Friday 15 Podcast

Are B2B and B2C eCommerce Converging?

Brian Beck and Andy Hoar on a convergence that now runs both ways, from David's Bridal and Home Depot moving into B2B to the contract pricing and payment terms B2C players discover they lack, plus the new B2B Exchange at Shop Talk.

Friday 15 Podcast

Key takeaways

  • B2B and B2C ecommerce are converging from both directions: consumer brands and retailers are building B2B and wholesale arms (David's Bridal, Home Depot, Wayfair Professional), while B2B companies adopt consumer-grade digital experiences.
  • On customer experience, the two are merging, with B2B merchandising now resembling B2C. On the business model, B2B is often the more predictable and profitable side, which is part of why B2C players are moving in.
  • Home Depot has effectively become a multi-category B2B distributor that also runs stores, having acquired SRS in 2024 and then GMS, with pro sales outpacing a softer DIY business in its latest quarter.
  • The hardest differences to bridge are B2B-specific: contract and tiered pricing shown per account, purchase orders and net terms, and the need for sales reps, which pure B2C companies discover they lack when they go wholesale.
  • Payment terms are a quiet but major gap, since pro buyers expect to buy on terms rather than a credit card, which is why providers like Credit Key and TreviPay exist and B2C-turned-B2B sellers often learn it the hard way.

The token apocalypse hits Accenture

The breaking-news segment picked up a thread from recent episodes: enterprise AI costs. Leaked audio reported by 404 Media showed consulting giant Accenture trying to stop non-technical workers from burning through its AI token budget on trivial tasks like converting PDFs into slides. Accenture’s agentic AI strategy lead, Justice Kwak, said the data pointed to non-engineers, rather than engineers, as the main driver of token consumption. Andy’s reaction was that companies told employees to do exactly this, then recoiled at the bill.

Old process times new technology equals old results.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

His point was that swapping AI into an unchanged process does not help. The reason AI looks expensive for trivial work, he argued, is that companies are still paying humans to do that work too. If they rethought the organization so AI handled defined tasks and people moved to higher-value work, the same spend would read as cheaper than hiring. Brian added that token costs should fall over time, a thread the hosts have tracked across several recent episodes. The reporting rests on leaked audio, so it reflects one internal view at one moment.

Are B2B and B2C ecommerce converging?

The main topic was a long-running debate: are B2B and B2C ecommerce converging, or are they fundamentally different? The hosts landed in the middle, and noted the more interesting development is that the convergence now runs in both directions. For years the story was the consumerization of B2B, with B2B companies catching up to B2C on customer experience. What has changed is that B2C is now looking to B2B for growth.

B2C is discovering the value of B2B

The examples are piling up. David’s Bridal launched a wholesale division this year, opening its collections to independent boutiques, small businesses, and national retailers. Its leadership framed it as a new model where partners can offer differentiated products and grow alongside the company. Home Depot has gone deep into the pro market through its SRS Distribution subsidiary, acquired in 2024, which then bought specialty building products distributor GMS, accelerating Home Depot’s goal of becoming a multi-category building distributor.

Home Depot is now a B2B distributor, period. A multi-category distributor that happens to have retail locations.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

Andy went a step further, wondering aloud whether years from now Home Depot might operate far fewer stores, with some functioning mainly as distribution points. The pattern is not limited to traditional retail. Brian pointed to Wayfair Professional, the B2B arm of the online furniture retailer, which by his estimate accounts for well over a billion dollars in sales, a meaningful slice of Wayfair’s roughly $12 billion in revenue, and likely the more profitable slice given order sizes. Wayfair does not break that figure out publicly, so treat it as an estimate, though the direction is clear.

Where they converge, and where they don’t

On the similarity side, Andy’s pick was merchandising. B2B used to lag while B2C raced ahead, and now the experiences have merged. Visit Grainger’s site and the imagery, descriptions, and ratings look much like a consumer retailer. Brian’s similarity was the digital buying experience itself: a B2B buyer carries Amazon-grade expectations for fast search, easy navigation, and quick checkout, and the old green-screen ERP login no longer meets them.

The differences are real and concentrated in commerce mechanics. Contract pricing has no true B2C equivalent, since a consumer does not get a personal price based on volume. In B2B it is a core feature, which means pricing has to appear per account across search results and product pages, rather than as a generic list price. Payments differ too, with purchase orders, net terms, and volume discounts. When B2C players go wholesale, they discover they have to build these. Amazon Business had to add bulk and tiered pricing and request-a-quote, and Wayfair Professional had to develop contract pricing it never needed on the consumer side.

The business-model surprise: B2B is the steadier engine

Andy flagged an irony. The original framing was that B2B had to learn from B2C. On customer experience that holds. On the business model, he argued, B2B is often the stronger side: more predictable, more durable, and frequently more profitable. The current numbers support the point. In Home Depot’s most recent quarter, pro comparable sales were positive and outpaced the DIY business, where consumer comp sales were softer. For a company like Home Depot, the B2B side is now acting as a hedge against a slower consumer business.

