B2B eCommerce strategy is no longer optional for UK manufacturers, wholesalers and distributors. Seventy-three percent of B2B buyers complete their research online before speaking to sales. This guide covers the buyer journey, self-serve portals, account pricing architecture, ERP integration, B2B UX principles, platform choice, and the 2026 trends reshaping how B2B businesses grow online.
A B2B eCommerce strategy is the plan that turns a business’s online channel into a genuine revenue driver. It covers how B2B buyers discover, evaluate, and purchase online; how the platform handles account-level pricing, purchase orders, and self-serve portals; how the store integrates with ERPs and CRMs; and how UX is designed around procurement workflows. Done well, it reduces the cost of serving existing accounts, opens new ones without growing the sales headcount, and compounds authority in search over time.
The B2B buyer journey involves between three and seven stakeholders per purchase. The person who discovers the product online is rarely the same person who signs off the purchase order. Your eCommerce strategy must serve all three roles simultaneously: the researcher, the approver, and the repeat orderer.
The researcher searches online for products, suppliers, and specifications. This is where SEO, GEO, and content strategy win or lose the deal before any human contact.
Two to four suppliers get shortlisted. The buyer compares pricing, lead times, account terms, and certifications. A self-serve portal with clear account pricing accelerates this stage dramatically.
The shortlist goes to the budget holder. Requisition lists, formal quotes, and purchase order workflows earn their keep here. Stores that force buyers to call sales at this stage lose accounts.
The first order is rarely the biggest. Repeat order UX, saved addresses, reorder shortcuts, and account-level order history determine whether the account grows or stays flat.
Gartner estimates B2B buyers spend only 17% of their total buying journey talking to potential suppliers. Your eCommerce content, pricing transparency, and self-serve capabilities influence the other 83% of the journey you never see. Optimise for that 83%.
A B2B self-serve portal is a login-gated area where existing trade customers manage their account, view account pricing, place orders, track shipments, download invoices, and manage sub-users. It is the operational backbone of a B2B eCommerce strategy and the single feature most likely to reduce the cost of serving an existing account.
The company account is the top-level entity. Under it sit individual users with roles: buyer, approver, viewer. Each role has configurable permissions and spending limits. This mirrors how procurement actually works in UK businesses.
B2B buyers order the same products repeatedly. Requisition lists let a buyer build a standard order, save it, and convert to a purchase at any time. This feature alone can increase order frequency by 20 to 40 percent for established accounts.
Large orders should not go straight to checkout. The quote workflow lets a buyer submit a basket for pricing review, the sales team responds with a formal quote, and the buyer accepts or negotiates. The accepted quote converts to a locked order at the agreed price.
Finance teams want to pull invoices and check outstanding balances without contacting the supplier. A self-serve portal that provides this removes a significant source of inbound contact and accelerates payment.
The 5MS result: across our B2B portal builds, clients generating 198,000 monthly sessions consistently see self-serve adoption above 60% within six months of launch. The accounts that adopt first are the highest-volume ones — they have the most to gain from removing manual steps.
B2B pricing is not a public price list with a discount applied. It is an architecture: multiple pricing tiers, per-account contract rates, volume breaks, and catalogue visibility rules that vary by customer group. Getting this right at the start determines whether the platform scales or collapses under edge cases.
| Pricing type | What it means | How it is implemented |
|---|---|---|
| Customer group pricing | Different tiers pay different base prices | Customer groups assigned at account level. Price tables per group per SKU. |
| Contract pricing | Accounts have negotiated rates overriding the group price | Per-account price overrides stored in the platform or pulled from ERP in real time. |
| Volume breaks | Price per unit drops at defined quantity thresholds | Tier pricing rules per SKU, must interact correctly with group and contract pricing. |
| Catalogue visibility | Some customer groups see products others do not | Shared catalogue rules in Adobe Commerce. Category-level permissions per group. |
| Hidden pricing | Non-logged-in visitors see products but not prices | Login-gated pricing display. Encourages account registration. |
The most common B2B pricing failure is treating promotions as a layer on top of the public price list without accounting for customer group or contract pricing. A properly architected B2B pricing system defines the precedence order for pricing rules explicitly and tests every combination at build stage.
A B2B eCommerce store without ERP integration is a manual order entry system with a better interface. ERP integration is not optional in a serious B2B eCommerce strategy.
Stock available in the ERP displayed on product pages in real time. Warehouse-level availability for multi-site operations. Back-order flags and restock dates surfaced automatically.
For accounts with individually negotiated rates stored in the ERP, the store pulls pricing via API on page load. The ERP is always the source of truth.
