Research

2025 eCommerce Predictions

Master B2B's six predictions for 2025: entry-level roles shift toward apprenticeships, customer experience gets a dedicated owner, analytics foundations come first, generative AI proves a 70% solution, inside sales moves up the value chain, and modern search unlocks long-tail revenue.

Key takeaways

  • Entry-level hiring shifts toward apprenticeships so companies can evaluate skills and fit before committing, as grade inflation makes top performers harder to identify from a transcript.
  • Customer experience is a stated top-three priority but often lacks a clear owner. The fix is a senior product manager modeled on the software-company playbook.
  • Analytics and reporting topped strategic priorities among more than 100 executives. Companies should strengthen descriptive and predictive foundations before layering on prescriptive AI.
  • Generative AI will be roughly a 70% solution in 2025, meaningful enough to invest in but still requiring human governance rather than full replacement.
  • AI chatbots and automated ordering will take routine volume from inside sales, freeing reps for consultative selling and technical advisory.
  • Next-generation search, guided selling, and intent understanding will unlock revenue from the 80% to 95% of SKUs that sit in the long tail.
70%
how far generative AI will get B2B teams toward solving a problem in 2025, not 100%
80-95%
the share of SKUs that make up the long tail, a small slice of revenue that better search can unlock
#1
analytics and reporting was the most-cited strategic priority among more than 100 B2B executives surveyed

The future of AI in B2B is finally coming into focus, and not every prediction this year hinges on it. This report lays out six predictions for 2025, spanning how companies hire for entry-level roles, who owns customer experience, where analytics investment should go, the real limits of generative AI, the shifting role of inside sales, and how modern search can grow revenue from long-tail products.

(For the year ahead, see our predictions for 2026.)

Prediction 1: Entry-level roles morph into apprenticeships

KPMG US chief executive Paul Knopp described a brewing crisis in accounting, with firms facing a shortage of new accountants as college grows more expensive and finance graduates find lucrative roles elsewhere. He told the Financial Times he now supports four years of undergraduate study plus an apprenticeship that replaces the traditional fifth year. We’re seeing the same dynamic in the changing shape of B2B eCommerce hiring. Grade inflation makes it harder to identify top performers from a transcript, even as customer expectations keep rising.

Businesses can’t lower their standards accordingly. In fact, the standards are going up, not down, because customer expectations are going up, not down.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

Converting an entry-level job into an apprenticeship gives a company time to evaluate skills and fit before a full-time commitment, pairing a candidate with a proven employee in real scenarios that matter. One industrial manufacturing executive finds apprentices close to home by building relationships with local high schools and colleges, speaking to classes a few days a year, and hiring marketing interns from those schools, which also earns the company priority on projects that used to go to competitors.

Prediction 2: Customer experience becomes a hot potato

Across dozens of Master B2B events, nearly every executive calls improving customer experience a top-three priority. The paradox is that when asked who owns it, the answers are consistently inconsistent. Some name the CEO, who in a multibillion-dollar company is not weighing in on website functionality. Others say the customer owns the experience, which usually means no one inside the company does.

The fix borrows from the software playbook: hire a senior product manager to own customer experience, responsible for understanding customer needs and working across teams to prioritize, spec, and build the functionality. The role is common in software and some B2C companies, so the talent pool is deep, and recent Forum job postings suggest demand is growing in B2B. The hard part is convincing today’s assorted owners that a senior product manager is the way to turn their ideas into reality.

We make the fuller case for a dedicated customer experience owner in our maturity research.

Prediction 3: A renewed emphasis on analytics

When Master B2B asked more than 100 B2B executives about their strategic priorities for the next 6 to 12 months, offering more than a dozen choices, analytics and reporting was selected most often by a wide margin. That follows last year’s call that ROI cases would move from incremental to existential, as companies favor channels with the lowest cost to serve and the least friction for buyers.

A Harvard Business Review framework groups analytics into three types: descriptive, where humans make the decisions; predictive, where machines surface likely outcomes and humans choose the path; and prescriptive, where machines manage autonomously. Given the investment pouring into AI, it is tempting to jump straight to prescriptive. The foundation comes first. Without solid descriptive and predictive analytics, the broader organization will not be ready to use prescriptive solutions generated through AI. We see 2025 as the year B2B companies shore up that foundation and make sure they are telling the right stories through data.

Prediction 4: Generative AI becomes a 70% solution

Almost every executive roundtable ends on AI. After two years of the hype cycle, from amazement to enthusiasm to disappointment to exhaustion, the picture is clearer. In 2025, generative AI will get teams roughly 70% of the way to solving a problem, not all the way there.

Need product descriptions at scale? GenAI gets you most of the way but still needs human review. Search ads across thousands of variations? It helps, though trained people and existing software still govern the process. A customer service chatbot that answers in your brand voice with deep product knowledge? Close to 70% when done well, and that is a big if. Seventy percent is meaningful enough to justify the investment without pretending the first generation of tools fully replaces the work teams do today. A business case that acknowledges the remaining gap is also one a CFO is more likely to approve.

