The Future of B2B Customer Experience: Meeting B2C Expectations
Amazon, Uber, and Airbnb can all offer compelling case studies.
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Managing Director of Customer Experience at MCA Connect
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Customer experience is critical, whether you’re a business-to-business (B2B) or business-to-consumer (B2C) company. But what are the key differences between B2B and B2C customer expectations? The B2B customer experience has traditionally been seen as slower, more complex, and less transparent. But, in recent years, the lines between the two have substantially blurred.
That’s because companies like Airbnb, Uber, and Amazon have set the pace. The speed, personalization, and convenience they provide have reset expectations, across both our personal and professional lives.
This fact has caused two different mindsets to emerge. There are the B2B manufacturers who look at sluggish processes and suboptimal client communication and say, “That’s just the way it is.” And then there are those who see the benefits of the B2C approach and adapt accordingly.
That second group is on to something.
The Rise of Digital-Native B2B Buyers
As the old guard transitions out and younger demographics reach key purchasing ages, it’s critical to ask, how are Millennials and Gen Z influencing B2B purchasing behaviors?
Members of these groups are considered digital natives, meaning they’ve grown up surrounded by digital technology and have developed an inherent familiarity with tech tools. As such, their deeply digital habits have reshaped expectations entirely.
Take the fact that over 90% of consumers in major markets reported shopping online-only in one month, and food delivery alone has more than doubled its share of global food spending in five years.
These same buyers are stepping into the very roles your B2B operation may serve. And, whether they’re one-click ordering through Amazon or vetting your business for a multi-million-dollar investment, they expect the same instant access, frictionless purchasing, and personalized recommendations.
Bridging the Gap: Strategies for Meeting B2C-Like Expectations
Adopting the best parts of the B2C approach, effectively meeting growing B2C expectations, starts with realizing what’s possible. That’s why I typically recommend an envisioning session as a first step. Teams can walk through familiar examples, like Airbnb or Amazon, to identify key drivers of value. This tends to include choice, transparency, and ease.
We also dig deep into the data, so having a platform that unifies ERP and CRM data is highly valuable. After all, the more data you have — about customers, products, and processes — the easier it is to interconnect and optimize. It also allows more advanced technologies, like agentic AI, to automate trend analysis and data correlations, serving up the suggestions that matter most to your business… throughout the entire customer lifecycle. After all, the more data you have — about customers, products, and processes — the easier it is to interconnect and optimize.
From there, leaders can prioritize impactful, new initiatives, like offering omnichannel support, ensuring consistent experiences across sales, service, and digital touchpoints, or even developing a mobile app.
Take Cisco, for example. The company successfully transformed its portal from a limited, back-office tool into a consumer-grade experience, where customers can see order status, receive tailored recommendations, and access troubleshooting guides as easily as they might shop online.
In the same exploratory vein, GE once used VR and AR to bring an “Apple-like” showroom feel to product exploration, giving buyers a chance to visualize solutions before they existed.
Even distributors are finding ways to consolidate fragmented product availability, borrowing from B2C retailers who have mastered the art of transparency via “# in stock” disclaimers across online sites.
The key is opening the door to what’s possible, effectively aligning initiatives with customer expectations, ensuring data supports any investment, and nailing the execution.
The Role of Digital Transformation in B2B Customer Experience
Speaking of the execution, what role does digital transformation play in enhancing B2B customer experiences?
Digital transformation gives B2B companies the tools required to move from reactive to proactive in serving customers. By connecting data, systems, and operations, businesses can deliver the kind of seamless, transparent, and personalized experiences that buyers increasingly expect.
This all starts with the right digital foundation. Microsoft Dynamics 365 Customer Engagement (CE) and its modular architecture — including Sales, Customer Service, and Marketing — provide the tools to unify customer touchpoints and deliver seamless, personalized interactions.
When paired with the Microsoft Power Platform, organizations can rapidly build apps, automate workflows, and analyze data to uncover insights that drive smarter engagement.
Many organizations also choose to invest in their IoT to maximize efficiency. Through embedded equipment sensors, manufacturers can monitor performance, predict failures, and stage parts closer to where they’ll be needed. This reduces costly downtime, which could derail orders and, as a result, customer experience.
Automation and robotics are other cutting-edge options. Whether implemented in fulfillment centers or on production lines, automation keeps processes moving with greater precision and speed. Customers then see faster turnaround times, fewer errors, and more consistent delivery.
AI adds intelligence to the mix by learning from patterns across large sets of customer and product data. It supports predictive models, curates recommendations, and anticipates needs. So, companies can offer experiences that feel tailored rather than generic.
Note that MCA Connect Connected Blueprint™ helps manufacturers strategize around these tools and technologies by mapping where processes fall short of modern, customer-grade expectations. In just a few weeks, it delivers a prioritized roadmap with clear financial impact, helping organizations align business and IT, streamline operations, and adopt the kind of seamless, customer-centric practices that B2C leaders have already mastered.
The Business Impact: Loyalty, Revenue, and Competitive Advantage
It’s important to circle back to the fact that the ROI on these shifts can be significant.
Operators see less waste, faster time to market, and more efficient use of resources, which all translate into higher profitability. Clients can configure products more easily, track orders transparently, and access seamless support, which means they’ll be more likely to stay loyal or even expand their relationship.
Over the long term, B2B companies that invest thoughtfully in these B2C-like experiences gain a meaningful competitive advantage — In a sector where differentiation can be difficult to achieve and even more challenging to maintain, no less.
Turning B2C Expectations into B2B Success
Ultimately, Uber, Amazon, and Airbnb are here to stay. And that’s a good thing, as they certainly provide some compelling case studies.
Instead of fighting their impact, B2B manufacturers can adopt the most prudent practices of these modern providers. Because, with long-term growth in mind, the results will benefit both the operators themselves and their valued clients.
Ready to get started?
Join Anna Falcon, managing director of MCA Connect’s customer engagement practice, for a custom CRM modernization plan.
AUTHOR
Managing Director of Customer Experience at MCA Connect
Anna Falcon is an accomplished consulting leader who brings a business transformation lens to every engagement. With deep expertise across Microsoft CRM and the Power Platform, she helps enterprise organizations align their growth strategies with modern, scalable technology.
