If you sell through channel partners, you’re competing for attention. Partners have other suppliers and other priorities. According to Gallup, 70% of channel customers are looking to buy from someone else. There’s good and bad news there: the bad news is that most of your customers are at risk of moving on to competitors. The good news is that you can become the competitor that those 70% move on to, while keeping the partners you have. How do you do that? By following the B2B personalization examples in this blog, making partners’ experience with you memorable and useful.
Let’s not kid ourselves: partner decisions come down to price and many things you can’t fully control, like supply chains, product availability, materials costs, etc. But your competitors are dealing with those same constraints. Which means B2B personalization can help you carve out an advantage. We’re not talking about meaningless kind of “personalization” that just swaps in a first name in an email, but a partner experience that’s genuinely valuable, with intangible (recognition, confidence, trust) and tangible benefits (education, rewards, easier selling) to your brand.
86% of B2B marketers believe personalized 1:1 marketing is the key to success.
(Source: DemandBase)
Data-Driven B2B Segmentation
Collect data from the systems below and consolidate it into one place so you can segment partners based on reality (not assumptions). Technology like Extu’s Partner Experience Platform can make this a lot easier by bringing partner marketing and incentives into one place—then integrating with the systems you already rely on (CRM, ERP, PRM, and more) so you get a single, connected view of partner activity for smarter segmentation and personalization.
Data Integration
Data integration is the foundation for B2B personalization. If partner data is scattered across tools, segmentation turns into guesswork. You need one connected view of each partner in one place. The technology you use should combine partner marketing and incentives, then integrate with systems like your CRM, ERP, and PRM. Each system yields data that can contribute to B2B personalization, including:
Incentive Programs
- Qualifying Activity Type: The exact behavior the partner completed (what you’re rewarding)
- Points Earned: A simple measure of participation and performance against your goals
- Reward Redemptions: What rewards partners chose and when can provide useful insight into what motivates them
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Systems
- Account ID: The identifier that lets you match partner records across systems
- Contact Role/Title: Who you’re targeting inside the partner org (so you tailor by role)
- Opportunity Stage: Where deals sit, so you can personalize content to the selling moment
- Last Activity: A quick engagement signal (active vs. drifting)
- Win/Loss Outcome: What converts (and what doesn’t) by partner or segment
Channel Marketing Platforms
- Campaign ID: The campaign anchor you can tie engagement back to
- Email Open Rate: A signal of subject-line relevance and list health
- Click-Through Rate: A stronger signal of real interest in your content/offers
- Form Submission Count: How often partners or prospects took a next step
- Lead Source: Where interest originated so you can prioritize what’s working
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Software
- Order ID: The transaction record you use to track and reconcile activity
- SKU Purchased: What partners actually buy (and what they ignore
- Units Ordered: Volume patterns that reveal growth, churn, or seasonality
- Invoice Amount: Revenue impact—not just engagement
- Order Date: Timing you can use for seasonality planning and outreach
E-Commerce Platforms
- Website Session Source: What channels influence partner traffic and behavior
- Product Page Views: What they’re researching before a purchase decision
- Add-to-Cart Rate: High intent—often where friction starts to show
- Checkout Completion Rate: Whether intent turns into conversion
- Abandoned Cart Count: A built-in trigger for timely follow-up
Partner Relationship Management (PRM) System
- Partner Tier: How you tailor benefits, messaging, and expectations
- Partner Primary Contact: Your main owner for communication and follow-through
- Deal Registration ID: Direct tie between partner activity and pipeline
- MDF/Co-op Claim Amount: Who’s investing in marketing and how much
- Partner Certification Status:
Who’s enabled vs. who needs a ramp plan - Portal Login Frequency: A straightforward indicator of engagement
Support or Service System
- Ticket Category: What issues are most common for partners
- Ticket Severity/Priority: What’s most disruptive (and needs proactive attention)