Prediction 5: AI-enabled commerce starts taking share from inside sales

Nine years ago, Andy Hoar’s research report “Death of a B2B Salesman” argued that well-trained inside sales and customer service reps could close deals once reserved for outside sales. Generative AI extends continue to reshape inside sales. eCommerce sites already handle easy reorders and subscriptions, and AI chatbots are starting to field a meaningful share of routine questions that once arrived as calls or emails.

As Andy described on a recent Friday 15 podcast, a chatbot can answer a question on the site and offer to book the transaction. If the buyer says yes, the order never touches inside sales, outside sales, or customer service. AI will not answer everything, and buyers making larger purchases still want a person. The open question is whether that person needs to be an expensive outside rep, or whether inside sales or customer service can handle it.

We expect to free up time from the inside sales team and change their focus to higher value tasks … more consultative selling and technical advisory.

Brian Beck, Master B2B

Prediction 6: Better search supercharges long-tail product sales

Long-tail products are the 80% to 95% of SKUs that make up only a small share of total revenue. Across a recent roundtable series, practitioners kept returning to advanced search as the way to grow that revenue. A midsized HVAC distributor described the tension of carrying hundreds of thousands of SKUs, where putting everything on the site can get in the way of finding anything.

We need to find a way of balancing having everything on the site with getting people to the products that they want.

Midsized HVAC distributor executive

Practitioners suggested several fixes for the clutter that comes from surfacing long-tail products: show them only through targeted faceted search, return them only for specific search terms rather than all of them, or build dedicated landing pages so they surface in key queries. We expect 2025 to highlight next-generation search, guided selling, and a deeper understanding of intent that let sellers present a wider range of core and adjacent products to buyers at the right time.

This connects to unlocking long-tail growth, where the same dynamics play out.

Get the full 2025 eCommerce Predictions report

All six predictions in depth, with practitioner quotes and the Master B2B perspective on each.

Download the report

Frequently asked questions

What are Master B2B's eCommerce predictions for 2025?

Six predictions: entry-level roles morph into apprenticeships, customer experience becomes a hot potato without a clear owner, a renewed emphasis on analytics, generative AI proves a 70% solution, AI-enabled commerce takes share from inside sales, and advancements in search supercharge long-tail product sales.

Why are B2B companies turning entry-level roles into apprenticeships?

Grade inflation makes it harder to identify top performers from a transcript, while customer expectations keep rising. An apprenticeship lets a company evaluate skills and fit in real scenarios, pairing a candidate with a proven employee, before making a full-time commitment.

Who should own customer experience in a B2B organization?

A senior product manager, borrowing from the software-company playbook. Customer experience is a top-three priority for most B2B executives, but it frequently has no clear owner. A product manager can understand customer needs and work across teams to prioritize, spec, and build the functionality.

What types of analytics should B2B companies invest in first?

Descriptive and predictive analytics before prescriptive AI. A Harvard Business Review framework groups analytics into descriptive (humans decide), predictive (machines surface outcomes, humans choose), and prescriptive (machines manage autonomously). Without a descriptive and predictive foundation, organizations are not ready to use prescriptive AI.

Can generative AI fully replace manual work in B2B eCommerce?

No. Expect generative AI to get teams about 70% of the way on tasks like product descriptions, search ads, and customer service chatbots, with human governance still required. Seventy percent is enough to justify the investment, and a business case that acknowledges the gap is easier for a CFO to approve.

How will AI affect inside sales teams?

AI chatbots and automated ordering will handle routine reorders, subscriptions, and easy questions, taking volume from inside sales. That frees reps to move up the value chain into consultative selling and technical advisory. Buyers making larger purchases still want a person, though not always an expensive outside rep.

How can better search grow long-tail product sales?

Long-tail products are the 80% to 95% of SKUs that drive a small share of revenue. Surfacing them all can clutter results, so practitioners use targeted faceted search, term-specific surfacing, and dedicated landing pages. Next-generation guided selling and intent understanding help present core and adjacent products at the right time.

Sources & methodology

  1. Master B2B, 2025 eCommerce Predictions.
  2. Produced in partnership with Coveo and HCLSoftware.
  3. Paul Knopp comments on accounting hiring reported by the Financial Times.
  4. Analytics framework: Harvard Business Review, Analytics for Marketers (hbr.org/2023/05/analytics-for-marketers).
  5. Inside sales context: Andy Hoar, Death of a B2B Salesman (prior research).
Andy Hoar Andy Hoar
Co-Founder, Master B2B

Andy is a Co-Founder of Master B2B, founder of Paradigm B2B and author of the book Bot2Bot: The New Future of B2B Commerce. Andy is one of the leading global authorities on B2B commerce strategy.

Brian Beck Brian Beck
Co-Founder, Master B2B

Brian is a co-founder of Master B2B, Managing Partner of Amazon agency Enceiba, and author of the book "Billion Dollar B2B Ecommerce." Brian has also been C-level digital commerce executive with two decades of experience.

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