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The Future of Sales: Reinvention for the modern age of industry

Kevin Hansen
Director of Strategy at Valtech

September 23, 2025

In industrial manufacturing, selling complex solutions has long been a high-touch, expertise-driven game. It’s been built on deep product knowledge, in-person relationships and a web of manual handovers across disconnected teams. For decades, that model worked. Today, it’s beginning to break.

B2B customers now expect the speed, simplicity and transparency they experience in consumer platforms. Research from Genesys finds that 97% of customers want seamless, consistent, omnichannel experiences without having to repeat themselves across channels. CMSWire highlights how consumers rank transparency and empathy among their top drivers of brand loyalty.

But meeting these expectations is only the baseline. The real opportunity is to lead the category, outperform best-in-class peers and redefine what excellence looks like in industrial B2B sales. 

Internally, however, many organizations are still navigating a maze of legacy systems, fragmented data and disconnected teams, turning even routine sales into slow, resource-heavy efforts.

Meanwhile, the external environment is becoming more volatile:

  • According to the World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2025, geopolitical conflict and state-based instability are seen as the most immediate global risk — with direct implications for supply chain continuity.
  • Maersk similarly notes that geopolitical disruption, trade tensions and material shortages are making global supply chains more fragile and harder to forecast.
  • Labor shortages add to the pressure. The National Association of Manufacturers predicts U.S. factories alone will need to fill 3.8 million jobs in the next decade amid increased nearshoring efforts. 

Layer on top of that a wave of rapidly evolving buyer expectations driven by digital-native behavior and AI adoption. Accenture reports that more than half of consumers are now comfortable using conversational AI to engage with brands, underscoring the demand for fast, personalized and tech-enabled sales interactions. 

This shift isn't theoretical. We’ve seen it reshape entire industries:

  • Xometry turned custom manufacturing into an on-demand ecommerce experience, delivering instant RFQs and fulfillment visibility.
  • Airbus has integrated digital twins and predictive maintenance into its post-sales service model, transforming ongoing support into a competitive differentiator.
  • Polestar reimagined automotive sales with a direct-to-consumer model that emphasizes digital-first engagement, allowing customers to configure and order vehicles online, bypassing traditional dealership dependency.

These aren’t edge cases. At Valtech, we believe the solution is not incremental optimization, but a fundamental redesign — a shift we call The Future of Sales. It’s not a nice to have. It’s already here.

And the companies embracing it today are setting the pace for everyone else. 

The Future of Sales isn’t just about selling smarter. It’s about selling in a way that’s faster, more human, more connected, and ultimately more valuable and more rewarding.

The challenge: A fragmented sales landscape

Let’s be honest. For many industrial companies, the current state of sales is a patchwork of processes and platforms.

Original equipment (OE) sales, service sales and partner-led sales often operate in silos, with different systems, KPIs and engagement styles. This leads to inefficiencies, duplicated work and inconsistent experiences, especially when a buyer’s journey spans multiple divisions, platforms and service lines.

These silos actively hold businesses back from delivering on customer expectations. Even internally, sales teams often struggle to navigate a disjointed toolchain — CRM, CPQ, ERP, custom Excel trackers — that complicate lead qualification, slow down quoting and obscure performance tracking.

All the while, customers and partners grow increasingly impatient, digital-first competitors gain ground, and market volatility adds urgency.

The shift: From transactions to lifecycle value

The Future of Sales isn’t a new CRM or one more digital touchpoint. It’s a complete shift in mindset and operating model, from one focused on transactions to one designed to deliver value throughout the customer and partner lifecycle.

That means treating the sales process not as a linear funnel but as a continuous journey, from the first inquiry, through order execution, and well into the in-use phase, where service, spare parts, upgrades and long-term engagement reside.

Modern industrial buyers don’t want to restart their journeys with every new inquiry. They want continuity, context and clarity. That’s why the Future of Sales integrates:

  • Lead-to-cash orchestration. This aligns sales, engineering, operations and service on a connected workflow.
  • In-use engagement. This enables ongoing customer success through self-service, spare parts access and proactive support.
  • Partner collaboration. This empowers distributors, service providers and integrators with shared tools, data and visibility.

In short, it’s about delivering one unified experience — even when dozens of internal teams and external actors are involved — and maximizing lifetime sales by creating consistent, value-driven relationships that extend far beyond the initial deal.

Smart sales powered by data & AI

To support this vision, data and AI must move from being nice-to-haves to acting as strategic infrastructure:

  • Use AI to qualify leads based on behavior, intent and fit.
  • Automatically route inquiries to the right team based on context and workload.
  • Enable predictive quoting, guided configuration and proactive service.
  • Track and optimize conversion from inquiry to order using data-driven insights.

Of course, none of this works without clean, connected data. That’s where composable architecture plays a vital role. Composability makes it possible to decouple front-end experiences from legacy systems, standardize APIs, and plug in new tools or vendors without starting from scratch.

Digital core: The rise of industrial ecommerce

Ecommerce has long been misunderstood in industrial contexts. Many still think of it as a B2C gimmick or a spare parts catalog. But for modern manufacturers, ecommerce is becoming the transactional core of lifecycle sales.

