partnerships
The Stranger Tax
A new study finds that founding teams with stranger co-founders raised fifty percent more capital and were significantly more likely to fail. The market rewards the wrong signal, and founders keep paying for it.
partnerships
A new study finds that founding teams with stranger co-founders raised fifty percent more capital and were significantly more likely to fail. The market rewards the wrong signal, and founders keep paying for it.
partnerships
Every founder building a partner program in 2026 is working against a deadline their partner never agreed to. This is the structural contradiction killing most partner-led growth programs before they produce a single dollar.
partnerships
Corporate partners arrive with distribution, credibility, and a collaborative frame. The agreement they bring contains something else entirely, and most founders discover the cost long after the conversation is over.
partnerships
When survival anxiety reaches a certain threshold, founders stop evaluating partners and start collecting them. The 2026 data on why that is the most expensive thing they do.
partnerships
Founders leave first partnership meetings with genuine optimism and land in silence two weeks later. The deal did not die when the partner stopped responding. It died in the meeting everyone left feeling good about.
partnerships
Founders tell themselves the partnership stalled because the partner went cold. The actual sequence usually runs the other direction, and the data from 2026 is making the pattern harder to ignore.
partnerships
Most partnership deals die after the first meeting, not during it. Founders spend their best energy on the pitch and leave the internal review process entirely to chance.
partnerships
Partner-led growth now accounts for 30 to 50 percent of total revenue for leading B2B companies. The stakes of getting selection wrong have never been higher. The methodology most founders are using was built for a world where partnerships were optional.
partnerships
Sixty-nine percent of companies plan to increase their investment in partnerships this year, and only 42% of them have any reliable way to measure whether those partnerships are generating revenue. That gap, between commitment and accountability, is where most partnership strategies quietly collapse. The data comes from PartnerStack'
partnerships
Sixty-nine percent of B2B companies are increasing their investment in partnerships this year, and only 42 percent of them can tell you which ones are generating revenue. That number comes from PartnerStack's State of Partnerships in GTM 2026 report, and it deserves more attention than the headline
partnerships
The founder who built the most productive partnership pipeline this year almost certainly did not have the largest network in the room. They had the most consistent process for converting their existing connections into structured, revenue-generating agreements, and that process is what produced the outcomes. A 2026 PwC survey
partnerships
Most founders think about partnerships in one of two ways: "let's do a co-marketing post" or "let's build a referral program." That is not a partnership strategy. That is two tactics from a list of nine categories, which means most founders