Pulse offers two types of partnerships: referral partnerships and co-delivery partnerships. Both are designed for practitioners who work with leaders on strategy and organizational health. The right structure depends on how you work with clients and how closely you want to stay involved after making an introduction.

Referral partnerships

A referral partnership is for consultants, coaches, and advisors who identify clients who would benefit from Pulse and make the introduction. After the introduction, the client relationship with Pulse stands on its own. The referring partner receives a referral fee for introductions that convert to paid accounts. There is no quota, no required training, and no expectation that you manage the relationship afterward.

Seeing this in your organization?

30 minutes with the founders. We will talk through how Pulse surfaces alignment signal in your specific organizational context.

Co-delivery partnerships

A co-delivery partnership is for practitioners who want to integrate alignment intelligence into the work they do with clients. In a co-delivery arrangement, the practitioner is involved in interpreting the Pulse data with the client, running response cycles, and connecting alignment findings to the advisory or consulting work they are already doing. This is a deeper relationship with more structure on both sides.

How to find out which fits

The right partnership structure depends on your client relationships, your practice model, and how you want to position alignment intelligence relative to your other work. Book a conversation with the Pulse team and we will walk through what each structure looks like in practice and help you identify which one fits how you work.