For many manufacturers and distributors, email still plays a central role in how orders are placed. Customers send PDFs, sales reps forward spreadsheets, and customer service teams interpret requests and manually enter orders into the ERP. On the surface, this process works fine.
Orders get processed, customers get what they need, and the business keeps moving. But underneath that workflow is a growing problem: Manual order processing doesn’t break all at once. It becomes more expensive, more fragile, and more risky over time.
Email-based ordering persists for three key reasons:
It’s flexible.
It’s familiar.
It accommodates customer-specific needs.
For sales teams, it supports relationships for sales teams, it requires no behavior change for customers, and in early stages of growth, this approach often feels efficient. There’s no need to invest in systems, standardize workflows, or train customers. However, as volume increases, complexity compounds. What once felt flexible starts to create friction.
Most organizations don’t see the full cost of email ordering because it doesn’t appear in a single line item.
Instead, it shows up across the business in small, compounding ways.
Every emailed order must be:
Reviewed
Interpreted
Entered into the ERP
Verified for accuracy
This work often falls on customer service or inside sales teams. However, as order volume grows, so does the workload. At a certain point, the business is no longer limited by demand. Instead, it is limited by how quickly orders can be processed manually.
Email orders can introduce ambiguity for your customers. This can look like:
Incomplete information
Incorrect SKUs
Outdated pricing
unclear quantities
Even experienced teams make mistakes when re-keying orders. Those mistakes lead to things like order corrections, returns, customer frustration, and internal rework. Over time, error rates increase as product catalogs and pricing structures become more complex.
In many B2B environments, pricing is not static. It may include things like customer-specific pricing, contract terms, negotiated discounts, and volume breaks. However, when orders arrive by email, pricing must be manually validated against ERP data or internal knowledge. Ultimately, this creates risk and can show up as inconsistent pricing, missed margin opportunities, and reliance on individual employees. Instead of being system-driven, pricing becomes person-dependent.
When orders originate outside structured systems, visibility suffers. Leaders begin asking questions like:
Where is demand actually coming from?
Which customers are ordering most frequently?
What products are driving repeat purchases?
But when workflows are fragmented across email, spreadsheets, and manual entry, reporting becomes delayed or inconsistent. Decision-making slows down because the data cannot be trusted in real time.
In many organizations, a handful of employees understand how orders actually move through the system. In fact, this is more common that you might imagine. These employees know things like:
How to interpret customer emails
How pricing should be applied
How to resolve exceptions
Over time, those individuals become critical to daily operations. However, if they leave, take time off, or become overwhelmed, the system struggles. Ultimately, what appears to be a process is often tribal knowledge held by a few people. This is a severe limitation of growth in the long term.
From the customer’s perspective, email ordering can feel unpredictable. For example:
Response times vary, order confirmations may be delayed.
Errors require back-and-forth communication.
Some customers receive excellent service. Others experience friction.
As expectations shift, especially among newer buyers, this inconsistency becomes more noticeable and needs to be proactively addressed to meet their needs.
Most companies don’t replace email ordering because they want to. Instead, they replace it because they reach a point where:
Order volume outpaces team capacity
Errors begin to impact customer trust
Reporting gaps limit decision-making
Operational risk becomes too high
At that point, the question is no longer: “Should we modernize?” It becomes: “How do we modernize without disrupting the business?”
The instinct is often to solve this problem with technology. This often starts with a comment, like: “Let’s implement an eCommerce platform so customers can order online.” But replacing email ordering is not just a system change. It requires rethinking how customers place orders, how pricing is presented, how sales teams interact with customers, how orders flow through operations, and how systems exchange data
This is why many digital initiatives struggle. They attempt to replace email workflows without fully understanding how those workflows function today.
Companies that successfully move away from email ordering take a different approach. They begin by understanding the current state:
How do different customers place orders?
What exceptions occur regularly?
Where does manual work enter the process?
Which steps create the most friction?
From there, they define a future state:
What should the ordering experience look like?
What information should customers have access to?
How should pricing be handled?
How should orders flow into the ERP?
Only after that clarity exists do they select and implement technology. This approach is a core principle behind The B2B eCommerce Blueprint, developed by The B2B eCommerce Agency to help manufacturers and distributors modernize digital commerce without introducing unnecessary risk.
The goal with modernization is not simply to eliminate email. The goal is to create a system where customers can place orders easily and accurately. In this scenario, pricing is consistent and system-driven, orders flow directly into operational systems, and internal teams spend less time processing and more time supporting customers.
When done well, digital ordering reduces friction for both customers and internal teams. It doesn’t remove relationships. Instead, it supports them.
Email ordering often persists because it works “well enough.” But “well enough” becomes increasingly expensive as the business grows. The companies that address this early don’t just improve efficiency.
They reduce operational risk, improve data visibility, and create a more consistent customer experience
Best of all, these companies build a foundation for scalable growth. And over time, they develop something more valuable: a digital channel that makes it easier for customers to do business with them.