It’s where configuration meets transaction, where parts meet pricing, where onboarding meets automation. And when executed correctly, ecommerce becomes a self-service platform for:

  • Configuring and quoting solutions
  • Tracking orders, shipments and delivery status
  • Accessing technical documentation and contracts
  • Reordering parts based on usage data
  • Initiating service or warranty claims
  • Managing account-specific content and pricing

Ecommerce doesn’t replace the salesperson. It enhances the salesperson’s role, freeing them to focus on strategic engagement. More importantly, it offers customers and partners the speed, autonomy and clarity they increasingly expect.

Ecosystem first: Empowering partners

For most industrials, the front line includes a wide network of distributors, service partners and integrators. These partners often represent your brand, deliver your services and support your products, but they’re frequently left out of digital initiatives.

The Future of Sales includes them by design. That means:

Giving partners access to real- time data, tools and tracking
Enabling co-selling and lead sharing
Offering personalized digital experiences tailored to partner roles
Supporting onboarding, quoting and service processes across the extended ecosystem

Your partners are an extension of your value chain. Empowering them digitally is just as important as enabling your internal teams.

Make change stick: Transformation is a people strategy

Let’s be clear: Tech alone won’t solve this. The hardest part of any sales transformation is change management, aligning people, processes and priorities across functions, geographies and legacy systems.

At Valtech, we’ve seen successful programs make change adoption a first-class citizen from Day One. That includes:

  • Co-designing with users, not just delivering to them
  • Training and supporting teams across sales, service and support
  • Embedding champions and feedback loops into every phase
  • Treating enablement as an ongoing function, not a launch task

Without this, even the best digital tools risk becoming shelfware.

From vision to execution: Seven principles for success

From our experience in leading industrial sales transformations, seven principles consistently drive success:

  1. Solve real problems. Anchor everything in business value.
    Start with what matters most to the business. Focus on solving concrete, high-impact problems, whether it’s reducing quoting time, improving win rates or simplifying order workflows. Every initiative should tie directly to measurable outcomes that drive ROI and business relevance.
  2. De-risk the journey. Start small, prove quickly and learn continuously.
    Rather than chasing a perfect future state, take a pragmatic, iterative approach. Launch in one market, one process or one sales motion. Use these early efforts to build internal confidence, test assumptions, refine your model and create blueprints for broader rollout.
  3. Tear down silos through co-creation.
    Effective transformation is cross-functional by nature. Involve sales, service, marketing, IT, and key external stakeholders like customers and partners from the start to ensure alignment, shared ownership and solutions that reflect the full ecosystem.
  4. Execute with accountability. Anchor in KPIs.
    Drive decisions and progress with clear, outcome-oriented metrics. Measure success through KPIs such as lead conversion, cycle time, user adoption, attach rate and lifetime value — not just feature completion or system rollout.
  5. Enable and empower people early.
    The best-designed systems only succeed if people are ready to use them. Start enablement activities early — including training, ongoing support and change communications — to accelerate onboarding, reduce friction and sustain long-term engagement.
  6. Build a strong backbone. Govern and communicate for continuity.
    Transformation is a journey. Establish a robust governance structure with clear roles, decision rights, roadmaps and feedback loops to sustain alignment and momentum. Just as critical is a consistent communication rhythm across teams and leadership to reinforce priorities, share progress and keep the organization engaged at every step.
  7. Secure C-level sponsorship.
    Transformation at this scale requires visible and sustained commitment from executive leadership. C-level sponsors must champion the vision, actively drive alignment across business units, clear roadblocks and reinforce the strategic importance of change across the organization.

Aligning for advantage: Experience, tech & data, and capability

In an increasingly volatile and fast-moving market, industrial companies must make it easier to do business. That’s what the Future of Sales enables.

True transformation is about aligning the entire operating model — across experience, technology and capability — to drive operational efficiency and long-term growth. Let’s look at the target states for each to envision what a strategy for sustainable success will look like:

The experience target state

This defines what customers, partners and employees should experience at every stage of the journey, from initial need to post-delivery engagement. It’s about removing friction, increasing transparency, and delivering seamless, consistent interactions. Done right, it builds trust, accelerates decisions and fosters long-term loyalty.

The tech & data target state

A future-ready tech stack must be composable, scalable and adaptive. The right architecture supports real-time data, seamless orchestration and modular upgrades, making it possible to integrate new capabilities without disruption. This is what allows organizations to respond quickly to market shifts and unlock continuous innovation.

The capability target state

Even the best experience and technology fall flat without the business muscle to back them up. This target state defines the foundational capabilities in people, processes and governance required to deliver and sustain the new model. It ensures alignment between experience design and system execution, enabling consistent performance across functions and regions.

These three layers are interdependent levers of transformation. When they’re aligned and reinforce each other, organizations gain agility, reduce complexity and create real business advantage.

The bottom line

The Future of Sales is a strategic shift in how industrials grow, compete and create value. It’s about:

  • Moving from siloed transactions to connected journeys.
  • Turning data into decisions and decisions into outcomes.
  • Empowering not just internal teams but the entire ecosystem.
  • Making it radically easier for customers and partners to engage.

In a world defined by uncertainty, how easy you are to do business with becomes your strongest differentiator. Your organization’s transformation starts by aligning what you want to deliver with what you’re able to execute across experience, tech and capability. Learn how we help manufacturers transform and leap ahead.

Kevin Hansen
Director of Strategy at Valtech

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