LLM+

Co-Marketing Partnerships

When the user wants to find co-marketing partners, plan joint campaigns, or brainstorm partnership opportunities. Use when the user says 'co-marketing,' 'partner marketing,' 'joint campaign,' 'who should we partner with,' 'integration marketing,' 'cross-promotion,' 'collaborate with another company,' 'partnership ideas,' or 'co-brand.' For customer referral programs, see referral-program. For launch-specific partnerships, see launch-strategy.

Installation

  1. Make sure Claude is on your device and in your terminal.

    Skills load from ~/.claude/skills/ when Claude Code starts up — so you need it on your machine first. If you don't have it yet, install it once with the command below, then run claude in any terminal to verify.

    One-time setup
    npm i -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code

    Already have it? Skip ahead.

  2. Paste into Claude Code or into your terminal.
    Install
    git clone https://github.com/coreyhaines31/marketingskills.git /tmp/coreyhaines31__marketingskills && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills/co-marketing-coreyhaines31 && cp -r /tmp/coreyhaines31__marketingskills/skills/co-marketing/. ~/.claude/skills/co-marketing-coreyhaines31/

    This copies the whole skill folder into ~/.claude/skills/co-marketing-coreyhaines31/ — the SKILL.md plus any scripts, reference docs, or templates the skill ships with. Safe default: works for every skill.

    Faster alternative (instruction-only skills)

    Skips the clone and grabs only the SKILL.md file. Don't use this if the skill ships Python scripts, reference markdowns, or asset templates — they won't be downloaded and the skill will fail when it tries to load them.

    Quick install (SKILL.md only)
    mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills/co-marketing-coreyhaines31 && curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/coreyhaines31/marketingskills/main/skills/co-marketing/SKILL.md -o ~/.claude/skills/co-marketing-coreyhaines31/SKILL.md
  3. Restart Claude Code.

    Quit and reopen Claude Code (or any other agent that loads from ~/.claude/skills/). New skills are picked up on startup.

  4. Just ask Claude.

    Skills auto-activate when your request matches the skill's description — no slash command needed. Trigger phrases live in the skill's own frontmatter; you can read them in the “What this skill does” section above.

Prefer to read the source first? Open on GitHub.

When Claude uses it

When the user wants to find co-marketing partners, plan joint campaigns, or brainstorm partnership opportunities. Use when the user says 'co-marketing,' 'partner marketing,' 'joint campaign,' 'who should we partner with,' 'integration marketing,' 'cross-promotion,' 'collaborate with another company,' 'partnership ideas,' or 'co-brand.' For customer referral programs, see referral-program. For launch-specific partnerships, see launch-strategy.

What this skill does

You are a co-marketing strategist who helps SaaS companies identify ideal partners and brainstorm high-impact joint campaigns.

Before Starting

Check for product marketing context first: If .agents/product-marketing-context.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing-context.md in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.

When to Use This Skill

  • Finding potential co-marketing partners
  • Brainstorming campaign ideas with a specific partner
  • Planning joint launches or promotions
  • Evaluating partnership fit
  • Structuring co-marketing agreements

Partner Identification Framework

1. Audience Overlap Analysis

The best partners share your audience but don't compete for the same budget.

Ideal partner characteristics:

  • Same buyer persona, different problem solved
  • Adjacent in the workflow (before, after, or alongside your tool)
  • Similar company stage and customer size
  • Complementary, not competitive

Questions to identify partners:

  • What tools do your customers already use?
  • What do they use before/after your product?
  • Who else is selling to your ICP?
  • Which integrations do customers request most?

2. Partner Scoring Criteria

Rate potential partners (1-5) on:

CriteriaWhat to Evaluate
Audience fitHow closely does their audience match your ICP?
Audience sizeDo they have reach worth partnering for?
Brand alignmentWould you be proud to be associated?
Engagement qualityDo they have an active, engaged audience?
Reciprocity potentialCan you offer them equal value?
Ease of executionDo they have a partnerships team? History of co-marketing?

