For most of the last century, distributor-led go-to-market models in B2B manufacturing were both common and, in many cases, necessary. Distributors aggregated fragmented demand, extended credit, provided local sales coverage, and handled the logistics of moving products to customers. As distributors built their online presence, manufacturers were often paralyzed by whether to build a direct channel of their own. Their DNA was in production, not distribution, and they feared that selling direct would create channel conflict that upended longstanding relationships. As one executive at a safety products manufacturer put it, “We only talk about channel conflict every day.”
In our conversations with manufacturing executives, that paralysis is showing signs of ending. The question is no longer whether to sell direct, but how to build a distribution strategy that serves different customer segments while preserving the distributor relationships that still matter.
Four forces pushing manufacturers to act
Four converging forces have reached critical mass. First, digital buyer behavior has fundamentally changed: business buyers research online before engaging sales, expect self-serve purchasing and transparent pricing, and B2B ecommerce now accounts for 16% of all manufacturing and distribution sales. Second, margin compression demands action, as rising material, labor, and transportation costs, plus tariffs, make multiple distribution margin layers harder to afford. Third, pricing transparency has exposed distributor economics, since customers can now see when a reseller marks a product up. Fourth, technology has removed the technical barriers to selling direct, though manufacturers are clear that implementation is still operationally complex.
Where distributor-only models fall short
The manufacturers we spoke with were broadly satisfied with their distribution partners, but saw three built-in sources of friction. Incentives are misaligned, because distributor sales teams optimize for their own margin, rebates, and volume, not for a manufacturer’s brand or long-term category development.
Distributors are profit-driven. They’ll focus on brands that give them better economics. There’s not much loyalty, it’s price-driven.
Global consumer electronics manufacturer executive
Second, distributor-only models cost manufacturers visibility into their end customers. A McKinsey report cited in our research found that limited buyer understanding is a significant drag on financial results, and that manufacturers who add direct sales tend to see higher margins and a deeper understanding of customer needs. Without that data, companies make product and market decisions based on what distributors order rather than what end customers actually need. Third, pricing discipline breaks down under transparency. As one CPG executive asked, “How do you manage MAP pricing when you have 10,000 distributors?”
Distributors still earn their place
None of this means distributors are obsolete. They deliver value manufacturers cannot easily replicate: working capital and credit management for thousands of small accounts, logistics efficiency through full-truckload shipping and consolidation, service for mid-size and larger customers, and market coverage without the manufacturer carrying fixed overhead. The real question is not whether distributors add value, but whether that value justifies their economic claim in every product category and customer segment.
The modern hybrid manufacturer
The most sophisticated manufacturers have moved past direct-versus-distributor thinking toward segmented, multi-channel strategies. Six questions emerged from these conversations that help a manufacturer find direct opportunities without igniting channel conflict:
- Are there segments your distributors have refused to serve, such as small orders they find unprofitable?
- Are there sellers you want to push out of a marketplace, for example non-OEM sellers on Amazon?
- Would you be comfortable running a quieter direct site rather than a heavily promoted one?
- How much installation and ongoing support does your product require? Simple products suit direct sales, while complex ones may stay with distributors or use direct as lead generation.
- Can management accept the tradeoff between price integrity and conversion rate, since holding prices above distributors protects them but lowers direct conversion?
- Is the company willing to invest in brand marketing?
That last question produced the most surprising finding. One manufacturer that advertised its direct site saw more offline sales through distributors in the same states.
We’re seeing more sales offline through distributors in states where they advertise online. That’s because nobody was advertising our brand before.
Cabinet manufacturer executive
Brand advertising, even when it promotes a direct channel, can generate downstream distributor revenue. A rising tide lifts all ships.
The bottom line
The question facing B2B manufacturers is no longer whether to sell direct, but how to architect a strategy that serves different segments appropriately while preserving valuable distributor relationships. The manufacturers finding success are the ones willing to accept complexity and tradeoffs. They ask hard questions about which segments are underserved, where product complexity genuinely requires distributors, whether leadership can accept lower conversion to protect price integrity, and whether the organization will invest in the technology, service, and brand marketing that direct selling demands. Those who stay paralyzed risk ceding their customer relationships, margins, and competitive position to more vertically integrated competitors.

