Amazon is becoming more of a competitor as it sells through sales reps as well as directly online. But it also offers a good marketplace platform that manufacturers and distributors should consider as a place to sell their own products.

One of the top takeaways from Jim Collin’s seminal business book “Good to Great” is the observation that “great” companies—or those that far exceed their peers over time in terms of enterprise value—“confront the brutal reality” of their markets and situations.

Management at these companies gather the facts, understand trends, and do something about them. They aren’t afraid to test new approaches in the face of changing market conditions, and will risk failure rather than suffer mediocrity or death by inaction. They confront what is happening, and take action. As Jeff Bezos, Amazon.com Inc.’s CEO, puts it in a recent letter to shareholders, great companies work hard to stay “Day 1” companies–constantly iterating and testing to improve. Process is secondary and always subservient to customers’ needs.

Brian Beck

Brian Beck,
senior vice president,
Guidance

In today’s digital-centric world, the brutal reality is that one company is successfully disrupting the way products are sold in industry after industry. That company is called Amazon—Mr. Bezos’ baby that has grown to a giant by staying a ‘Day 1’ company

At its core, Amazon is a disruptive juggernaut that is dis-intermediating traditional sales and distribution channels. As an example from the retail sector, just take a look at Circuit City and Borders Books–both of which were forced to shutter their doors, due, in significant part, to Amazon. Further, with Amazon emerging as the largest apparel retailer in the United States, there is a growing list of apparel retailers that are falling off the map, including The Limited, American Apparel, Wet Seal, and numerous others. Sports equipment retailers, consumer electronics giants, department stores, and many more categories are being impacted.

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What does this mean for brands, manufacturers, and distributors operating in traditional business-to-business selling markets? In my opinion, it is only a matter of time before Amazon disrupts the B2B marketplace in similar fashion. The brutal reality is that Amazon has the expertise, deep pockets, data, and incredible execution capabilities that will change how and where business buyers are transacting. Make no mistake–this is already happening.

The Writing is on the Wall

Amazon is investing heavily in enabling business buyers to purchase online using the same tools and user experiences these same buyers have become accustomed to as consumers in shopping for their personal purchases on Amazon.com. The company calls this Amazon Business, and they are executing right now to digitally support traditional B2B workflows and customers’ purchasing expectations.

Amazon’s efforts include:

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  • Adding People—Amazon is a metric-driven execution machine that hires very smart people. Over the last few years, Amazon has tripled in size in terms of the number of employees it has hired—as hard as that may be to believe.
  • Acquiring Business Buyers in Key Sectors–For example, Amazon recently secured a major public sector contract, which enables buyers at public agencies and nonprofit organizations to procure the items they need through Amazon. The contract could be worth as much as $5.5 billion. They have a growing sales team that is out in the field adding both business buyers and sellers (like you and your competitors) to build out its marketplace ecosystem for B2B. Putting sales people in the field is new for Amazon, and a sign that the company now understands what it will take to build out Amazon Business (versus their earlier efforts in B2B).
  • Integrating with Procurement Systems—Amazon is integrating with a number of the most common procurement software platforms utilized by corporate and institutional buyers (more than 40 to date). This enables business buyers to use their enterprise resource planning, or ERP systems of financial management and other business software to manage the purchasing of things through Amazon. In other words, procurement folks can now buy things through Amazon the same way they buy something from another vendor through their ERP today.
  • Creating B2B Workflows and Functionalities–Amazon has added key functionalities that are required by business buyers and sellers, such as support for tiered pricing and purchase approval processes. They are even extending business credit terms to buyers.

Combine these investments with the fact that Amazon is probably ten years ahead of most other companies in terms of how they use data to personalize digital experiences, and clear evidence that many business buyers are already buying on Amazon, and you have a brutal reality to confront. Dis-intermediation has started.

This is Good News for Brands and Manufacturers

…if you confront the brutal reality!

Not too long ago I made the case that companies that make products that stand on their own merits and benefits are in a great position to take advantage of this major shift. Traditional channels are going to change, and Amazon will likely impact a large number of distributors.

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We already see this occurring. The B2B e-commerce ground-breaker and distribution behemoth Grainger recently announced that its sales growth is slowing. Grainger missed its Q1 2017 earnings projections, which the company attributed to price reductions and online sales pressures. Its earnings per share came in at a 9% decline compared to Q1 2016. Its Q2 earnings came in more than 40% down from a year earlier.

Industry pundits expect increasing margin pressure on the company and other distribution leaders such as Fastenal, specifically coming from Amazon Business. This is writing on the wall.

