Next-Gen PartnerOps Video Podcasts

Scaling Partner Ecosystems: Lessons from Cisco & SonicWALL

In this compelling episode of ZINFI’s Partner Ecosystem Podcast, host Sugata Sanyal, Founder & CEO of ZINFI, welcomes Michelle Ragusa-McBain, a global channel leader with executive roles at Cisco, SonicWALL, and more. Michelle shares first-hand insights on how major tech players like Cisco and SonicWALL built, scaled, and evolved their partner ecosystems over the past two decades.

From partner enablement and PRM tools to market development funds and the role of AI and cybersecurity, Michelle breaks down the strategic thinking behind building a robust, agile ecosystem. She also dives into her passion for diversity and inclusion in tech and how leaders can mentor the next generation.

Tune in for practical, high-level takeaways to apply whether you’re in a $200M mid-market firm or a global enterprise.

Listen now to learn how to scale and future-proof your ecosystem.

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Scaling Partner Ecosystems: From Enablement to Intelligence

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Video Podcast: Scaling Partner Ecosystems: Lessons from Cisco & SonicWALL

Chapter 1: The Evolution of Channel to Partner Ecosystems

Companies like Cisco defined the early days of the technology channel, with value-added resellers (VARs) serving as the primary go-to-market route. Vendors emphasized "partner-first" strategies, and ecosystems grew from networking roots to broader service offerings and solutions. A fascinating anecdote about the Internet’s origins highlights Cisco’s foundational role. Infrastructure development during this era created ripple effects that shaped the entire channel ecosystem.

As the industry matured, partner expectations and business models evolved. VARs transitioned into Managed Service Providers (MSPs) and later into Managed Security Service Providers (MSSPs), responding to shifts in how customers consumed technology. Subscription and consumption-based revenue models started to dominate, accelerated by digital transformation. Vendors needed to offer new support and enablement to maintain loyalty and performance. Specialized partners such as ISVs and integrators emerged, playing crucial roles in multi-vendor deals. Partnerships evolved into orchestration rather than linear sales.

The rise of cybersecurity and AI became significant ecosystem drivers. Cybersecurity became central to every organization, while AI shifted from a buzzword to an operational necessity. These forces reshaped go-to-market strategies, partner enablement, and vendor-partner relationships. The channel transformed into a diverse, interconnected ecosystem requiring continuous innovation and adaptation.

Chapter 2: Building a Partner Office from the Ground Up

Building a "partner-first" organization, especially as companies scale from mid-market players to global enterprises, starts with understanding the buyer persona and identifying the partner types needed to reach them. Companies must assess their geographic operations and determine how partner types—VARs, MSPs, GSIs, ISVs—can support regional expansion across North America, EMEA, LATAM, and APAC.

Distribution plays a critical role and varies by region. In North America, companies often operate through distributors and direct-to-partner channels, while in Europe and Latin America, distributors are essential connection points. Traditional distributors (e.g., Ingram Micro, Tech Data, Arrow) contrast with born-in-the-cloud players like Pax8, who have transformed partner expectations.

Influence is crucial—organizations must understand where partners spend time and who they trust. Companies must be visible in key forums such as events, online communities, and podcasts. Modern ecosystem leadership focuses on orchestrating a network of influencers, service providers, marketing agencies, and law firms. Building a successful partner office demands holistic thinking and integrated execution across these stakeholders.

Chapter 3: Partner Ops, MDF, and the Playbook for Growth

Partner Operations (Partner Ops) is an emerging core function of partner ecosystems. Many partner organizations remain underinvested and under-structured, leading to missed scalability opportunities. Listening to partner feedback via advisory councils, surveys, and interviews is critical for building programs that align enablement, co-selling, and incentives consistently and data-driven.

Many people often misunderstand Market Development Funds (MDF), even though they play a key role. Transitioning from proposal-based to point-based MDF systems rewards real partner contributions across the buyer journey, including social selling, thought leadership, customer enablement, and post-sales support. Simplifying MDF programs helps address pain points like upfront cost burdens and improves utilization rates.

Partner Ops must manage the entire partner lifecycle: targeting, recruiting, onboarding, enabling, co-marketing, co-selling, incentivizing, and accelerating. Success requires collaboration across product, marketing, sales, and customer success teams. Holistic systems that reward consistent contributions deal with closures and build resilient and growth-oriented ecosystems.

Chapter 4: AI, Cybersecurity, and the Future of Partner Enablement

Two transformative forces—AI and cybersecurity—are reshaping partner enablement. Security is now a baseline requirement; differentiation is critical with over 6,500 cybersecurity vendors globally. Companies must focus on what they sell, who influences buying decisions, and how they co-market effectively in a crowded ecosystem.

AI is revolutionizing partner enablement by personalizing education journeys. Innovative companies use AI to combine gamification, microlearning, and adaptive content delivery, tailoring training to individual partner roles, learning styles, and paces. This targeted enablement improves retention, engagement, and sales velocity.

Beyond enablement, AI enhances lead distribution, deal registration, and predictive analytics. Generative AI powers 24/7 partner support, automates marketing content, and analyzes deal flows in real time, improving operational efficiency and scaling smaller organizations without significant resource investments. The convergence of AI and cybersecurity defines a new era for partner ecosystems built on intelligence, agility, and collaboration.

Chapter 5: Diversity, Mentorship & Building Inclusive Ecosystems

Building diverse and inclusive ecosystems requires intention. Representation matters across every level of the partner ecosystem, from leadership boards to advisory councils. Inclusive ecosystems are not only more equitable but also more innovative and resilient.

Distribution can serve as a democratizing force by naturally connecting vendors with diverse organizations across geographies and industries. Inclusive strategies must extend beyond gender or ethnicity to include neurodiversity, disability, socioeconomic background, and thought diversity. Research consistently shows that diverse teams perform better—and the channel is no exception.

Future leaders—especially young and underrepresented—are encouraged to seek mentors, champions, and sponsors. Small interactions and mentoring relationships can profoundly influence career trajectories. Organizations must embed inclusion into the ecosystem’s DNA to build stronger partner relationships, better products, and more sustainable revenue streams. Diversity is not a checkbox—it is a business imperative for the future of partner ecosystems.