Friday 15 Podcast

Is Great UI/UX Necessary in B2B Ecommerce, or Is Good Good Enough?

Brian Beck and Andy Hoar on why B2B user experience is harder than B2C, why speed to answer matters more than visual elegance, and what Grainger gets right.

Friday 15 Podcast

Key takeaways

  • Forrester research shows that websites with well-designed user interfaces can increase conversion rates by as much as 200%, but achieving that level of design requires significantly more time, budget, and resources.
  • Logic IO found that 60% of B2B websites deliver a negative experience, and AWS research suggests companies that do not meet UX standards are missing out on 35% of potential web sales.
  • B2B buyers are different from B2C buyers: they are often efficient, hunter-like, and want to enter a part number and get out, rather than browse visually elegant pages.
  • The general rule of thumb is that for every one-second delay in search results, conversion rates drop by 7%, making speed to answer a critical metric in B2B.
  • A LinkedIn poll found that 73% of practitioners believe great UI/UX is necessary in B2B ecommerce, though the hosts noted the number might be lower if a price tag and timeline were attached.

MDM forecasts a stronger 2025

Brian opened with data from MDM forecasting that 2024 would end on an upswing, followed by a stronger 2025. Andy noted that economic forecasts shift constantly, but what matters is where companies are placing their bets. Budget season is underway, and distributors are planning for growth.

What does great UI/UX mean in ecommerce?

Brian asked ChatGPT for a definition of great UI/UX in ecommerce. The answer: creating a seamless, intuitive, and engaging experience that guides users through the shopping process, enhances satisfaction, and drives conversion. It balances aesthetics with functionality, ensuring the design looks appealing and is easy to navigate. Brian connected this to his book, which emphasizes eliminating friction as a key measure of success in B2B.

The data on why UI/UX matters

Forrester research shows that websites with well-designed user interfaces can increase conversion rates by as much as 200%. But the B2B reality is different. Logic IO found that 60% of B2B websites deliver a negative experience. AWS research suggests companies that do not meet UX standards are missing out on 35% of potential web sales. The question is whether B2B companies have the appetite to invest at the level required to be great.

Great UI/UX design is like great athletics or great music. To go from good to great is an order of magnitude leap. Are you willing and able to invest that? I do not find many B2B companies are.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

B2B buyers are different

Andy challenged the assumption that B2B should emulate consumer sites. B2B buyers are often efficient and task-oriented. They enter a part number, find what they need, and get out. They may not care about 360-degree views or elegant imagery. In some cases, visual elements can be an impediment to an efficient buying process. Eric Nebia from Fortune Brands made a related point in the comments: B2B buyers face switching costs that keep them on a site regardless of experience, and better UX may not increase sales if buyers already know what to buy.

Speed to answer is the metric that matters

Brian shared a rule of thumb: for every one-second delay in search results, conversion rates drop by about 7%. He described working with a large distributor whose site took minutes to return search results. It was their number one customer complaint. Customers continued to order because they had to, but the experience was unacceptable.

It does not have to be beautiful in B2B. It has to be fast and efficient. Therein lies the challenge in UX and UI in B2B. I think it is more important than B2C, but it has to be great in a different way.

Brian Beck, Master B2B

What Grainger gets right

Brian asked ChatGPT for the best example of B2B UI/UX, and Grainger came up. Their site is not the prettiest, but it is effective. They have invested for decades in getting customers to products quickly. They mimic B2C best practices where appropriate and layer in B2B requirements like technical specifications and complex configurations. Andy noted that the key to great UI/UX is knowing your customers. Grainger knows theirs.

Guided selling as an emerging practice

Andy mentioned guided selling as an emerging area in B2B search. Instead of leaving buyers with a blinking cursor, sites are parsing queries and asking clarifying questions: are you looking for this fastener in this temperature rating for this use case? The search becomes an intelligent guided browse. This matters more in B2B than in consumer because of the product complexity.

The poll: 73% say great is necessary

A LinkedIn poll asked whether great UI/UX is necessary in B2B or if good is good enough. The result: 73% said great is necessary. Andy noted the number is aspirational. If the question included the cost and timeline to achieve great, the result might be different.

Frequently asked questions

Is great UI/UX necessary in B2B ecommerce?

It depends on how you define great. Visual elegance matters less in B2B than in B2C. What matters is speed to answer: getting the buyer to the right product quickly and efficiently. A B2B site does not need to be beautiful, but it cannot be ugly or slow. A LinkedIn poll found 73% of practitioners believe great UI/UX is necessary, but that number might be lower if the cost and timeline to achieve it were factored in.

How are B2B buyers different from B2C buyers when it comes to user experience?

B2B buyers are often efficient and task-oriented. They enter a part number, find what they need, and get out. They may not care about 360-degree product views or elegant visuals, and in some cases those elements can slow down the buying process. Visual elegance is not an excuse for a bad experience, but it is not the primary measure of success in B2B the way it is in consumer ecommerce.

What is the cost of slow search results in ecommerce?

The general rule of thumb is that for every one-second delay in returning search results, conversion rates drop by about 7%. A five-second delay would mean a 35% drop. One practitioner described working with a large distributor whose site took minutes to return search results, which was their number one customer complaint. Customers continued to order because of switching costs, but the experience was unacceptable.

What does good B2B UI/UX look like?

Grainger is often cited as an example. Their site is not the prettiest, but it is effective. They have invested for decades in delivering a fast, efficient experience that gets customers to products quickly. They mimic B2C best practices where appropriate but also layer in B2B requirements like complex product configurations and technical specifications. Speed and efficiency define success, not visual elegance.

Why is B2B UI/UX harder than B2C?

B2B products are often far more complex. A shirt has size and color as variants. A fastener may have thousands of viable combinations, including temperature ratings, use cases, and compatibility requirements. Configure-price-quote (CPQ) is inherently complicated. Getting buyers to the right product quickly amid this complexity is a harder design problem than creating a visually appealing clothing site.

Do switching costs reduce the importance of UI/UX in B2B?

Switching costs can reduce pressure on B2B sellers to invest in UI/UX because buyers are locked in by contract pricing, vendor relationships, and procurement processes. However, this is not an excuse for a poor experience. A strong user experience can help with customer acquisition, even if retention is driven by other factors. New entrants like Amazon Business are raising the bar, and companies that do not invest risk losing new customers to competitors with better experiences.

Sources & methodology

  1. Friday 15 Podcast, Master B2B
  2. Forrester, research on UI design and conversion rates
  3. Logic IO, 2024 study on B2B website experience
  4. Amazon Web Services, research on user experience and sales
  5. Master B2B LinkedIn poll on UI/UX, September 2024
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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