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    Home»blog»Why B2B Companies Are Moving to BigCommerce: A Distributor’s Guide
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    Why B2B Companies Are Moving to BigCommerce: A Distributor’s Guide

    Zenith TeamBy Zenith TeamJuly 11, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read
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    B2B eCommerce used to mean a compromise. You could have an enterprise platform with B2B features and an enterprise price tag, or an affordable platform built for consumer brands that fought you on every quote request, customer-specific price list, and net terms checkout.

    That trade-off has collapsed, and BigCommerce is a large part of the reason. Over the past several years it has built out one of the strongest native B2B feature sets in the mid-market, and manufacturers, distributors, and wholesalers have noticed.

    At Anchor Group, we build B2B commerce sites for companies whose buyers are procurement managers, contractors, and purchasing departments, not weekend shoppers. This article covers why so many of them are landing on BigCommerce, and what to know before you follow.

    The B2B Buyer Has Changed

    Start with the buyer, because the buyer is driving all of this.

    The procurement manager placing a 40-line reorder at 7 a.m. expects the same experience she gets buying shoes at 9 p.m. She wants to see her contract pricing without calling a rep. She wants real inventory availability, not “call for stock.” She wants to reorder from history in three clicks, pay on terms, and download the invoice herself.

    Companies that make her fax a PO or wait for an emailed quote are not losing on price. They are losing on friction. Study after study shows B2B buyers now complete the majority of their purchase journey digitally before ever talking to a salesperson, and a growing share prefer never talking to one at all for routine orders.

    The catalog-and-phone-call model is not dying because it is old. It is dying because it is slow.

    What Makes BigCommerce Fit B2B

    Plenty of platforms claim B2B capability. Here is what actually matters when your customers are businesses, and how BigCommerce handles it.

    Customer-specific pricing and catalogs

    B2B pricing is not a price. It is a matrix: contract rates for key accounts, tiered volume breaks, customer group pricing, and products some customers can see while others cannot. BigCommerce price lists handle customer-specific and group-specific pricing natively, so your top account logs in and sees their negotiated rates automatically.

    Company accounts and buyer roles

    Real B2B customers are companies, not individuals. One account might have five buyers, an approver, and an accounts payable contact who only needs invoices. BigCommerce B2B Edition provides company account structures with roles and permissions, shared shopping lists, and buyer-level spend controls. This mirrors how your customers actually purchase, which is the whole point.

    Quoting and negotiated orders

    A large share of B2B revenue still starts as a quote. B2B Edition includes quote management inside the platform: buyers request quotes from a cart, sales reps respond with adjusted pricing, and the accepted quote converts directly to an order. No more quotes living in inboxes and dying there.

    Payment terms and invoicing

    Consumers pay by card. Businesses pay on net 30. Supporting purchase orders, payment terms, and invoice-based checkout is table stakes for B2B, and it is an area where consumer-first platforms still make you fight. BigCommerce supports terms-based checkout and integrates cleanly with ERP-driven credit limits, which matters more than most demos let on.

    Openness

    BigCommerce is an open SaaS platform. Its APIs are broad and well documented, it does not lock checkout behind proprietary walls, and it plays well with the ERP, PIM, and CPQ systems that serious B2B operations run on. For companies that see their commerce site as one part of a larger operational stack rather than an island, this architecture is the quiet reason the platform keeps winning technical evaluations.

    The Part Everyone Underestimates: The Backend

    Here is the hard truth we share with every B2B prospect. The storefront is the easy half.

    A B2B commerce site is only as good as the operational data behind it. Customer-specific pricing has to come from somewhere, and that somewhere is your ERP. Real-time inventory has to reflect the warehouse, not last night’s export. Credit limits, order status, shipment tracking, and invoices all live in your back office. If the website cannot see them, your customer service team becomes the integration, answering phone calls the website was supposed to eliminate.

