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AI and predictive analytics: Putting data to work for B2B e-commerce profitability

In part four of The Profitability Imperative series, we explore how B2B companies use predictive analytics, AI in e-commerce, and data democratization to transform profitability.

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When Master B2B conducted executive roundtables with e-commerce businesses across the country, they expected to hear about generative AI management and personalization strategies. Instead, the most frequent strategic priority was "managing our analytics and reporting."

This response reveals a critical shift happening in B2B e-commerce. Companies don't lack data—they struggle with turning that data into actionable insights that improve profitability. While businesses have used e-commerce analytics for reporting for years, advances in the field of AI in e-commerce have spotlighted predictive analytics: using historical data to forecast future business outcomes.

The stakes couldn't be higher. In today's economic climate, every digital investment must demonstrate clear ROI, and every customer experience touchpoint needs to contribute to retention and growth. That's why leading B2B companies are embracing AI and predictive analytics not just as a reporting tool but as a strategic profit driver.

For part four of the Profitability Imperative series, Master B2B surveyed 86 global manufacturing and distribution executives to understand how they're approaching data and analytics investments. The results show that while 44% of companies increased their analytics spending in 2024, most are missing significant opportunities to drive profits through smarter data use.

Let's explore how forward-thinking companies are transforming their approach to data—and their bottom lines.

The power of predictive AI to transform business decisions

Predictive analytics represents a fundamental shift from descriptive reporting to strategic forecasting. While traditional e-commerce analytics tell you what happened—website traffic, average order value, conversion rates—AI and predictive analytics help you understand what will happen next.

This distinction matters enormously for profitability. Consider supply chain optimization: instead of simply tracking inventory levels, predictive AI can analyze seasonal patterns, geographic trends, and demand signals to ensure optimal stock levels. Wendy's buying co-op exemplifies this approach, using AI and predictive analytics to manage inventory for their $1 Frosty promotion across 6,000 locations. As the head of purchasing for Wendy’s put it, companies that don’t embrace these tools will face "a distinct disadvantage" within years.

The survey reveals that B2B companies are most comfortable using AI and predictive analytics for customer-facing applications like marketing campaigns (17.4% adoption) and product recommendations (12.8%). However, fewer than 10% are applying these tools to core operational functions like demand forecasting or warehouse optimization—representing massive untapped potential.

Use cases for e-commerce revenue growth

The most successful implementations of AI in e-commerce focus on three high-impact areas.

Supply chain and purchasing optimization

Predictive analytics can parse vast quantities of purchase data to spot seasonal and geographic buying trends so companies can ensure they have the optimal amount of inventory in the correct retail locations. This capability becomes crucial when inflation drives inventory costs higher, making it prohibitively expensive to maintain excess stock across multiple locations.

The survey data shows that only 8.1% of companies currently use generative AI for supply chain optimization in their predictive analytics—representing another untapped opportunity for competitive advantage.

Dynamic pricing strategies

While dynamic pricing has been discussed for over 20 years, advances in AI are now making sophisticated pricing optimization more automated and precise than ever before. Delta Air Lines recently announced it’s working with AI pricing technology to automate pricing decisions that previously required an analyst.

At a recent investor day, Delta president Glenn Hauenstein explained the power of these new pricing tools: "What we have today with AI is a super analyst. We have an analyst that's working 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and trying to simulate in real time—given the same inputs that an analyst sees today—what should the price points be?"

The financial impact is substantial. A study in The Journal of Professional Pricing found that pricing optimization can provide a 2-5% improvement in EBIT—a meaningful margin enhancement that directly impacts profitability.

Turbo-charging the analyst role

Beyond replacing routine tasks, AI and predictive analytics are augmenting human analysts in powerful ways. Large companies are posting new roles seeking data scientists who can build tools that use large language models to ingest data and make inferences and predictions—essentially creating virtual analysts.

As the report describes, Walmart posted a Data Scientist role seeking someone who can build "a state-of-the-art SaaS platform that utilizes LLMs and computer vision models to derive retail insights and automate decision-making processes, enhancing customer satisfaction and operational efficiency."

Meanwhile, existing data analysts can now run "what if" scenarios faster than ever before, enabling predictive analytics for e-commerce growth through better profit-maximizing predictions. For example, analysts can quickly model questions like: "What if we changed our supplier and moved all our manufacturing to a facility closer to that supplier?" or "What would the impact be on product margins if we eliminated one supplier but bought more from a different supplier?"

Building the team structure for analytics success

The survey revealed a troubling gap: 52% of companies lack dedicated data analysts for their e-commerce platform. This staffing shortfall directly correlates with low adoption of advanced analytics techniques. Without dedicated expertise, companies struggle to move beyond basic reporting to the implementation of predictive analytics for business growth.

Master B2B recommends a four-pillar approach to analytics team building:

Companies successfully scaling AI in e-commerce report that this structured approach prevents the common pitfall of "analysis paralysis," ensuring insights translate into profitable action.

The data democratization imperative

In each part of this research series, the importance of collecting and integrating data from across the organization has been emphasized. One of the drivers of data silos is that teams are concerned their data will end up in places where they lack control over it. But this mindset is part of what contributes to the proliferation of data silos.

Breaking down data silos

In an era where customers buy from multiple channels and generative AI tools require as much data as possible to create personalized experiences, data silos are no longer acceptable. This change—where all areas of the company have access to all company data—is called "the democratization of data."

A global air conditioning parts manufacturer executive recently shared its mindset shift around data ownership: "We decided we should stop worrying so much about our proprietary data getting out, because anyone who really wants it can probably get it anyway. Instead, we decided to share our data more openly within the company. If the digital team and the sales teams are working off the same data set, then it is up to them to determine how to best serve customers."

Establishing data quality standards

Data democratization doesn't mean abandoning oversight. As Gartner Senior Director Analyst Melody Chien recently noted, "Good quality data provides better leads, better understanding of customers, and better customer relationships. Data quality is a competitive advantage that data and analytics leaders need to improve upon continuously."

Successful data democratization requires establishing a committee to provide oversight over how data is used and to ensure that data meets organizational standards. While data will never be perfectly clean, organizations should define what "good enough" looks like and set that as the standard for measurement.

The competitive advantage of integrated analytics

SAP CX addresses these challenges by providing integrated e-commerce analytics capabilities that connect seamlessly with ERP, CRM, and other business systems. This integration enables predictive analytics powered by comprehensive customer data—from purchase history and service interactions to financial metrics and operational data.

SAP's strength lies in data integration across the entire business ecosystem. This means every AI predictive analytics insight can incorporate profitability data, which helps to optimize decision-making for long-term business value.

In times of economic uncertainty, this integrated approach becomes even more valuable. Companies need e-commerce analytics that improve customer experience and demonstrably impact the bottom line.

Key takeaways for B2B leaders

As detailed in part four of the SAP and Master B2B’s four-part “Profitability Imperative” series, the opportunity to transform your commerce operations through AI and predictive analytics is available today. With many companies increasing their analytics investments, forward-thinking leaders are recognizing the competitive advantage these capabilities provide.

Immediate action steps:

These aren't theoretical concepts—they're practical solutions being implemented by leading companies today. Your data holds the key to enhanced profitability and sustainable growth, and the question isn't whether these capabilities will become essential, but whether your organization will lead the transformation or follow others who act first.

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The Profitability Imperative: Part 4

How data and analytics drive profits higher

Discover how B2B companies democratize data and use AI to improve margins.

Read the report

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