Partnership Resource

Strategic Partnership Checklist

A practical checklist for business owners, operators, investors, founders, and private partners reviewing alignment, incentives, roles, decision rights, capital, risk, timing, and long term partnership structure.

Why This Checklist Exists

A strong partnership should be structured before everyone gets excited.

Many partnerships begin with energy, trust, opportunity, and shared upside. That is useful, but it is not enough. The partnership still needs clarity around who contributes what, who controls what, who decides what, who carries risk, and how the parties handle pressure.

This checklist helps people slow down and review the core questions before entering a serious partnership conversation.

The goal is not to make the partnership feel complicated. The goal is to make the partnership clear enough to survive real business conditions.

Best First Move

Review alignment before reviewing upside.

Clarify why the partnership exists and what problem it solves
Identify what each party contributes and what each party expects
Review decision rights, control, capital, execution, and downside risk
Understand what happens if the opportunity works better or worse than expected
Put structure around the relationship before pressure arrives

The First Questions

Before forming a partnership, understand what each side is really trying to accomplish.

A partnership can look attractive because the opportunity sounds strong. The stronger question is whether the people, incentives, structure, and execution responsibilities are aligned.

Question One

Why should this partnership exist?

A partnership should solve a real problem or create a clear advantage. Capital, access, operations, deal flow, execution, relationships, or expertise should improve the opportunity.

Question Two

What does each party contribute?

Contributions may include money, time, assets, relationships, licensing, labor, systems, credibility, deal access, risk tolerance, management, or strategic guidance.

Question Three

How are decisions made?

Decision rights should be clear before conflict appears. Control, voting, authority, budgets, approvals, exits, and major decisions should not be left vague.

Partnership Structure

The best partnerships usually have clear roles, clean incentives, and a shared understanding of risk.

A partnership is not just an agreement to work together. It is a structure for how people, capital, control, effort, timing, and rewards interact under real pressure.

Alignment

Shared Objective

Each side should understand the goal, timeline, expected outcome, and reason the partnership creates more value than either side acting alone.

Contribution

Clear Inputs

Money, work, relationships, assets, opportunity access, management, and guarantees should be identified clearly before value is divided.

Control

Decision Rights

The parties should know who approves spending, signs documents, manages execution, controls accounts, and decides major changes.

Protection

Downside Planning

Strong structures address delay, underperformance, disputes, capital shortfalls, exit rights, deadlock, and unexpected problems.

Review Areas

A partnership should be reviewed from both the relationship side and the structure side.

Good people can still create weak partnerships when expectations are unclear. Strong review helps identify the places where trust, control, risk, and economics need more structure.

Area

Economic Alignment

Review ownership, profit splits, preferred returns, repayment rights, fees, distributions, reinvestment, capital calls, and timing of payouts.

Area

Role Clarity

Review who manages operations, capital, reporting, documents, relationships, vendors, investors, compliance, and daily execution.

Area

Risk Allocation

Review guarantees, losses, liabilities, debt, delays, legal exposure, capital shortfalls, reputational risk, and unexpected obligations.

Area

Exit Planning

Review buyouts, sale rights, dispute resolution, deadlock provisions, transfer restrictions, death, disability, and what happens if the plan changes.

Warning Signs

Some partnerships create problems because the hard questions were skipped early.

A partnership can feel strong when everyone is optimistic. The real test is whether the structure still works when there is delay, pressure, disagreement, unexpected cost, weaker performance, or a change in priorities.

Vague roles, unclear economics, uneven risk, missing authority, poor reporting, unclear exits, or unbalanced control can turn a promising opportunity into a difficult relationship.

The best time to review those issues is before the partnership begins.

Slow Down If

Review these issues before moving forward.

The parties are excited about upside but vague about responsibilities
One side controls key decisions while the other carries major risk
The economics do not match contribution, control, or exposure
There is no clear process for disputes, exits, delays, or failed performance
The structure depends only on trust instead of written clarity

Downloadable Checklist

Download the Strategic Partnership Checklist.

Use the PDF version to review alignment, contribution, control, incentives, risk, decision rights, exits, and the key questions that should be answered before entering a serious partnership.

Bring The Situation Forward

Have a partnership, joint venture, capital relationship, or strategic opportunity worth reviewing?

Before You Submit
  • Explain who is involved and why the partnership exists now
  • Clarify each party’s contribution, expected role, and desired outcome
  • Identify capital, control, decision rights, risk, and timing concerns
  • Include any documents, term sheets, business summaries, or property details if available
The strongest partnership submissions are clear, specific, and tied to a real opportunity where alignment, structure, capital, or execution may change the outcome.