- Product/SKU Involved: Where product friction may be hurting confidence
- Warranty Claim Reason: Repeat issues that can erode trust fast
- Time to Resolution: A real-world measure of partner experience quality
Configure Price Quote (CPQ) Software
- Quote ID: A record of quoting activity you can analyze over time
- Quote Value: Revenue potential (and where to focus help)
- Products/Configuration Requested: What they’re trying to sell and how
- Discount Percentage: Margin pressure and deal health indicators
- Win/Loss Outcome: Which quoting patterns lead to closed business
Distributor Sell-Through / Point of Sale (POS) Data
- End-Customer Identifier: Enough visibility to spot patterns without exposing sensitive info
- SKU Sold: What’s actually moving through the channel
- Units Sold: True volume beyond “sell-in”
- Sell-Through Revenue: Downstream performance and impact
- Purchase Date: Buying cycles you can plan campaigns around
Pricing / Product Information Management (PIM) System
- List Price at Time of Order: Accurate analysis when pricing changes
- Customer Price Tier: Which partners operate under which pricing rules
- Product Availability: Prevents promoting what can’t ship
- Substitute SKU Mapping: Enables smart “if X is out, push Y” personalization
- Product Attributes/Specs: Lets you tailor by use case, vertical, and fit
Incentivized Data Submission
Once you’ve integrated your system data, first-hand data is what makes B2B personalization feel human. It tells you what partners care about, what they’re hearing from customers, and what they need from you next. The easiest way to collect it consistently is to make submission simple and reward partners for taking the time.
Surveys
Use short surveys to capture inputs your systems can’t: partner priorities, challenges, and what support they want most. Keep surveys short and relevant. For high participation, SurveyMonkey recommends surveys be less than 10 minutes long, prioritize essential (while removing unnecessary ones), use progress indicators, and offer incentives.
Reviews and Feedback
Collect feedback at key moments such as after a campaign, training, deal, or support interaction. Ask for specific, actionable inputs and reward partners for submitting detailed responses. Over time, this becomes a steady stream of insight you can use to personalize messaging by partner needs.
Warranty Registrations
Warranty registrations give you reliable first-hand data about what product’s being installed, where, when, and for whom. Incentivize partners for each completed registration and keep the process friction-free. Extu’s Partner Experience Platform can help by letting partners snap a photo of a warranty registration and upload it directly to the platform for instant rewards.
Strategic B2B Segmentation
Once your data is centralized, data-driven B2B segmentation turns information into action. Instead of blasting every partner with the same “monthly campaign + training + promo,” you group partners based on what they need (and what you need from them), then tailor your outreach accordingly. A few qualities partners are commonly segmented by:
- Firmographics: partner size, revenue potential, region/territory, partner type (distributor, reseller, agent, etc.)
- Performance: sales volume, product mix, growth trend, deal velocity, win rate
- Engagement: campaign participation, portal logins, training completion, incentive participation, responsiveness
- Strategic Value: whitespace opportunity, priority markets/verticals, readiness for new product adoption
You don’t need a million micro-segments to get value out of B2B personalization. A few clear groups are enough to personalize messaging and offers:
High Performers
Keep them moving with early access, co-marketing support, advanced enablement, and higher-threshold promos tied to strategic goals.
High Potential / Underperforming
These partners usually need clearer plays: focused campaigns, sales tools, and targeted incentives that remove friction and build momentum.
Mid-Tier
Engage mid-tier partners with consistent, repeatable messaging like simple monthly campaigns, light enablement, and promotions nudging them toward growth.
New or Reactivated
Put them on a ramp path: onboarding, quick wins, and small rewards for early actions (training, first campaign, first deal).
Disengaged / At-Risk
Treat this like a save motion: short surveys, direct outreach, simplified programs, and offers based on what they’ve stopped doing.
Segmentation should help you decide where partner potential lies and what promotions and campaigns they qualify for. If you can’t answer “what should this partner do next?” your segments are still too vague.
