Part 5 of the Executive Briefing Series for Manufacturing & Distribution Leaders
You’ve seen the strategy. You’ve understood the numbers. You’ve acknowledged the internal challenges.
Now comes the most important question: As a leader, what exactly should you do to make B2B eCommerce succeed?
Because here’s the reality: Technology doesn’t drive transformation. Leadership does. The most successful B2B organizations didn’t win with better software.
They won because executives owned the vision, rallied their teams, and kept the organization aligned as change unfolded.
This is your playbook.
Step 1: Define a Clear “Why”
Before any roadmap, before any launch, you need to articulate why this matters.
Ask yourself:
- What does digital success look like for us?
- Are we aiming to scale without adding headcount?
- Improve margins through automation?
- Meet modern buyer expectations?
- Retain key customers and defend market share?
Don’t let your “why” be vague. Make it strategic, measurable, and aligned with business growth.
Leadership Move: Share this “why” in every kickoff, board review, and departmental plan.
Step 2: Assign Ownership With Authority
You wouldn’t launch a new product without a GM. You wouldn’t open a branch without a manager.
Why should eCommerce be different? Yet in many companies, ownership is split across:
- IT for the platform
- Marketing for the UX
- Sales for adoption
- Finance for funding
And when everyone owns it… no one owns it.
Leadership Move: Assign a senior-level owner, like a VP of Digital or Chief Commercial Officer, with cross-functional authority and KPIs tied to performance.
Step 3: Fund the Ecosystem, Not Just the Tool
Here’s where many companies undercut their own success:
They fund the platform… But they don’t fund:
- Data cleanup
- Product content enrichment
- Customer onboarding
- Internal training
- Dedicated digital staff
So the site launches and then limps.
Leadership Move: Budget for platform + enablement. Treat eCommerce like a revenue-producing branch. Staff and support it accordingly.
Step 4: Align Metrics Across the Org
If you want alignment, start with measurement. You can’t have sales, operations, and marketing rowing in the same direction if they’re being evaluated on different goals.
Align around metrics like:
- % of digital revenue
- Average order value online
- Customer login and portal usage
- Quote-to-cash cycle time
- Order accuracy and return rate
And here’s a big one:
Don’t penalize reps for digital orders. Reward account growth, regardless of channel.
Leadership Move: Update comp plans, dashboards, and QBRs to reflect digital success.
Step 5: Lead the Culture Shift
Digital transformation is 90% mindset.
If you want your organization to embrace eCommerce, you need to make it visible, repeatable, and reinforced.
This means:
- Talking about it in all-hands and leadership meetings
- Recognizing teams who adopt and innovate
- Sharing customer success stories
- Setting expectations that this is how we serve customers now
Culture is built by what leadership consistently says and does.
Leadership Move: Make eCommerce part of the way you run the business, not just a tech thing “over there.”
Final Word: The Leaders Who Win
The leaders who win in B2B eCommerce aren’t the ones with the flashiest platforms.
They’re the ones who:
- Made digital part of their strategy
- Backed it with structure and investment
- Unified their teams around a shared goal
- And led visibly from the front
Because in the end… This isn’t a website launch. It’s a leadership moment, and the organizations that embrace it aren’t just catching up.
They’re pulling ahead.