The Coming of ‘Buyer-Centric’ Manufacturing Sales

April 14, 2026

Rising product complexity and higher customer expectations are pushing manufacturers to better align buyer engagement with the realities of engineering and production.

Companies that ensure sales configurations, quotes and product options that reflect real manufacturing are better positioned to compete in an operationally complex industry with a digital-first market. 

Moreover, the buying journey has shifted across B2B markets. Sixty-one percent of B2B buyers prefer to complete much of their evaluations independently, without direct engagement from a sales representative, according to new research from Gartner. Today, buyers prioritize speed, convenience and the ability to easily compare solutions across vendors. Once an order is placed, however, priorities move toward reliability, accuracy and predictable delivery.

This dichotomy creates a challenge for manufacturers. Complex products often involve thousands of configurable options, engineering constraints and production dependencies. To keep pace with rising product complexity and changing buyer expectations, many are moving toward a buyer-centric smart factory, an operating model in which buyer engagement is directly integrated with engineering, manufacturing and fulfillment systems.

The Buyer-Centric Smart Factory

In this model, sales isn’t just transacting on the front end. Instead, it serves as the entry point to a connected lifecycle where buyer requirements flow seamlessly into engineering design, configuration logic and production planning.

At the same time, buyer behavior is evolving. Today’s customers expect to explore solutions freely: researching products online, configuring options digitally, comparing pricing scenarios and moving quickly through early stages of evaluation.

But speed without technical validation creates risk. Misaligned configurations, inaccurate lead times or poorly defined specifications can erode customer trust and disrupt manufacturing operations.

The buyer-centric smart factory addresses this challenge by connecting early-stage exploration, configuration and quoting directly to manufacturing reality. When a customer configures a product or receives a quote, the underlying logic reflects real engineering rules, production constraints and material availability. The promise made during the configuration process becomes the reality delivered in production.

Manufacturers that successfully leap to this promising model invest in automation and artificial intelligence to guarantee optimal success.

Automation and AI

Automation and artificial intelligence play a central role in the buyer centric smart factory. But both must be implemented carefully.

With this model, automation is grounded in governed configuration logic. AI doesn’t replace engineering expertise. Instead, it scales that expertise across the buying journey. By embedding validated engineering knowledge into configuration rules and intelligent systems, manufacturers can make technical guidance available earlier in the sales process.

Automation supports convenience during early research and comparison. Generative AI can interpret high-level buyer requirements and translate them into technically accurate, manufacturable configurations. 

But manufacturers must implement automation with governance to ensure that sales, engineering and manufacturing systems operate from a single source of product truth. If automation lacks guardrails, quotes may include configurations that can’t be produced efficiently; materials may be unavailable, or lead times won’t reflect current capacity.

By establishing a single source of truth based on product configurability, teams work from the same logic on what can be sold, built, delivered and serviced across the lifecycle. Where configuration logic reflects real production constraints — capacity, materials, compliance requirements and manufacturing feasibility — automation enhances both speed and reliability.

This governance protects margins while ensuring that customers receive solutions that can be delivered predictably.

As manufacturers modernize these systems, they’ll develop a deeper appreciation of the buying habits of the new generation of manufacturing purchasers.

Understanding Next-Generation Buyers

A new generation of B2B decision-makers is flooding the complex manufacturing market.  Millennials and Gen Z now account for approximately 71% of B2B buyers, according to Forrester Research.

These digital natives have expectations shaped by consumer technology experiences. Even when purchasing mission-critical capital equipment, they expect intuitive, transparent and responsive digital interactions. Transparency and speed are baseline expectations.

Meeting these expectations requires careful balance. Speed without technical accuracy undermines trust and creates operational risk. Yet requiring extensive engineering involvement for every quote slows responsiveness and increases cost.

Manufacturers can deliver both digital engagement and engineering rigor simultaneously, by drawing on codified engineering knowledge, governed configurability and tight alignment between sales systems and manufacturing operations. Moreover, starting with an advanced configure, price and quote (CPQ) process and rules-driven configuration tools will set them on the right path.

Complex manufacturers don’t need to choose between digital ease and engineering rigor — they need to integrate them. Digital-native buyers expect fast, self-service experiences, but the products themselves require strict configuration rules and operational precision. The solution is to make the experience feel simple while hiding the underlying complexity behind the scenes.

This starts with rules-driven configuration. Advanced CPQ and product configuration tools can encode engineering logic directly into the buying journey, guiding users to valid options in real time. Buyers get speed and autonomy, while guardrails ensure every configuration is compliant, manufacturable and accurate.

Speed and convenience also depend on connected systems. Front-end experiences must integrate with enterprise resource planning, supply chain and production systems so pricing, availability and lead times are instantly accurate. This creates a seamless digital thread from configuration through fulfillment, eliminating delays and rework.

At the same time, manufacturers should use progressive disclosurestarting with simple, outcome-based choices and revealing deeper technical detail only when needed. This lets buyers engage at their preferred level without being overwhelmed, while still enabling full control for advanced users.

Ultimately, success requires alignment across engineering, sales and operations around shared product models and governance. When engineering knowledge is embedded into digital systems and connected end-to-end, manufacturers can deliver the speed and flexibility buyers want, without sacrificing precision or the ability to scale complexity.

Making Complexity Scalable 

With configurability governance, complexity becomes a strategic asset rather than an operational burden.

By expanding the scope of governed configurability, manufacturers can shift more business toward configure-to-order (CTO) models rather than relying heavily on engineering-to-order (ETO). Reducing unnecessary engineering involvement in routine quotes lowers operational cost, reduces cycle times and allows technical teams to focus their expertise on true innovation and differentiation.

Furthermore, sales cycles accelerate, win rates improve, margins become more predictable, and delivery performance becomes more reliable. The organization becomes better equipped to scale while maintaining control over operational complexity.

Ultimately, the future of complex manufacturing sales isn’t about eliminating complexity but mastering it. Manufacturers that connect buyer engagement to engineering truth and operational reality will be best-positioned to compete in a buyer-led, digitally driven world.

Nils Olsson is chief strategy officer with Tacton.

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