Friday 15 Podcast

Is Excessive Cost Focus Limiting Digital Innovation in B2B?

Brian Beck and Andy Hoar examine whether B2B companies are too focused on cost reduction at the expense of digital innovation, with 54% of survey respondents saying yes.

Friday 15 Podcast

Key takeaways

  • A Master B2B LinkedIn poll found 54% of practitioners believe an excessive focus on cost is limiting digital innovation at B2B companies, while 46% said no.
  • Gartner research indicates CFOs are laser focused on ROI and time to payback, driven by cautious financial climates and economic uncertainty.
  • The hosts argued that customers are increasingly demanding digital experiences and B2B companies must invest in innovation to avoid losing wallet share to competitors.
  • Companies that maintained digital investments during the pandemic emerged stronger, suggesting that cutting during uncertainty is counterproductive.
  • The discussion distinguished between cost savings through efficiency (good) versus cost cutting that limits investment in growth (risky).

Shaq sells off Papa Johns

Brian opened with news that Shaquille O’Neal is selling his Papa Johns franchise locations in the Atlanta area. This follows his departure from the company’s board. The hosts noted that franchise businesses, while appearing hands-off, still require significant operational attention. The sale reflects broader challenges in the quick-service restaurant industry.

Breaking news on Intuit

Intuit made headlines by laying off 1,800 employees, about 10% of their workforce. The company stated they are reinvesting in AI and other areas while cutting roles that no longer align with company priorities. Andy noted this reflects a broader pattern in tech where companies are reallocating resources toward AI capabilities while reducing headcount in traditional areas.

The cost versus innovation debate

The main topic addressed whether B2B companies are too focused on cost reduction at the expense of digital innovation. Gartner research indicates CFOs are laser focused on ROI and time to payback, driven by cautious financial climates following pandemic-era spending. A Master B2B LinkedIn poll found 54% of practitioners believe excessive cost focus is limiting digital innovation, while 46% said no.

The companies that have invested in digital capabilities during challenging times consistently come out stronger on the other side.

Brian Beck, Master B2B

Customer expectations keep rising

The hosts argued that B2B buyers now expect digital experiences comparable to what they experience as consumers. If a company fails to deliver self-service capabilities, real-time inventory visibility, and easy ordering, customers may shift purchasing to alternatives like Amazon Business or competitors with better digital tools. This creates an existential argument for investment that goes beyond incremental ROI calculations.

Efficiency versus cutting

Andy distinguished between efficiency gains and cost cutting. Digital tools can deliver efficiency by automating customer service, reducing manual order entry, and improving data quality. These efficiencies do more with less, freeing up resources for innovation. Cost cutting that simply reduces budgets without improving capabilities is riskier because it limits a company’s ability to respond to changing market conditions.

There is a difference between efficiency, which is doing the same work with fewer resources, and cost cutting that limits investment in growth. One enables innovation, the other constrains it.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

Lessons from the pandemic

Companies that invested in digital during the pandemic were better positioned to serve customers when buying patterns shifted online. Those that delayed investments scrambled to catch up. The hosts noted that many CFOs wrote large checks during the pandemic and are now asking about returns, creating the current tension. However, the companies that maintained marketing and digital investment emerged stronger, suggesting that cutting during uncertainty is counterproductive.

Making the existential case

The hosts suggested digital leaders frame investment as existential rather than incremental. Instead of arguing for a specific ROI percentage, show what happens if the company fails to invest: lost customers, declining market share, and obsolescence. This reframes the conversation from justifying expense to managing risk. The 54% majority who see excessive cost focus as limiting innovation suggests this argument resonates with practitioners.

Frequently asked questions

Are B2B companies too focused on cost at the expense of digital innovation?

A Master B2B LinkedIn poll found 54% of practitioners believe excessive cost focus is limiting digital innovation. The hosts noted this is a slight majority, suggesting reasonable people disagree. Companies face real pressure from CFOs to demonstrate ROI, but the risk is that cost focus delays investments that could drive growth, leaving companies behind competitors who continue to invest.

Why are CFOs so focused on ROI for digital investments?

Gartner research indicates CFOs are laser focused on ROI and time to payback due to cautious financial climates and economic uncertainty. The pandemic led many companies to invest heavily in digital, and CFOs now want to see returns on those investments. This creates tension with digital leaders who see ongoing investment as necessary to keep pace with changing customer expectations.

What happens when companies cut digital investment?

The hosts argued that companies cutting digital investment risk losing wallet share to competitors who continue to invest. B2B buyers now expect digital experiences comparable to what they experience as consumers. Companies that fail to deliver those experiences may see customers shift purchasing to alternatives like Amazon Business or competitors with better digital capabilities.

How should digital leaders make the case for investment?

The hosts suggested framing digital investment as existential rather than incremental. Instead of arguing for a specific ROI percentage, digital leaders should show what happens if the company fails to invest: lost customers, declining market share, and obsolescence. Research from the pandemic shows companies that maintained marketing and digital investment emerged stronger than those that cut.

Is there a difference between cost efficiency and cost cutting?

Yes. The hosts distinguished between efficiency gains (doing the same work with fewer resources through automation and better processes) versus cost cutting that limits investment in growth. Digital tools can deliver efficiency by automating customer service, reducing manual order entry, and improving data quality. These efficiencies free up resources for innovation rather than simply cutting budgets.

What did companies learn from the pandemic about digital investment?

Companies that invested in digital during the pandemic were better positioned to serve customers when buying patterns shifted online. Those that had delayed investments scrambled to catch up. The hosts noted that many CFOs wrote large checks during the pandemic and are now asking about returns, creating the current tension between investment and cost focus.

Sources & methodology

  1. Friday 15 Podcast, Master B2B
  2. Master B2B LinkedIn poll, November 2024
  3. Gartner, CFO priorities 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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