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There has never been a more destructive phrase in B2B eCommerce than “Consumerization of B2B.”
In the musical Hamilton, there’s a song called “The Room Where It Happened.” Well, I was in the room where it happened when this phrase was born.
I was working with the hybris team and a few of their big agency partners—mostly B2C guys—who wanted to push into B2B but couldn’t quite crack it. At one point, someone said something like:
"Isn’t eCommerce just eCommerce? Don’t people bring their expectations from buying into the workplace?"
And that was it. That became the strategy. And honestly? It set B2B digital back a decade.
In 2010, I wrote two articles:
Because even then, I knew—we were solving the wrong problem.
B2B buyers don’t need a better shopping cart. They need better tools to do their job.
[THE CAVEAT]
Now, let’s be clear—there are industries where traditional eCommerce does work.
When we talk about customer adoption problems, we have to ask ourselves:
"Are customers not adopting because it’s not actually helpful?"
I’m not saying websites don’t matter. Information, knowledge, discovery, and solutioning are more critical than ever.
But why would we expect customers to adopt a system that makes their job harder?
We wouldn’t.
The Rethink: Mapping the Customer Journey First
Before we talk about solutions, we need to ask a fundamental question:
Do you truly understand how your customers purchase today in their jobs?
Not just where they buy—but how they buy. What triggers a purchase? Who’s involved? What systems do they already use? What makes their job harder—or easier?
If you haven’t done a customer journey map to break down every stage of the buying process, you’re just guessing. And that’s how we end up building eCommerce sites that nobody actually wants to use.
We need to rethink the whole model:
Because at the end of the day, the goal isn’t to get them to use your system. It’s to make their job easier.
The companies that win in B2B eCommerce won’t be the ones with the best website.
They’ll be the ones who digitally enable their customers’ work.
B2B isn’t about mimicking Amazon. It’s about eliminating friction, integrating processes, and making life easier for the buyer.
It’s time we stop talking about the
There has never been a more destructive phrase in B2B eCommerce than “Consumerization of B2B.”
In the musical Hamilton, there’s a song called “The Room Where It Happened.” Well, I was in the room where it happened when this phrase was born.
I was working with the hybris team and a few of their big agency partners—mostly B2C guys—who wanted to push into B2B but couldn’t quite crack it. At one point, someone said something like:
"Isn’t eCommerce just eCommerce? Don’t people bring their expectations from buying into the workplace?"
And that was it. That became the strategy. And honestly? It set B2B digital back a decade.
In 2010, I wrote two articles:
Because even then, I knew—we were solving the wrong problem.
B2B buyers don’t need a better shopping cart. They need better tools to do their job.
[THE CAVEAT]
Now, let’s be clear—there are industries where traditional eCommerce does work.
When we talk about customer adoption problems, we have to ask ourselves:
"Are customers not adopting because it’s not actually helpful?"
I’m not saying websites don’t matter. Information, knowledge, discovery, and solutioning are more critical than ever.
But why would we expect customers to adopt a system that makes their job harder?
We wouldn’t.
The Rethink: Mapping the Customer Journey First
Before we talk about solutions, we need to ask a fundamental question:
Do you truly understand how your customers purchase today in their jobs?
Not just where they buy—but how they buy. What triggers a purchase? Who’s involved? What systems do they already use? What makes their job harder—or easier?
If you haven’t done a customer journey map to break down every stage of the buying process, you’re just guessing. And that’s how we end up building eCommerce sites that nobody actually wants to use.
We need to rethink the whole model:
Because at the end of the day, the goal isn’t to get them to use your system. It’s to make their job easier.
The companies that win in B2B eCommerce won’t be the ones with the best website.
They’ll be the ones who digitally enable their customers’ work.
B2B isn’t about mimicking Amazon. It’s about eliminating friction, integrating processes, and making life easier for the buyer.
It’s time we stop talking about the