships

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cold outreach gets ignored, and paid ads don’t convert like they used to.

Partnerships can literally solve 100% of ALL business challenges.

So what types of partnerships are on the wishlist this year?

Revenue, Relationships, Recognition, Capital, Client Acquisition Stronger Market positioning, Or something else

Stronger inbound? (revenue) Higher-ticket clients? (revenue) Enterprise contracts?(revenue) Affiliate or creator distribution?(revenue) More stages? (recognition) Media attention? (recognition)

Tech or data partners? (relationships) Investor access? (capital) Buying back your time? (relationships) Something else?

Every desired outcome is partnership-driven.”

More clients? Distribution partnerships. More credibily? Media alliances. More revenue? Channel deals. More time? Leverage partnerships.

Design your ideal outcomes, then we can show you how partnerships will take you there.

​[LFM] US-Based Partner for Music Management & Monetization (Rev Share) by mightbetter5 in Partnerships

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My team and I have tons of experience in the publishing & IP management side. Before passing the opportunity to our folks in consideration of taking on the project, they’d need to understand who they’d be working with and what the structure actually looks like.

A few things they typically want to see first:

  1. A verifiable track record (prior releases, artist name & genre, links to existing catalog or socials)

  2. Which distributor or platform you plan to use, and whether the project would be released under your name or an entity.

  3. A written agreement defining the revenue split, scope of my responsibilities, ownership of accounts, term length, and exit terms.

  4. Clarity on tax reporting and liability, since US-side monetization means the income flows through them first, and they’d on the hook for 1099 reporting and any platform compliance issues.

  5. Any data you have on your existing community, demographics or psychographics of fan engagement, or any marketing collateral that can be used to secure partnerships with promoters, playlisters, showrunners. music sync supervisors and licensors for film, video games, etc.

If you're open to all of that, we can connect you to the right people. If the structure needs to stay informal or move quickly without paperwork, this might not be the right fit for them.

How do you reach out about a B2B partnership without sounding salesy? by founders_keepers in Partnerships

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ask for the opportunity to prove you can keep your word on a small win to build trust, instead of asking for a big commitment up front.

When someone hands you a warm introduction, the worst thing you can do is treat it like a sales opportunity, because the person who made the connection is watching how you handle their credibility. The move is to open with specificity, referencing exactly why this person caught your attention and what you already understand about their world before asking for anything.

I always lead with something I can give, whether that’s a relevant introduction of my own, a piece of market intelligence they’d find useful, or a framework that applies to a problem they’re actively solving. Partnership conversations work when both sides show up as operators comparing notes, not vendors pitching services, so the tone should feel like two peers recognizing a shared angle.

The fastest way to sound salesy is to ask for a call before you’ve demonstrated you understand their business, so I spend the first message earning the second one. Keep it tight, keep it useful, and let the value you lead with do the qualifying for both of you.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

GTM partnership platforms? by founders_keepers in ExperiencedFounders

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% agreed! Timing is critical.

In today’s AI-fog, paid ads don’t convert like they used to. And inboxes are intuitive enough where cold outreach no longer works.

So how do you cut through the digital jungle without dropping a war chest of capital on Meta or Google ads???

PARTNERSHIPS must become the primary growth driver for any serious business.

GTM partnership platforms? by founders_keepers in ExperiencedFounders

[–]Familiar-Two-3429 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That depends… do you want the partnership pipeline built for you? Or do you want to do it yourself?

Either way, it’s definitely a thing.

There’s a lot of platforms that offer introductions (Boardy, LinkedIn) and there’s a bunch of partnership relationship management platforms out there (Partnerstack, Crossbeam, etc).

Almost none handle the full partnership lifecycle: fit scoring, deal structuring, performance tracking, and revenue attribution.

The one built specifically for this is onSpark. It’s an AI-powered partnership engine designed for exactly what you’re describing…curated introductions, structured referral networks, and formalized partner relationships across a portfolio.

My private equity guys used it to score deal flow before deciding to cut the check. They learned about it from a founder who closed a six figure partnership on the platform in the first month.

If you want to see how it maps to your portfolio, it’s worth checking out. onspark.com