B2B Personalization Examples
Once you’ve segmented partners, your ongoing campaigns shouldn’t look like a single monthly blast. They should feel like targeted support—designed around what each group is trying to accomplish, what they’re capable of executing, and what will actually move the needle for them.
The goal is to make it easier for the right partners to take the right actions at the right time.
Regular Monthly Campaigns
Basic monthly campaigns are your baseline: consistent communication partners can rely on. But “basic” doesn’t mean generic. Even with one recurring campaign, you can conduct B2B personalization by segment—who gets what, how it’s framed, and what you ask them to do.
A good monthly campaign should answer three questions for the partner: What’s new? What’s in it for me? What do you want me to do next? It should include mix of content that helps and informs partners (and promotes your brand, where appropriate).
Product Marketing
Product marketing campaigns are where B2B personalization becomes a competitive advantage—because partners don’t need more product info; they need the right product story for the customers they serve. When product marketing is segmented, you can highlight different features, use cases, bundles, and proof points based on what each partner sells, who they sell to, and what’s happening in their market.
Industry Insights
Industry insights give partners timely, useful context they can bring to customers. Segment these updates by the markets partners actually sell into (region, vertical, partner type, product focus), so you’re not sending the same “trend report” to everyone. The goal is to help partners spot demand shifts, speak to what buyers care about right now, and know which plays to run next.
Thought Leadership
Thought leadership builds credibility partners can borrow. Instead of generic brand content, create partner-ready pieces that help them position your products with confidence—then tailor topics and formats by segment (vertical themes, partner maturity, and role). Keep it easy to share: short articles, one-pagers, webinar recaps, and social snippets partners can use without rewriting.
Co-Marketing and MDF Activation
Co-marketing falls flat when partners have to build everything from scratch. MDF activation should feel like “we made this easy to launch,” not “here’s a pile of assets—good luck!” The goal is to remove friction, tailor support by partner segment, and give partners ready-to-run campaigns that match their market.
Co-branded Landing Pages
Give partners landing pages that are already built, branded, and conversion-ready—so they can start driving leads without waiting on their own web team.
Localized Templates
Provide templates that reflect a partner’s region, audience, and common use cases (language, offers, seasonal angles), so they don’t have to rewrite everything to make it relevant.
“Done-for-You” Campaign Kits
Package the full campaign—not just the content. Think emails, social posts, landing page copy, CTA guidance, and simple launch steps so partners can execute fast.
MDF Plans by Tier
Match the level of MDF support to the partner’s potential and maturity. Top tiers get deeper investment and more hands-on help; emerging tiers get lighter, standardized kits to build momentum.
Concierge Services
For partners with strong upside, offer higher-touch help: campaign setup, targeting guidance, launch support, and performance check-ins to keep execution moving.
Pre-Approved Ad Copy
Give partners ad copy that’s already compliant and tailored to specific industries and use cases so they can run campaigns without delays (and without going off-brand).
Education and Enablement Content
This is where B2B personalization gets practical. Once you know what products a partner buys (or avoids), where their knowledge gaps are, and which certifications they need, you can use marketing campaigns to deliver the right enablement to the right partners—so they’re not digging through a giant library hoping to find what’s relevant.
Certification Processes
Use campaigns to guide partners through the exact certifications they need based on their role, tier, and product focus—what to take, in what order, and what they unlock when they finish.
Resource Library
Promote a library that’s organized by partner segment (product line, vertical, role, experience level), so partners see “what to use next” instead of an overwhelming content dump.
Videos
Send short, targeted videos tied to a specific outcome—how to position a product, run a demo, handle a common objection, or explain a use case—based on what that partner is selling.
Infographics
Use visuals to simplify complex info partners need fast (product comparisons, use-case maps, installation basics, buying guides), then tailor which ones partners receive by product mix and vertical.
