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See the world through a company’s eyes

“Understanding the needs of a business is the starting point of any project.” John Williams.

Right now, in the middle of the cost of living crisis, you want to understand how things are for business. It's important you have empathy with the people you want to build partnerships with. Running a business is more challenging than ever. Many business leaders feel overwhelmed. To get their attention it is important to show you understand and then offer a simple solution to one or more of their challenges.

Below we describe five problems companies are facing.

The battle for talent

One of the greatest challenges is the recruitment and retention of employees. The battle for talent has never been so competitive. The post pandemic landscape has added a challenge, because employees' needs and wants have changed. By 2025 it is expected that 75% of the global workforce will be millennials (forbes.com). Companies need to to adapt their working practices, environments, and cultures to meet the demands of this generation. On the whole, millennials want to work for companies with a purpose that goes beyond just making money. They want to feel good about their work because it is making a positive impact on society.

We recommend offer corporate partners and prospects the opportunity to authentically demonstrate their purpose through a shared purpose partnership. This will show their employees why they are such a great company to work for.

Engaging employees

It is a shocking statistic that only 11% of employees in the UK and western Europe feel engaged at work. (Gallup, 2021). People are the most important resource in a company and yet they are often neglected. Employee engagement is the greatest priority for most companies. Disengaged employees are less productive, the quality of their work suffers and they sometimes spread negative messages about the company. When we consider that 85% of employees in the UK and western Europe are not engaged at work and 18% are actively disengaged (Gallup 2021), we begin to understand the scale of this challenge.

We recommend you demonstrate how your partnership opportunity will engage a companies employees, by giving their people opportunities to help create a better society.

Working conditions 

Companies are having to operate with much smaller operational budgets, whilst balancing the need to support employees in the cost of living crisis. Health and well-being is priority, especially during this time of uncertainty.

We recommend you show how your partnership opportunity can help a company demonstrate its commitment to creating a healthy, supportive and inclusive workplace.

Supply chain issues

The war in Ukraine has caused major disruption in companies' supply chains. Also the price of oil and gas has risen sharply, which is impacting energy-intensive sectors. With increase costs for essential parts and materials, many companies are facing a cash flow crisis.

We recommend that you use a cause related marketing strategy to help support companies that need to increase pricing. By introducing a charity donation with higher pricing, they are able to show the customer the same value for money as well as being more being purpose driven.

Partnerships not delivering value

In a recent survey 63% of respondents said they, “want CEOs to take a stand on key societal issues, with income inequality, racial equality and climate change the top issues identified” (JUST Capital, 2021). Unfortunately, many charities partnerships which are created take these issues are failing to deliver real value for the business. This means business CEOs see charity partnerships as a drain on resources, rather than delivering genuine commercial benefits. And in difficult times company CEOs increase their focus on the bottom line.

We recommend you show how your partnership opportunity will deliver commercial value for your corporate partner or prospect, by helping them with their reputation, employee engagement and/or sales.

We hope this blog helps you understand the challenges companies are facing right now, and gives you the inspiration and insight to seize the significant opportunities in the cost of living crisis.

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Latest News
5
min read
The 3 Keys To Unlocking Higher-Value Partnerships

Imagine your prospect is a door with three locks, to unlock a truly high-value partnership, you need all three keys:

  • Your relationship
  • Emotional engagement
  • The business case

Miss one, and the door stays firmly shut.

Too often, charities focus only on pitching sponsorship packages or partnership benefits, but the strongest and most valuable corporate partnerships are built when all three elements work together.

Here’s how to unlock them.

1. Your Relationship: People Buy From People

The first key is trust and rapport. People buy from people they know, like and trust, which is why relationship-building is such an important part of corporate partnerships.

The strongest partnerships are rarely built in a single meeting. They are built over time through conversations, consistency and genuine interest in the other person.

Sometimes the simplest moments have the biggest impact.

Taking a few minutes to ask about someone’s weekend, holiday plans or family life helps people feel comfortable and valued. It also helps you learn more about your prospect as a person, not just as a company representative.

Remembering those details matters, questions like: “How was your holiday to Greece?” or “How’s your child settling into school?” show genuine care and help build trust over time.

Authenticity is everything. People quickly sense when relationship-building is forced or transactional and the best partnerships are built on genuine human connection.

2. Emotional Engagement: Make Them Feel Something

The second key is empathy and passion about the need. People make decisions emotionally before they justify them logically. If you want a company to truly engage with your charity, they need to feel connected to the cause.

That’s why storytelling is so powerful.

Sharing a real story about someone your charity has supported creates emotional connection in a way statistics and presentations rarely can. Videos, service visits and first-hand experiences can be equally impactful.