3. Where to Find Partners

Integration ecosystem:

  • Your existing integration partners
  • Tools in the same app marketplace category
  • Platforms your product plugs into

Adjacent categories:

  • Tools that solve the problem before yours
  • Tools that solve the problem after yours
  • Tools used by the same role but different workflow

Community signals:

  • Who sponsors the same podcasts/newsletters?
  • Who exhibits at the same conferences?
  • Who's active in the same communities?
  • Whose content does your audience share?

Data sources:

  • Crossbeam or Reveal for account overlap
  • Customer surveys ("what else do you use?")
  • G2/Capterra category neighbors
  • Job postings mentioning your tool + others

Co-Marketing Campaign Types

Content Partnerships

FormatEffortLead SharingBest For
Co-authored blog postLowShared byline, link exchangeThought leadership, SEO
Joint ebook/guideMediumGated, split leadsLead gen, deeper topic
Research reportHighGated, split leadsAuthority, PR
Guest newsletter swapLowEach keeps own leadsAudience exposure
Podcast guest exchangeLowEach keeps own leadsRelationship building

Webinars & Events

FormatEffortBest For
Joint webinarMediumLead gen, product education
Virtual summit panelMediumMulti-partner exposure
Co-hosted workshopHighHands-on education, deeper engagement
Conference booth sharingMediumCost splitting, audience overlap
Joint happy hour/dinnerLowRelationship building at events

Product & Integration Marketing

FormatEffortBest For
Integration launchMediumExisting integration partners
Joint case studyMediumShared customers
"Better together" landing pageLowIntegration discovery
Bundle or discountMediumConversion boost, cross-sell
In-app cross-promotionMediumUser activation

Community & Social

FormatEffortBest For
Social media takeoverLowAudience exposure
Joint giveaway/contestLowList building, engagement
Slack/Discord community collabLowCommunity building
Joint AMA or Twitter SpaceLowThought leadership

Brainstorming Partner Campaigns

When brainstorming with a specific partner, consider:

1. Shared Audience Moments

  • What trigger events matter to both audiences?
  • What seasonal moments align with both products?
  • What industry trends affect both customer bases?

2. Combined Value Propositions

  • What can customers achieve with both tools that they can't with one?
  • What workflow does the combination enable?
  • What pain point does the integration solve?

3. Unique Assets Each Brings

Your AssetsTheir Assets
Your audience size/engagementTheir audience size/engagement
Your content expertiseTheir content expertise
Your product capabilitiesTheir product capabilities
Your brand credibilityTheir brand credibility
Your customer storiesTheir customer stories

4. Campaign Idea Prompts

Ask these to generate ideas:

  • "What would we create if we had to launch something in 2 weeks?"
  • "What content do both our audiences desperately need?"
  • "What would make customers say 'finally, someone did this'?"
  • "What exclusive thing could we offer together?"
  • "What data do we both have that would make a compelling story?"

Approaching Potential Partners

Cold Outreach Template

Subject: [Your Company] + [Their Company] co-marketing idea

Hey [Name],

I'm [Role] at [Your Company]. We [one-line description].

I noticed we share a lot of the same audience—[specific observation about overlap].

I have an idea for [specific campaign type] that could work well for both of us: [one-sentence pitch].

Would you be open to a quick call to explore?

[Your name]

What to Prepare for the Call

  1. Account overlap data (if available via Crossbeam/Reveal)
  2. 2-3 specific campaign ideas (not just "let's do something")
  3. Your audience metrics (list size, traffic, engagement)
  4. Examples of past partnerships (shows you can execute)
  5. Clear ask (what you want from them, what you'll provide)

Structuring the Partnership

Key Questions to Align On

  • Lead ownership: How are leads split or shared?
  • Promotion commitments: What will each party do to promote?
  • Asset creation: Who creates what? Who approves?
  • Timeline: When does each phase happen?
  • Success metrics: How will you measure success?
  • Follow-up: Will you do more together if it works?

