When a founder needs to write partnership or BD emails, craft integration pitches, or create co-marketing proposals. Activate when the user mentions partnerships, business development, integration proposals, co-marketing, channel partnerships, or strategic alliances.
Activate when a founder needs to identify and reach out to potential partners, write partnership emails, propose integrations, or create co-marketing proposals. Also use when the user says "I want to partner with X," "help me write a BD email," "how do I propose an integration," "co-marketing opportunity," or "I need a channel partner strategy."
From startup-context or the user:
Deliver the appropriate materials based on the partnership stage:
Before reaching out, score the potential partner on these dimensions:
| Dimension | Strong Signal | Weak Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Audience overlap | You share the same ICP but do not compete | Marginal audience overlap or direct competition |
| Complementary value | Your products are better together than apart | Nice-to-have integration with limited user benefit |
| Stage alignment | Similar company stage or the larger partner has an active partner program | Massive stage mismatch with no partner program |
| Distribution leverage | Partner has distribution you lack (or vice versa) | Neither side brings meaningful new distribution |
| Strategic timing | Partner is expanding into your space or just launched relevant features | No clear strategic reason for them to partner now |
Score each dimension 1-5. A score of 20+ suggests a strong partnership opportunity. Below 15, reconsider whether it is worth pursuing.
| Type | What It Is | Best For | Typical Structure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Integration | Build a technical connection between products | Complementary SaaS tools | Joint engineering effort, shared docs, marketplace listing |
| Co-marketing | Joint content, webinars, or campaigns | Companies with overlapping audiences | Shared leads, co-branded content, cross-promotion |
| Referral | Informal lead sharing | Trusted companies in adjacent spaces | Referral fees or reciprocal introductions |
| Reseller/Channel | Partner sells your product | Agencies, consultants, system integrators | Revenue share, tiered pricing, enablement materials |
| Strategic alliance | Deep collaboration on product or GTM | Companies with highly aligned vision | Joint roadmap, executive sponsorship, shared metrics |
Partnership emails differ from sales emails. You are proposing a collaboration, not selling a product. The tone should be peer-to-peer and the value proposition must be bilateral.
Structure: Shared Audience - Mutual Benefit - Proof - Lightweight Ask
When proposing a co-marketing initiative, include:
When proposing a product integration:
Cold partnership emails work, but warm intros convert 3-5x better. Before going cold, check for shared investors, advisor connections, shared customers who could intro, or conference overlap. Engage with their content on LinkedIn before reaching out.
| Touch | Timing | Angle |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Day 0 | Primary partnership pitch with mutual benefit |
| 2 | Day 5 | Share a specific data point or customer anecdote that reinforces the opportunity |
| 3 | Day 12 | Reference a market trend or competitor partnership that creates urgency |
| 4 | Day 20 | Brief breakup: "Want to respect your time — should I circle back next quarter?" |
cold-outreach — use for the underlying outreach mechanics (email structure, subject lines, follow-up cadence)proposal-generation — use when the partnership conversation advances to a formal proposal or agreementExample prompt: "I want to reach out to Segment about building an integration. We are a customer data quality tool with 800 users. About 40% of our users also use Segment."
Good outreach email output:
Subject: segment integration — 320 shared users
Hi [Name],
We build [Product], a data quality tool used by about 800 companies. Roughly 40% of our users also use Segment, and "Segment integration" is our most-requested feature.
The integration would let shared customers automatically validate and clean data flowing through Segment before it hits downstream destinations — fewer bad records in warehouses and analytics tools.
We would build and maintain the integration on our end. We would need access to your partner API docs and a technical point of contact for a few questions.
Worth a 20-minute call to see if this makes sense?
Good partner evaluation output snippet:
Partner Fit: Segment
- Audience overlap: 5/5 — 40% of our users are Segment customers
- Complementary value: 5/5 — Data quality is a known pain point for Segment users; our products are better together
- Stage alignment: 3/5 — They are much larger, but they have an active partner/integration program
- Distribution leverage: 4/5 — Their marketplace and integrations page would give us significant visibility
- Strategic timing: 4/5 — They recently launched their new Protocols product, which aligns with data quality
- Total: 21/25 — Strong partnership opportunity