When people emotionally connect with your mission, the conversation changes. It moves from: “This sounds interesting…” to: “We need to help.”

Emotion creates urgency, deepens commitment, and it often unlocks far greater value in partnerships.

3. The Business Case: Solve Their Problem

The third key is commercial value, clearly showing what the company will gain from partnering with you.

The reality is that even if a prospect loves your cause and enjoys working with you, they still need to justify the partnership internally. Decision-makers need to see how the partnership supports their business goals, priorities or challenges.

That’s why understanding your prospect’s needs is so important. Every company is trying to achieve something. They may want to:

  • Increase brand awareness
  • Improve employee engagement
  • Build customer loyalty
  • Generate PR opportunities
  • Reach new audiences

Your role is to understand what matters most to them and position your partnership as part of the solution. The best way to uncover this is by asking great questions:

  • “What are your biggest priorities this year?”
  •  “What challenges is your team currently facing?”
  •  “What would success look like for you?”

The more clearly you understand their objectives, the stronger your partnership proposition becomes. That’s what great partnerships do, they create mutual value.

Unlocking The Door

One of the simplest ways to understand how close you are to securing a new partnership is to score your prospect out of 10 across all three areas:

  • Relationship
  • Emotional engagement
  • Commercial value

For example:

  • Relationship = 9/10
  • Emotional engagement = 8/10
  • Commercial value = 2/10

Even though two areas are strong, the partnership is still unlikely to unlock because one key is missing, and this is where many partnership opportunities stall.

Scoring prospects helps you quickly identify what needs more attention:

  • Do you need to build more trust?
  • Create stronger emotional connections?
  • Strengthen the commercial case?

The goal is to get all three keys as close to 10 as possible. When all three keys turn together, that’s when remarkable partnerships happen.

If you’d like to learn more about unlocking higher-value partnerships, contact Jonathan: jonathan@remarkablepartnerships.com

What unlocks truly high-value corporate partnerships? It’s not just a great pitch. Discover the 3 essential keys every fundraiser needs to build stronger relationships, create emotional connection, and demonstrate real commercial value that companies can’t ignore.

Latest News
5
min read
Unlock Corporate Partnership Value

One of the biggest challenges charities face when working with companies is undervaluing themselves.

When charities underestimate the value they bring to businesses, partnerships are often priced too low. The results are low-value partnerships that fail to deliver meaningful impact for the charity or the company.

In reality, both sides are missing out on enormous potential.

So why does this happen?

Many charities simply struggle to recognise and measure the true commercial value they offer businesses. Even when they know they bring value to the table, they often don’t know how to calculate it or communicate it confidently. 

But the reality is that charities can deliver game-changing value for companies in several key areas.

The Four Ways Charities Create Value For Businesses

Charities help companies achieve the following goals:

Employee Engagement and Retention

Corporate partnerships provide employees with opportunities to support causes that matter, strengthening morale and workplace culture.

Competitive Differentiation

Working with charities helps businesses stand out and demonstrate purpose in an increasingly competitive marketplace.

Sales Opportunities

Purpose-driven partnerships can strengthen customer relationships and attract new customers.

Brand Trust and Credibility

Authentic partnerships help companies build stronger, more trusted brands.

Right now, all four of these areas are top priorities for companies.

Why Understanding Partnership Value Matters

When charities understand how to measure and communicate their partnership value, something powerful happens.

They gain the confidence to pitch bigger opportunities, create stronger proposals and negotiate partnerships based on the real value rather than guesswork.

This shift allows charities to move beyond undervalued collaborations and instead build high-impact corporate partnerships that benefit both sides.

Learn How To Calculate Your Partnership Value

To help charities develop this confidence, Remarkable Partnerships have created a new service: Unlock Corporate Partnerships Value Workshop.

This practical session is designed to help charities understand the value they can offer companies and apply a simple framework to calculate it.

During the workshop, you will learn:

  • About the four types of partnership value.
  • Explore why understanding value helps secure higher-value corporate partnerships. 
  • See examples from successful corporate charity partnerships.
  • Work through an interactive exercise calculating the value of a current partner or prospect. 

The session lasts 2 hours and 30 minutes and provides a practical method charities can continue using when developing future partnerships.

If you’d like to learn more about the workshop, contact: jonathan@remarkablepartnerships.com

Many charities undervalue their corporate partnerships, limiting both impact and opportunity. This article explores why, the real value charities bring to businesses, and how understanding it can unlock stronger partnerships, with a workshop for those looking to take it further.

Stay Informed. Stay Remarkable.