Ebooks
Use longer-form guides for deeper learning—like industry-specific playbooks or “how to sell to X” content, then route them to partners who sell into those segments or want to expand into them.
Deal Acceleration Tools
This is the “help me close” category: partner-specific battlecards, vertical objection handling, ROI calculators, configure/quote support, demo scripts, competitive intel, and deal coaching delivered based on the deals they’re pursuing and where they tend to get stuck.
Promotions
Socks are great when they’re one-size-fits-all, but partner promotions aren’t socks. Promotions should be personalized. Use the data-backed segments you’ve created to tailor the goal, the reward, and the path to success. Partners see an offer that fits their reality, and you motivate the actions you want them to complete, whether it’s more sales, faster adoption, or stronger engagement.
Discounts or Rebates on Qualifying Products
Use targeted discounts/rebates to move priority SKUs or manage inventory. Personalize by region, seasonality, or partner product mix, so partners’ offers that match what their customers are about to buy.
Threshold-Based Incentives
Set clear goals tied to the outcome (volume, product mix, growth). Personalize thresholds by partner tier or baseline performance, so smaller partners aren’t automatically excluded—and top partners still have something worth chasing.
Bonus Reward-Earning Opportunities
Run limited-time multipliers (like 2X points) to create urgency. Personalize the window and eligible products based on local demand cycles or launch priorities.
Group Incentive Trips
Use high-aspiration travel as a top-tier reward for high-priority goals. Personalize eligibility around the partners who can truly influence outcomes (top growth segments, strategic regions, or priority verticals).
Role-Based SPIFF Bundles
Different roles inside partner organizations drive different outcomes. Reward them differently. Sellers earn for closes, marketers earn for launching co-branded campaigns, and technicians earn for completing install or certification training.
Co-branded Campaign Incentives
Reward execution, not just sales. Incentivize partners to launch approved campaigns (and optionally tie additional rewards to results like leads generated or meetings booked).
MDF Match Multipliers
Instead of a flat MDF match, increase the match rate when partners run approved campaigns or align with your strategic priorities. Personalize by industry, partner tier, or use case (e.g., higher match for a compliance campaign in regulated verticals).
Lead Follow-up Speed Challenges
Reward fast response and consistent follow-up, because speed impacts conversion. Personalize SLAs by partner maturity or tier so expectations are fair, and improvements are measurable.
Tiered Milestone Ladders
Pay out at multiple moments, not just the finish line: first deal, third deal, first attach product, first deal in a new category. Personalize the ladder steps by partner size/territory so each segment has a credible path to progress.
New-Product Early Access and Exclusivity
Offer early access, priority inventory, protected leads, or launch kits to partners who commit to defined launch activities. Personalize who gets access, which vertical kits they receive, and what actions unlock the benefits.
Attach-and-Accelerate Promos
Incentivize bundles and attach (services, warranties, add-ons) to protect margin and increase deal value. Personalize the offer based on partner strengths. Core-product-heavy partners get bigger rewards for attach, for example, while services-led partners get rewarded for expanding into core.
Pipeline Conversion Accelerators
Reward movement through sales stages (SQL → opportunity → closed) to improve conversion, not just activity. Personalize the stage goals and payout logic by partner type, and pair each stage with the enablement assets that help that segment advance.
In Conclusion
B2B personalization helps you tailor partner marketing in ways that partners will actually engage with. It begins with data-driven B2B segmentation: collect and integrate all the partner data you have to create laser-focused B2B personalization strategies.
By acting on the B2B personalization examples in this blog such as sending monthly campaigns, wielding targeted co-marketing and MDF activation, supporting specialized education and enablement, and offering tailored promotions, you can replace generic partner communication with targeted support that fits each segment’s needs.
Partners get fewer irrelevant messages, clearer next steps, and resources that align to what they’re trying to sell. That’s how personalization turns into measurable engagement, stronger adoption of your priorities, and more predictable channel growth.