Simple Co-Marketing Agreement Outline

  1. Campaign description: What you're doing together
  2. Responsibilities: Who does what
  3. Timeline: Key dates and deadlines
  4. Lead handling: How leads are captured, shared, followed up
  5. Promotion: Minimum commitments from each side
  6. Branding: Logo usage, approval process
  7. Costs: Who pays for what (if any)
  8. Metrics sharing: What data you'll share post-campaign

Measuring Co-Marketing Success

Quantitative Metrics

  • Leads generated (total and per partner)
  • Lead quality (MQL/SQL conversion rate)
  • Revenue attributed
  • Audience growth (new subscribers, followers)
  • Content engagement (views, downloads, shares)

Qualitative Metrics

  • Ease of collaboration
  • Partner responsiveness
  • Audience reception
  • Brand lift
  • Relationship strengthened for future campaigns

Co-Marketing Checklist

Partner Identification

  • List tools your customers already use
  • Check Crossbeam/Reveal for account overlap
  • Score top 5 potential partners
  • Research their past co-marketing activities

Campaign Planning

  • Agree on campaign type and goals
  • Define lead sharing arrangement
  • Assign responsibilities and deadlines
  • Set success metrics

Execution

  • Create shared assets (landing page, content, etc.)
  • Coordinate promotion schedules
  • Brief both teams on talking points

Post-Campaign

  • Share metrics with partner
  • Debrief on what worked/didn't
  • Discuss future collaboration opportunities

Task-Specific Questions

  1. Are you looking for partners or planning a campaign with a specific partner?
  2. What type of co-marketing are you most interested in? (content, events, integrations, community)
  3. What's your audience size? (email list, social following, traffic)
  4. Do you have existing integration partners?
  5. Have you done co-marketing before? What worked/didn't?
  6. What's your timeline and budget for co-marketing?

Tool Integrations

For implementation, see the tools registry. Key tools for co-marketing:

ToolBest ForGuide
CrossbeamAccount overlap with partnerscrossbeam.md
IntrowPartner program management, deal registrationintrow.md
PartnerStackPartner and affiliate program managementpartnerstack.md

Related Skills

  • referral-program — For customer referral and affiliate programs (customers referring customers)
  • launch-strategy — For product launches with partners; covers co-marketing as a "borrowed channel"
  • content-strategy — For content planning including co-created content
  • sales-enablement — For partner-facing collateral and enablement materials

Related skills

A

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When the user wants to audit or optimize an App Store or Google Play listing. Also use when the user mentions 'ASO audit,' 'app store optimization,' 'optimize my app listing,' 'improve app visibility,' 'app store ranking,' 'audit my listing,' 'why aren't people downloading my app,' 'improve my app conversion,' 'keyword optimization for app,' or 'compare my app to competitors.' Use when the user shares an App Store or Google Play URL and wants to improve it.

C

Cold Email Writer

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Write B2B cold emails and follow-up sequences that get replies. Use when the user wants to write cold outreach emails, prospecting emails, cold email campaigns, sales development emails, or SDR emails. Also use when the user mentions "cold outreach," "prospecting email," "outbound email," "email to leads," "reach out to prospects," "sales email," "follow-up email sequence," "nobody's replying to my emails," or "how do I write a cold email." Covers subject lines, opening lines, body copy, CTAs, personalization, and multi-touch follow-up sequences. For warm/lifecycle email sequences, see email-sequence. For sales collateral beyond emails, see sales-enablement.

C

Community-Led Growth

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Build and leverage online communities to drive product growth and brand loyalty. Use when the user wants to create a community strategy, grow a Discord or Slack community, manage a forum or subreddit, build brand advocates, increase word-of-mouth, drive community-led growth, engage users post-signup, or turn customers into evangelists. Trigger phrases: "build a community," "community strategy," "Discord community," "Slack community," "community-led growth," "brand advocates," "user community," "forum strategy," "community engagement," "grow our community," "ambassador program," "community flywheel."

C

Competitor Comparison Pages

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When the user wants to create competitor comparison or alternative pages for SEO and sales enablement. Also use when the user mentions 'alternative page,' 'vs page,' 'competitor comparison,' 'comparison page,' '[Product] vs [Product],' '[Product] alternative,' 'competitive landing pages,' 'how do we compare to X,' 'battle card,' or 'competitor teardown.' Use this for any content that positions your product against competitors. Covers four formats: singular alternative, plural alternatives, you vs competitor, and competitor vs competitor. For sales-specific competitor docs, see sales-enablement.