The terms gap B2C is just discovering

One difference Andy singled out is unglamorous and easy to overlook: credit and lending. A contractor who buys $5,000 of plywood at the start of a job may not get paid for months, so they buy on terms rather than a credit card. Consumer retailers moving into the pro market often did not realize this until pro buyers asked for terms, which is why providers like Credit Key and TreviPay exist. The hosts also noted the rise of side gigs and small operators, which means more buyers behave like small businesses and expect business-style purchasing.

A place for the people in between: the B2B Exchange at Shop Talk

The episode’s announcement followed directly from the topic. Master B2B has partnered with Shop Talk to launch the B2B Exchange at Shop Talk, a dedicated B2B program inside one of retail’s largest events. The hosts’ rationale is that the people running B2B ecommerce at companies like Wayfair Professional have had nowhere to go, too B2C for the B2B events and too B2B for the B2C ones.

There is no place for the people who live between the two worlds. They are too B2C to go to the B2B events, and too B2B to go to the B2C event.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

The event runs September 28 to October 1, 2026 in Nashville, drawing roughly 3,500 attendees, with a pre-day B2B workshop capped at 200, two dedicated B2B stages on the show floor, private roundtables, and one-on-one meetings with solution providers. Shop Talk reimburses qualifying practitioners’ travel based on the number of meetings they accept, and practitioners can apply for complimentary passes. Programming will tackle the convergence questions the hosts raised: whether a platform can support both sides, how to set the right foundation, and how B2B can learn from the way B2C pushes on answer-engine optimization, AI adoption, and data quality. An analysis the hosts ran with Shop Talk found that most companies already attending had B2B arms, which is the convergence in a single data point. Details and registration are on the Master B2B events page at masterb2b.com.

Frequently asked questions

Are B2B and B2C ecommerce converging?

They are converging on customer experience while remaining distinct in commerce mechanics. B2B buyers now expect the same fast search, clear product pages, and easy checkout they get as consumers, and B2B merchandising increasingly resembles B2C. At the same time, contract pricing, purchase orders, net terms, and sales-rep relationships keep the two models different. The convergence also runs both ways, as consumer brands add B2B and wholesale operations while B2B firms adopt consumer-grade experiences.

Why are consumer retailers and brands moving into B2B and wholesale?

B2B and wholesale offer growth and often steadier, more profitable revenue than consumer retail, with larger order sizes and more predictable demand. As consumer spending softens, companies use B2B as a hedge. Examples include David's Bridal launching a wholesale division for boutiques and retailers, Home Depot expanding into pro distribution, and Wayfair building a professional arm. Because every business buyer is also a consumer, these companies can extend existing capabilities to serve professional customers.

How has Home Depot expanded into B2B?

Home Depot has built a large professional distribution business. It acquired SRS Distribution in 2024, and SRS later acquired specialty building products distributor GMS, positioning Home Depot as a multi-category building materials distributor that also operates retail stores. In its most recent quarter, Home Depot reported that professional comparable sales were positive and outpaced its do-it-yourself consumer business, underscoring how central the pro segment has become to its strategy.

What are the main differences between B2B and B2C ecommerce?

The core differences are in pricing and payments. B2B commonly uses account-specific contract pricing and volume discounts, which must display per customer rather than as a single list price, while B2C shows the same price to everyone. B2B also relies on purchase orders, net payment terms, and quote requests, and it typically requires sales representatives for larger or negotiated orders. B2C companies entering B2B often have to build these capabilities from scratch.

Why do B2B buyers need to buy on payment terms?

Many professional buyers incur costs well before they are paid. A contractor may purchase thousands of dollars of materials at the start of a job and not receive payment for months, so paying by credit card is impractical and costly. Buying on net terms, such as paying 30 days after invoice, lets them complete work and collect payment before the bill is due. Providers like Credit Key and TreviPay supply this business-to-business financing within ecommerce checkouts.

What is the B2B Exchange at Shop Talk?

The B2B Exchange at Shop Talk is a dedicated B2B program created by Master B2B inside Shop Talk, a large retail and ecommerce event, taking place September 28 to October 1, 2026 in Nashville. It is aimed at digital leaders working at the intersection of B2B and B2C, and includes a pre-day B2B workshop, dedicated B2B stages, private roundtables, and one-on-one meetings with solution providers. Practitioners can apply for complimentary passes and travel reimbursement based on meetings accepted.

Sources & methodology

  1. 404 Media and TechCrunch, on Accenture and enterprise AI token costs, June 2026
  2. David's Bridal, on its wholesale division launch, March 2026
  3. Retail Dive and The Home Depot, on the SRS and GMS acquisitions and Q1 pro sales
  4. SAP, Future Commerce research, on B2B buyer expectations
  5. Friday 15 Podcast, Master B2B
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.

New: B2B Exchange at Shoptalk Presented by Master B2B

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