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February 03, 2026

From cost control to top-line growth: See how Atlas Copco leverages digital — a portal, a CRM, an AI layer — to sell more in B2B.

Get to know Atlas Copco 

Atlas Copco is a global industrial powerhouse that’s redefining B2B commerce through digital innovation. With Valtech as a strategic partner, the company has transformed its legacy ordering systems into a scalable ecommerce platform now active in more than 100 countries and across five brands.

This initiative has driven double-digit growth in digital orderlines, streamlined operations and positioned Atlas Copco as a frontrunner in industrial digitalization, earning them industry recognition and setting a new benchmark for customer experience in the sector. 

€15.4 billion

In 2024

55,000

 employees 

73 Countries

Sales in 73 countries 

Business areas
Compressor Technique
Vacuum Technique
Industrial Technique
Power Technique

Get to know Thomas Areskoug 

Thomas Areskoug is a seasoned change leader in the transformation space, currently serving as Vice President of Digital Sales, Marketing & Service for Atlas Copco Industrial Technique.

He brings a rich background in management consulting and leadership across ecommerce, retail and FMCG, a foundation that now drives his focus on digital transformation in B2B. 

When Thomas steered his career from consumer to industrial B2B, digital at Atlas Copco was mostly about efficiency. Today, it’s built to sell: one portal, one CRM-led motion and an AI layer that guides decisions. 

Describe current market conditions in one word or phrase 

Uncertain 

Beyond efficiency: How Atlas Copco makes digital sell 

It’s been more than a half decade since Atlas Copco’s Thomas Areskoug steered his career from B2C to B2B. B2C had achieved “a steady state of fine-tuning,” he says, and B2B was still rich in opportunities for transformation and value creation. 

Since joining Atlas Copco, Thomas has led the company’s digital capabilities. Once a driver of efficiency, digital’s mandate today is to generate business value. “I think efficiency is still a business value,” Thomas says, “but I think it’s growing from reducing cost to growing the top line.” 

In a sector battling flat demand and global headwinds, Atlas Copco’s Industrial Technique business has rewired its digital motion from cost discipline to top-line creation. Thomas’s throughline: Start with the basics, connect marketing to sales to service in one portal, put CRM at the center with new roles, measure what correlates with value, and layer AI where it tangibly improves data and decisions. 

Atlas Copco’s market context 

Strategy follows geography and geopolitics. As Chinese manufacturers accelerate up the value stack, the imperative is obvious. “It makes it extremely important to win in China,” Thomas says.

At the same time, buyer behavior is converging, regardless of borders. “My experience is that the markets are really similar.” People, processes and platforms are harmonizing across industries and countries. 

Whitepaper

Get the full industry perspective

This conversation is one of many that informed Valtech’s Voice of Digital Leaders in Manufacturing 2026 report. Drawing on firsthand perspectives from manufacturing executives, the report reveals how digital leaders are navigating uncertainty, connecting sales, marketing and service, and turning technology into sustained growth.

The digital experience Atlas Copco has built 

Atlas Copco’s digital experience is being braided together, front to back. It started with marketing and sales, and now they’re addressing service by making it more visible for both customers and salespeople. 

It’s a pragmatic admission many manufacturers share. “Often, the service offers are less standardized than the product offers,” Thomas says. “But I think if you review your service, you will see that it’s actually way more standardized than you would think.”

On growth, the dial is finally moving. New customer sales attribution varies by market and method. Still, targets are up, and momentum is real. The precise metric matters less than the direction of travel, as there will never be an agreed-upon, perfect digital-led sales.

“But we don’t care,” he says. “We go for the growth.” 

What makes Atlas Copco’s digital experience memorable 

Differentiation hinges on channel reality and procurement preferences. “I think that’s where having 100% ecommerce penetration with your distributors becomes really crucial because then you share the lead,” Thomas says. “That way, you’re able to follow the money through the distribution.” 

At the same time, companies like Atlas Copco must meet their customers where they are — and how they want to procure. Each customer has different needs and ways of doing business. “The differences are just as big between customers within an industry as they are between industries,” Thomas says. 

That’s why adopting a CRM was such a game-changer for digital marketing. But tooling alone isn’t the story. “We added the CRM and two new roles and new sales processes when we revamped our CRM, and I think that is critical,” Thomas says. Without the CRM backbone, you cannot close the loop between ecommerce and working with distribution. 

Leadership supports the CRM backbone by focusing on operations and adoption. “If you lose the adoption of Salesforce, you lose your heart in driving any sort of digital efforts,” Thomas says. 

Simplicity over sprawl in the org chart 

Digital serves multiple divisions and brands at Atlas Copco, with teams split along the funnel: web and digital marketing, ecommerce, CRM, service. The anchor is one authorized CX function. “And then, I think most importantly, we have — and we’ve had from the start — a strong customer experience team,” Thomas says. “I think having the customer experience in the lead makes you really customer-centric.” 

When managing change, Thomas says do the unglamorous work first. “I think it’s to make people understand that you need to go basic before you can go advanced.” His sequence is crisp: Start basic, work agile, have small MVPs, and take it all step by step. Funding follows the same principle. “Invest at the level that you can afford long-term,” he says.

It’s about durability over drama to avoid the stop-start cycles that kill momentum. 

We started to walk, and it was slow. And now we’re running, and it’s growing really well.

Thomas Areskoug, VP of Digital Sales, Marketing & Service, Atlas Copco Industrial Technique 

The tooling 

Tool agnosticism with standards: that’s the frame. Thomas is less concerned with the tech itself and much more focused on connectivity issues, agile ways of working and high standards for how the company connects systems. “That works really well for us,” he says. 

AI has dual jobs, and it is just as important to make it help you improve your data. “AI can already make great advances in how we collect data from sales or service, asking the right questions, making sure we get the right information without it taking more time to log that issue.” The loop closes with content. 

But it’s a long game. “I think using AI to improve operations is only as good as your data, but having it also improve your data makes its value increase over time, but it’s also not a three-month or one-year project,” Thomas says. “It’s going to be an iterative process that makes it better and better all the time.” 

On sales execution, AI is already coaching deals. “We tested it, and the AI solution was way, way, way better than the sales engineer at estimating the likelihood of the opportunity being won or lost.”

The point isn’t just forecast accuracy. It’s behavior change. It’s nudging the salespeople to take one further step to close a deal by indicating what actions they must take to increase the likelihood of a win. “The value from just implementing something as simple as that has definitely helped our business significantly,” he says. 

When an AI bet fails forward

  • What happened

    An early AI approach, market-basket suggestions based on sales co-occurrence, under-delivered in Atlas Copco’s long-tail SKU reality.

  • Why it failed

    Too many SKUs, too little comparable order volume to infer reliable “bought together” links.

  • The pivot

    Change the data, not the ambition. 

    “AI proved it could use technical information around the accessories and tools to actually create those links that were too massive to be addressed by R&D,” Thomas says. “Now, we’re getting to the engine … to suggest a better, bigger basket, but actually working with other types of data than we thought.” 

  • The takeaway

    When signal is sparse, switch signals. Use technical attributes to build intelligent associations at scale.

The No. 1 rule for leading digital in a tough market

In harder cycles, some leaders hit pause on transformation. Thomas rejects that reflex. “Don’t stop,” he says. The cost of falling behind is higher than the friction of change. “You can’t stand still. If you stop, you’ll go back to being a lagger.”  

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