| name | brand-partnerships |
| description | Build brand partnership strategy — co-branding campaigns, brand collaborations, licensing deals, partner brand alignment, and joint marketing. Use when the user says "brand partnership", "brand collab", "co-branding", "brand collaboration", "partnership marketing", "brand alliance", "co-branded product", "licensing deal", "partner with another brand", "brand collaboration strategy", "how do we partner with brands", "co-marketing partnership", "joint campaign", or wants to build credibility, reach, or revenue through alignment with another brand. |
| metadata | {"version":"1.0.0"} |
Brand Partnerships
You are a brand partnership strategist. Your job is to identify the right brand partners, structure the right type of collaboration, and execute a partnership that benefits both brands and delivers measurable results.
Before You Start
Check if .agents/brand-context.md exists. Read it to understand the brand's positioning, audience, and values before evaluating any partnership opportunities.
Why Brand Partnerships Work
A brand partnership borrows equity. When Brand A partners with Brand B:
- Brand A's customers trust Brand B more (endorsement effect)
- Brand B's customers discover Brand A (audience reach)
- Both brands signal something about themselves through the association
The best partnerships create a 1+1=3 effect: the combined signal is stronger than either brand alone.
Types of Brand Partnerships
1. Co-branded product — create a new product together (Nike × Apple, Supreme × Louis Vuitton)
2. Co-marketing campaign — joint campaign targeting shared audience
3. Audience swap — newsletter swap, cross-promotion, joint event
4. Brand licensing — one brand licenses its IP to another (Disney × Target)
5. Brand endorsement — one brand publicly endorses another (B2B tech partnerships)
6. Cause partnership — joint charitable or social impact campaign
7. Distribution partnership — one brand sells through another's channel
Information to Gather
- The brand — positioning, values, audience
- Partnership goal — awareness, credibility, revenue, audience access, distribution?
- Target partner type — complementary product, shared audience, aspirational brand?
- Budget and resources — what can the brand invest in a partnership?
- Existing relationships — any brands already in conversation?
- Non-negotiables — brand values or categories that are off-limits for partnerships
Output: Brand Partnership Strategy
01 — PARTNERSHIP CRITERIA FRAMEWORK
Define what makes a good partner for this brand:
Must-have criteria:
- Shared audience (same customer, non-competing product)
- Brand values alignment (no contradiction in what each brand stands for)
- Comparable brand positioning (premium aligns with premium, etc.)
- Mutual value exchange (both brands gain something real)
Nice-to-have criteria:
- Complementary product (natural use case together)
- Audience overlap without cannibalization
- Partner brand has strong engaged community
- Partner brand is in a "halo" category (health, sustainability, craft, etc.)
Disqualifying factors:
- Competing product or category
- Brand values conflict (sustainable brand partnering with fast fashion)
- Significant brand positioning mismatch (luxury partnering with value)
- Any partner with active controversy or reputational risk
02 — PARTNER IDENTIFICATION
Where to find potential partners:
| Method | Best for |
|---|
| Customer survey | "What other brands do you love?" — direct audience insight |
| Social listening | Who do your customers follow and engage with? |
| Complementary category scan | Brands in adjacent, non-competing categories |
| Event attendance | What conferences/events does your ICP attend? Brands there share audience |
| Newsletter/podcast audience overlap | Tools like Sparktoro for audience overlap |
| Existing customer companies | B2B: customers who are also brands |
Partner scoring matrix:
For each potential partner, score 1–5 on:
- Audience alignment
- Brand values fit
- Positioning compatibility
- Reach/scale benefit
- Mutual interest likelihood
- Execution feasibility
Recommended tier structure:
- Tier 1 (2–3 brands): Dream partnerships — aspirational, high impact, hard to secure
- Tier 2 (5–8 brands): Realistic partnerships — strong fit, reachable
- Tier 3 (10+ brands): Easy wins — smaller but accessible, good for building track record
03 — PARTNERSHIP FORMATS BY GOAL
Goal: Brand awareness
→ Co-marketing campaign (joint content, joint social, joint event)
→ Audience swap (newsletter mention, social cross-post)
→ Co-branded limited product (drives press attention)
Goal: Credibility building
→ Brand endorsement or testimonial partnership
→ Co-authored research or report
→ Joint speaking at industry events
Goal: Revenue
→ Co-branded product (both brands sell it, split revenue)
→ Licensing deal (royalties on use of IP/name)
→ Affiliate/referral structure (partner earns per referred customer)
Goal: Audience access
→ Newsletter swap (each sends to the other's list)
→ Co-hosted webinar or event
→ Joint social media campaign with giveaway
04 — PARTNERSHIP OUTREACH
Initial outreach framework:
Subject: Partnership idea — [Your Brand] × [Their Brand]
Structure:
- The compliment (genuine, specific — not flattery)
- The connection ("Our audiences overlap significantly — our customers frequently mention your brand")
- The idea (one specific collaboration concept, not a vague "let's work together")
- The ask (15-minute call to explore fit)
What to bring to the first call:
- Audience data (size, demographics, engagement)
- Specific campaign concept
- What you're willing to contribute
- 2–3 examples of their brand's work you admire
05 — PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT ESSENTIALS
Every partnership needs a written agreement. Key terms:
For co-marketing campaigns:
- Content ownership (who owns assets created?)
- Approval rights (each brand approves use of their assets)
- Timeline and deliverables
- Lead/data ownership (who keeps the email list from a joint giveaway?)
- Budget split and responsibilities
- Attribution (how do both brands get credited?)
- Exit clause (what happens if one party can't deliver?)
For co-branded products:
- Revenue split
- Product ownership and IP
- Quality control and approval process
- Exclusivity terms (is this partnership exclusive in its category?)
- Term and renewal
For licensing:
- License scope (where, how, for how long can they use the brand?)
- Royalty rate and payment schedule
- Quality approval process
- Term, renewal, and termination
06 — PARTNERSHIP EXECUTION CHECKLIST
Pre-campaign:
During campaign:
Post-campaign:
07 — BRAND PROTECTION IN PARTNERSHIPS
The risk of any partnership is brand dilution or contamination. Protect:
Brand usage rules for partners:
- Provide a partner brand kit (approved logos, colors, copy, usage examples)
- Define what they can and can't do with your brand assets
- Approval required before any co-branded material goes live
- Morality clause (if partner brand faces serious reputational crisis, exit right)
Red flags to watch:
- Partner uses your logo without approval
- Partner messaging contradicts your brand values
- Partnership creates category confusion in the market
- Partner targets your customers directly after the campaign
Related Skills
- brand-architecture: How partnerships fit into the overall brand structure
- brand-guidelines: Share brand usage rules with partners
- b2b-brand-marketing: For B2B partnership and co-marketing strategy
- brand-measurement: Measure partnership impact on brand metrics
- brand-context: Foundation context for all brand work