    This is why the most successful B2B commerce projects are really two projects run as one: the storefront build and the ERP integration. Companies running NetSuite have a particular advantage here, because the BigCommerce-NetSuite pairing is mature and well traveled. Pricing, inventory, customers, orders, and fulfillment data flow between the two systems so the website always tells the truth.

    It is also why platform selection and implementation quality are inseparable. A capable partner scopes the storefront and the data flows together. If you are evaluating the move, look for a team whose BigCommerce implementation experience is specifically B2B, because B2B builds live or die on details that consumer builds never encounter: price list architecture, company account hierarchies, terms-based payment flows, and punchout requirements for larger customers.

    Extending the Platform

    No platform covers every requirement out of the box, and BigCommerce’s answer is a genuinely strong ecosystem. The marketplace of BigCommerce apps covers search and merchandising, tax automation, shipping and freight quoting, customer-specific catalogs, punchout, subscriptions, and dozens of other B2B needs. The practical guidance we give clients: prefer a well-supported app over custom code when one exists, and reserve custom development for the workflows that genuinely differentiate you. The same discipline that keeps an ERP account healthy keeps a commerce site healthy.

    Freight deserves a special mention for distributors. Parcel rating is easy. LTL quoting, dimensional weight, hazmat rules, and customer-specific freight programs are not, and they are exactly the kind of problem the app ecosystem plus targeted integration work solves well.

    A Realistic Roadmap

    For companies moving from a legacy B2B site, a print catalog, or phone-and-fax ordering, the successful pattern looks like this:

    1. Start with your top customers’ workflow, not your product catalog. Map how your best 20 accounts actually order today. The site must make that workflow faster, or adoption fails.
    2. Get the data ready. Product content, pricing structures, and customer records need the same cleanup discipline as an ERP migration. Thin product data is the most common launch-day disappointment.
    3. Integrate before you launch, not after. A pretty site with stale inventory burns trust with exactly the buyers you built it for.
    4. Launch to a pilot group. Roll out to a set of friendly accounts, fix the friction they find, then open the doors.
    5. Treat it as a channel, not a project. The site needs an owner, a merchandising rhythm, and a roadmap after go-live, the same as any sales channel.

    Companies that follow this arc typically see the wins compound: order entry costs drop, error rates fall, average order value rises as buyers discover the full catalog, and sales reps shift time from taking orders to growing accounts.

    How to Measure Success

    B2B commerce success is measured differently than consumer eCommerce, and using the wrong scoreboard leads teams astray. Conversion rate, the north star of B2C, matters far less when your buyers arrive with a purchase order in hand. Track these instead:

    • Digital order penetration. The percentage of total orders and total revenue flowing through the site rather than phone, fax, and email. This is the number that reflects real adoption, and the one that should climb every quarter.
    • Cost per order. Compare the fully loaded cost of a rep-entered order against a self-service web order. The gap is typically dramatic, and it is the core of the business case.
    • Order error rate. Re-keyed orders carry wrong SKUs, wrong quantities, and wrong ship-to addresses. Web orders entered by the buyer do not. Fewer errors means fewer returns, fewer credits, and fewer angry calls.
    • Account activation. Of your active customer base, how many have logged in and ordered online at least once? Adoption campaigns, run jointly by sales and marketing, move this number. It does not move itself.
    • Rep time reallocation. The hours reps stop spending on order entry should show up in outbound activity and account growth. If they do not, the savings evaporated instead of compounding.

    Set baselines before launch. Six months of before-and-after data is the difference between a project that gets its next phase funded and one that stalls.

    The Bottom Line

    B2B buyers have consumer-grade expectations and business-grade requirements. BigCommerce has become one of the strongest mid-market answers to that combination: native B2B functionality, open architecture, and an ecosystem that fills the gaps, at a total cost of ownership that mid-sized companies can defend.

    The platform choice matters. The execution matters more. Get the buyer workflow right, get the ERP integration right, and the storefront becomes what it should be: your hardest-working salesperson, on shift 24 hours a day.

    Zenith Team

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