Friday 15 Podcast

A Recap of the 2026 Master B2B Mindshare Summit

Brian Beck and Andy Hoar on the key themes from this year's summit in Chicago, why peer-to-peer roundtables generate more value than traditional conferences, and what practitioners are discovering about AI, LLMs, and answer-engine optimization.

Friday 15 Podcast

Key takeaways

  • The 2026 Master B2B Mindshare Summit brought together approximately 200 B2B digital leaders for 24 roundtable discussions over two days at the University of Chicago, with attendees from companies including Motion Industries, Lipton, HB Fuller, and Schneider.
  • Practitioners are finding that AI is saving money by eliminating positions they had planned to fill, rather than through layoffs, and the distinction between production (doing more) and productivity (doing better) emerged as a recurring theme.
  • A workshop on answer-engine optimization (AEO) was described as eye-opening, with several attendees discovering false information about their companies in LLMs or seeing competitors' products appear when their own should have been recommended.
  • The format of solution providers working alongside practitioners in roundtable discussions has proven more effective than trade show floors, because solution providers bring what one host called the God view: insight across multiple implementations rather than just their own circumstance.
  • Early movers in LLM optimization may have a lasting advantage because the engines tend to favor content with longevity and permanence, meaning companies that get their content right now will build an accumulated benefit over time.

A different format from traditional conferences

The hosts opened with a recap of the 2026 Master B2B Mindshare Summit, held at the University of Chicago on March 10th and 11th. Now in its fourth year, the event brought together approximately 200 B2B digital leaders from manufacturers and distributors across industries.

The format is intentionally different from traditional conferences. Instead of a trade show floor with booths and badge scanning, the summit uses roundtable discussions where practitioners and solution providers work together on real problems. Brian noted that this approach initially faced resistance from solution providers who expected the usual booth-and-scan model, but after four years, nobody is asking for it back.

Practitioners know their circumstance and they know it really well, but they don’t know anybody else’s circumstance very well. Solution providers have what I call the God view where they get to see multiple implementations.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

Similar challenges across different industries

The summit included attendees from companies like Motion Industries, Lipton Teas and Infusions, HB Fuller, Restec, Affiliated Distributors, ULE Group, and Schneider. Despite operating in vastly different industries, the challenges they discussed were remarkably similar.

Every company is thinking about AI adoption. Every company is thinking about staying relevant in the age of LLMs. Data quality, organizational alignment, hiring, getting sales team buy-in, and preventing implementations from failing appeared as recurring themes across all 24 roundtable sessions.

The hosts counted 24 breakout discussions over the two days, each with 15 to 20 people. Topics ranged from negotiating with Amazon Business to solving data problems to hiring strategies. Brian noted that facilitating one of the roundtables on Amazon Business produced three pages of notes, with manufacturers generating over $100 million on Amazon sharing perspectives alongside major distributors.

AI is saving money through avoided hiring, not layoffs

Andy ran a roundtable on making money versus saving money with AI. The discussions revealed that most companies are not laying off employees because of AI. Instead, they are choosing not to fill positions they had planned to hire for, or shifting employees into different roles.

The difficulty of attributing revenue gains to AI came up repeatedly. Cost savings are easier to measure: a position not filled is a concrete number. Revenue gains invite attribution debates where sales, customer service, and digital teams all claim credit for the same lift.

One recurring theme was the distinction between production and productivity. Several attendees mentioned that AI allows them to produce more content, but when asked whether the content was good, they acknowledged it was not as good as before. Producing more is not the same as producing better, and the hosts argued that conflating the two leads to a form of information slop that does not serve customers.

Answer-engine optimization as the next frontier

A workshop on answer-engine optimization (AEO) with Ntara was described by multiple attendees as eye-opening. The exercise involved searching for company products in various LLMs and observing what appeared.

Several attendees discovered problems they did not know existed. Some found false information about their companies. Others found competitors’ products appearing when their own should have been recommended. One attendee from a school furniture supplier asked an LLM for a chair for a middle school science student and received a recommendation for an office chair instead, because the product content was not tagged for the correct use case.