Orders placed on the store push to the ERP immediately. Status updates (picked, packed, despatched, invoiced) pull back to the portal automatically.
Credit limits, account terms, outstanding balances, and account status all pulled from the ERP. Customers over their credit limit see a hold notification rather than completing a checkout that will be manually blocked.
The ERP systems most commonly integrated with UK B2B stores include Sage 200, Sage 50, Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central, SAP Business One, SAP S/4HANA, NetSuite, Epicor, and Kerridge.
B2B UX is not consumer UX with a login screen. The jobs to be done are different, the devices are different, and the consequences of poor experience are different. A B2B buyer who cannot complete a reorder quickly calls the sales team — which costs money — or reverts to manual ordering.
A procurement manager placing a 200-line order does not care how the hero image animates. They care that the page loads under two seconds and search returns accurate results instantly.
B2B buyers search by SKU, technical specification, and trade name. A search bar optimised for consumer browsing fails a procurement manager searching for “304 stainless hex bolts M8 x 25mm DIN 933”.
For established accounts, reordering is the dominant interaction. Order history, saved lists, and quick-add by SKU should be accessible within two clicks of login. Most B2B stores bury these features.
The B2B checkout needs a PO number field, cost centre code, payment on account, multiple saved addresses, and approval routing. Every missing element pushes buyers back to manual ordering.
| Criteria | Adobe Commerce | Shopify Plus | WooCommerce |
|---|---|---|---|
| Native B2B features | Comprehensive | Growing | Plugin-dependent |
| ERP integration | Deep, bidirectional | Middleware-dependent | Middleware-dependent |
| Pricing architecture | Multiple native layers | Price lists, limited | Plugin, basic |
| Build cost | £35k to £120k+ | £15k to £50k | £8k to £30k |
The honest verdict: 5MS builds on all three platforms. Our B2B recommendation is Adobe Commerce for anything with genuine complexity, Shopify Plus for mid-market B2B with strong brand requirements, and WooCommerce only for smaller operations with simple pricing and no ERP dependency. For the full feature comparison, see our Magento B2B features guide.
B2B buyers search with intent. They know what they want and describe it precisely. B2B SEO means building content and category pages that match the specificity of how trade buyers actually search — not the broad category terms consumer brands compete for.
Generative engine optimisation (GEO) is the practice of structuring content so that AI search engines (Google AI Overview, ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini) cite it when answering related queries. B2B procurement researchers increasingly start their supplier search by asking an AI engine rather than typing into Google.
Technical product content earns AI citations. A product page with material grades, tolerances, compliance standards, and application guides is the kind of content AI engines pull when answering technical procurement queries. Most B2B stores have marketing copy. The stores earning AI citations have engineering content.
AI agents are beginning to evaluate supplier catalogues, compare specifications, and initiate quote requests on behalf of procurement teams. Stores with rich structured data get evaluated. Stores without them get skipped.
The generation of buyers who grew up with Amazon Business now expects to do everything online. Suppliers requiring phone calls for quotes or email for order amendments are losing accounts.
B2B sellers onboarding with one Mirakl-powered marketplace gain access to 400+ additional marketplaces through the same integration. Marketplace strategy is no longer separate from eCommerce strategy.
UK B2B buyers in sectors with supply chain ESG requirements are increasingly asking for carbon footprint data, material certifications, and ethical sourcing documentation through the digital channel.
- The B2B buyer journey involves 3 to 7 stakeholders. Your strategy must serve the researcher, the approver, and the repeat orderer simultaneously.
- Self-serve portals reduce account management cost and increase order frequency. 5MS B2B clients generating 198,000 monthly sessions see self-serve adoption above 60% within six months of launch.
- Pricing architecture is not a discount layer. B2B pricing requires customer group tiers, per-account contract rates, volume breaks, and catalogue visibility rules that interact correctly.
- ERP integration is the infrastructure, not the feature. A B2B store without real-time ERP sync is manual order entry with a better interface.
- AI search is reshaping B2B procurement research. GEO for B2B means technical product content, comparison tables, and named statistics that AI engines can cite when answering procurement queries.
5MS has been building and optimising B2B eCommerce stores since 2011. We have delivered 2,541 leads and 198,000 monthly sessions across our B2B portfolio. Tell us what you sell, who buys it, and what your ERP runs on.
Common questions about B2B eCommerce strategy from UK manufacturers and wholesalers. Get in touch if yours is not here.
We scope B2B eCommerce projects every week. Bring us your requirements, your ERP, and your timeline. We will tell you straight what the build costs, how long it takes, and which platform makes sense.