Amazon Business’s impact on traditional distributors is an opportunity for manufacturers and brands. If you are one of these two types of businesses, by launching on Amazon Business you have immediate opportunity to:

  • Drive incremental revenue and capture new customers.
  • Stay relevant to existing customers, many of whom are die-hard Amazon loyalists, and already buying on Amazon for their businesses.
  • Position yourself ahead of your competitors–there is an opportunity right now (and it will not last) to capitalize on Amazon’s efforts to build out their assortment through marketplace partnerships–you have some leverage at this moment in time that you are unlikely to have later. And you can get there before your competitors do.
  • Take control of how your brand is positioned on this rapidly growing channel. (As a fun and disturbing exercise, try searching for one of your products right now on Amazon. I do this with CEOs all the time–it immediately and invariably causes instant anxiety when the CEO sees how their brand shows up on the No.1 place people are looking for their products. Most of the time, it ain’t pretty.) By leveraging a Seller Central account, you can also control the pricing of your product on Amazon.

Consider the fact that 55% of all product searches are now originating on Amazon. We can expect that number to keep increasing. Ignore Amazon’s B2B efforts now, and you will be playing catch-up later. If yours is a truly differentiated product–one that can’t easily be replaced by a substitute—I strongly believe you should see this shift as an evolution of distribution channels, not a threat to your company.

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More Purchase Journeys are Starting and Ending on Amazon

Amazon’s efforts in the B2B sector are accelerating. As mentioned above, the number of business buyers beginning their product searches on Amazon is growing, taking traffic away from the sites of traditional distributors. Forrester Research recently reported that the number of business product-related searches starting on Amazon has now grown to equal the number of searches that begin on distributors’ sites. Amazon is also slowly taking search origination share from Google and Bing, according to the same report.

An increasing number of business buyers are finishing their shopping journeys on Amazon as well. More from our friends at Forrester: As of Q1 2017, almost 40% of B2B buyers are finishing their purchases on Amazon. In 2015, the percentage of B2B buyers that said they finished their purchases on distributor sites was 30%. In 2017, just two years later, that number has plummeted to 16%. Buyers are flocking to sites that are easy to use, fast, with broad selection, limited login requirements, and built-in trust. Amazon does these things better than anyone, and taking share from traditional channels in the process.

By 2020, it’s expected that B2B buyers will make over half of their purchases online–a trend that is only beginning, but accelerating quickly. What is important to note are the drivers for this shift: convenience, speed and price. And we all know Amazon does well in all three buckets.

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Amazon is quickly becoming a major distribution channel that manufacturers and brands can leverage to drive sales. Your customers are driving this. It is where your customers are searching for products–and it is where they are buying them, too.

Some Final Thoughts

If you have a product or brand that you manufacturer or own–and it is unique, stands on its own, and is in-demand–it is time to strongly consider getting yourself on Amazon.

Sure, you may say that Amazon may leverage what they learn about your industry category by selling your products and then enter your business by sourcing directly. Perhaps there are some categories where this is truly a threat (e.g., Amazon Basics). However, I’m convinced that the highly complex nature of the products in many B2B industry categories, combined with the continued importance of product and application knowledge (often delivered by human beings, not computers), makes this a much lower threat for most industries. Also–if you are truly an innovator in your field with fantastic product–and your product is your core competency–do you really have much to worry about?

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Note that Amazon Business also brings real time-to-market benefits for your own e-commerce presence, particularly if you are new to online commerce. A typical manufacturer or brand can be up and running on the Amazon platform in one to two months, normally at a nominal cost. Compare this to development and deployment of an in-house e-commerce web site, which can consume nine to 18 months with associated capital costs ranging from $250,000 to multiple millions or more (that said, I do believe strongly that brands and manufacturers should have both an e-commerce site as well as a presence on Amazon). Amazon’s programs such as Fulfilled by Amazon also make it easier for you to ship quickly to business customers, and meet Amazon’s fulfillment and service requirements.

Amazon is currently aggressively recruiting sellers for Amazon Business. They are hungry for you right now. But this will change over time as product categories get filled.

Confront the reality. Business buyers are rapidly shifting to Amazon. If you are not there, you are going to lose to someone else. It’s that simple. The early bird catches the worm. You don’t want to be caught sleeping in with so much at stake.

Brian Beck is senior vice president of e-commerce and omnichannel strategy at Guidance, an e-commerce design and development agency. Follow him on Twitter @briansalaubeck and on LinkedIn.

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