The phrase I heard repeatedly was eye-opening. Because many of them did not realize how they were being characterized in these LLMs.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

Early movers in LLM optimization will have lasting advantage

Brian compared the current state of AEO to the early days of SEO around 2005, when a new website could rank number one in Google within two weeks for a furniture category. The opportunity is similar with LLMs, but the hosts warned that the window will not stay open forever.

Andy noted that LLMs tend to favor content with longevity and permanence. Companies that establish accurate, well-structured content now will build an accumulated advantage. Getting it wrong in the present not only hurts current visibility but creates a deficit that will be harder to overcome as the engines mature.

One practical insight from the workshop: ask the LLM itself how to appear in its results. Companies can query the engine about what content and formatting will help them rank for specific types of questions. Brian tried this approach after the summit and found it surprisingly effective.

The value of peer-to-peer transparency

The hosts reflected on why the roundtable format works. The key ingredient is trust. When practitioners feel comfortable sharing their challenges openly, others can offer solutions they have already tested. One attendee mentioned struggling with a specific data cleansing problem; another immediately shared what had worked for them.

The table topic discussions, where attendees rotate between tables discussing different subjects, are now approaching 90 minutes in length. Each year, attendees ask for more time. Brian noted that one year an attendee suggested making the entire event just table topics. While the hosts have not gone that far, the feedback underscores how much value practitioners place on unstructured peer discussion.

The event also included panels with practitioners leading discussions on topics like IT and marketing alignment, ROI documentation, and getting executive buy-in. These featured leaders from large companies sharing how they have driven change within their organizations.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Master B2B Mindshare Summit?

The Master B2B Mindshare Summit is an annual peer-to-peer event for B2B digital leaders at manufacturers and distributors. Now in its fourth year, the event features roundtable discussions rather than traditional conference presentations. Approximately 200 VP-level and senior practitioners attend to share challenges and solutions across industries. The format emphasizes transparency and knowledge sharing between practitioners and solution providers.

Why are roundtables more effective than trade shows?

According to the hosts, roundtables create an environment where practitioners feel comfortable sharing challenges openly, which leads to practical problem-solving. Solution providers benefit from hearing real problems across multiple companies, and practitioners benefit from what one host called the God view that solution providers have across many implementations. The transparency builds trust and generates more actionable insights than badge scanning and booth visits.

How are companies saving money with AI?

According to discussions at the summit, companies are not typically laying off employees because of AI. Instead, they are choosing not to fill positions they had planned to hire for, or shifting employees into different roles. Many attendees found it difficult to attribute revenue gains to AI but could point to concrete examples of avoided hiring costs. The distinction between production (doing more) and productivity (doing better) was also discussed.

What is answer-engine optimization (AEO)?

Answer-engine optimization, or AEO, refers to strategies for ensuring that a company's products and brand appear correctly in AI-powered answer engines like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude. A workshop at the summit revealed that many companies had false information appearing in LLMs or were seeing competitors' products recommended instead of their own. The hosts compared the current state of AEO to the early days of SEO, suggesting that early movers will have a lasting advantage.

How can companies optimize for LLMs?

According to insights shared at the summit, one effective strategy is simply to ask the LLM itself how to appear in its results. Companies can query the engine about what content and formatting will help them rank for specific types of questions. The hosts noted that LLMs tend to favor question-and-answer formatted content and that properly tagged product content with accurate use-case descriptions is essential.

What common themes emerged across different B2B industries?

Despite operating in different industries, attendees shared similar challenges: AI adoption and measurement, staying relevant in the age of LLMs, data quality and governance, hiring and team structure, organizational alignment, getting sales team adoption, and preventing implementations from failing. The similarity of challenges across vastly different companies (from tea manufacturers to MRO distributors) was one of the notable observations from the event.

Sources & methodology

  1. 2026 Master B2B Mindshare Summit, Chicago
  2. Ntara AEO workshop, cited in the episode
  3. 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.

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