Monday, May 25, 2026
Opinion

India’s B2B Commerce Startups Are Quietly Building Massive Businesses

For much of the last decade, India’s startup ecosystem revolved around consumer internet narratives.

Food delivery platforms battled for market share. Quick commerce startups raced to promise faster deliveries. Fintech apps chased customer acquisition at scale. Venture capital rewarded visibility, consumer recall, and hypergrowth.

But away from public attention, another category has steadily become one of the most consequential sectors in Indian technology: B2B commerce.

Companies such as Udaan, OfBusiness, Zetwerk, Infra.Market, and Moglix are building large-scale businesses by digitising procurement, supply chains, industrial sourcing, manufacturing, and SME commerce.

Unlike consumer startups that depend heavily on advertising visibility, many of these firms operate deep inside India’s economic infrastructure. Their customers are factory owners, contractors, distributors, pharmacies, wholesalers, manufacturers, and kirana retailers.

The result is a category producing some of the highest-revenue startups in the country — often with stronger economics than many consumer internet companies.

The Shift From Consumer Internet to Economic Infrastructure

India’s B2B commerce opportunity emerged from a structural inefficiency.

For decades, procurement across industries remained fragmented, relationship-driven, and heavily offline. Small retailers relied on local distributors. Manufacturers depended on informal supplier networks. Credit systems were opaque and largely disconnected from formal financial infrastructure.

Technology changed that equation.

The combination of GST digitisation, UPI adoption, logistics improvements, Account Aggregator frameworks, and widespread smartphone penetration created the foundation for organised digital commerce between businesses.

More importantly, India’s SME economy represented a massive underserved market.

Research and Markets estimates that India has more than 63 million SMEs, many of which historically lacked access to formal trade credit or organised procurement systems.

This created an opportunity larger than simple ecommerce.

B2B commerce startups began combining three critical layers:

  • procurement marketplaces
  • logistics and fulfilment
  • embedded working capital and trade financing

That combination fundamentally altered how businesses sourced inventory and managed cash flow.

Why B2B Commerce Became a Massive Opportunity

1. India’s Supply Chains Were Still Largely Offline

Unlike consumer ecommerce, where digital adoption accelerated early, B2B trade in India remained deeply fragmented.

Procurement often depended on:

  • local relationships
  • phone-based ordering
  • inconsistent pricing
  • delayed payments
  • fragmented logistics networks

For SMEs, inefficiency was considered normal.

Startups entering the space realised that even small operational improvements could create enormous value at scale.

2. Embedded Credit Became the Real Moat

One of the biggest insights in Indian B2B commerce is that logistics alone is rarely enough.

Credit matters more.

Retailers, contractors, and SMEs often operate on tight working capital cycles. Businesses purchasing inventory frequently require short-term financing between procurement and customer payments.

This is why many successful B2B startups evolved into hybrid commerce-fintech platforms.

Research and Markets estimates India’s B2B BNPL market reached $8.65 billion in 2025 and could exceed $25 billion by 2030.

Platforms with transaction visibility gained a significant underwriting advantage because they could assess:

  • repeat purchasing behaviour
  • repayment reliability
  • inventory movement
  • seasonal demand patterns

That data layer became a competitive advantage traditional lenders often lacked.

The Major Players Reshaping Indian B2B Commerce

OfBusiness: The Quiet Profitability Story

Among India’s B2B startups, OfBusiness stands out because of its financial performance.

The company built a procurement and financing platform focused on raw materials and industrial supply chains, serving sectors such as:

  • manufacturing
  • construction
  • chemicals
  • agriculture

Unlike many consumer startups that prioritised GMV growth over economics, OfBusiness focused early on profitable operations.

Industry reports suggest the company crossed ₹22,000 crore in revenue in FY25 while remaining profitable.

Its NBFC arm, Oxyzo, became central to the business model by providing collateral-free working capital financing.

The combination of commerce and credit proved powerful because financing increased procurement stickiness while procurement data improved lending quality.

In many ways, OfBusiness resembles infrastructure software more than traditional ecommerce.

Zetwerk: Building India’s Manufacturing Layer

Zetwerk represents another evolution of B2B commerce.

Rather than focusing on wholesale trade, the company operates as a manufacturing marketplace connecting enterprises with supplier networks across sectors including:

  • industrial machinery
  • electronics
  • aerospace
  • renewables
  • infrastructure

The company benefits directly from global supply chain diversification and India’s manufacturing push.

As multinational companies reduce dependence on China-centric sourcing, Indian manufacturing networks are seeing renewed demand.

Industry reports indicate Zetwerk works with thousands of suppliers and enterprise customers globally.

Its growth also reflects a broader transition: Indian startups are no longer limited to consumer apps. Increasingly, they are becoming industrial infrastructure companies.

Udaan: The Category Creator That Exposed the Complexity

No discussion about Indian B2B commerce is complete without Udaan.

Founded in 2016 by former Flipkart executives, Udaan became one of the earliest startups to aggressively digitise wholesale commerce for kiranas and small retailers.

The company’s scale demonstrated the enormous demand for organised B2B trade.

In 2023, Udaan said it shipped more than 2.25 billion products across India and processed over 23 million orders.

The company also reported strong growth in 2024, driven partly by increasing buyer adoption.

But Udaan also revealed the operational difficulty of B2B commerce at scale.

Unlike consumer ecommerce, B2B marketplaces must manage:

  • logistics efficiency
  • credit underwriting
  • collections
  • inventory complexity
  • thin margins
  • repeat purchasing reliability

As capital markets tightened after 2022, investors shifted attention from growth to unit economics.

Udaan subsequently restructured operations, reduced cash burn, and focused on profitability improvements.

Its journey became an important lesson for the entire sector: B2B commerce is not merely about digitising transactions — it requires operational discipline across the supply chain.

Why Investors Continue to Bet on the Sector

Despite volatility, investor interest in B2B commerce remains strong for several reasons.

Larger Revenue Potential

Many B2B startups generate significantly higher revenues than consumer internet firms because transaction sizes are larger and purchasing frequency is consistent.

Industrial procurement, raw materials, and wholesale distribution naturally create high-volume commerce flows.

Stronger Retention

Once embedded into procurement workflows, B2B platforms can become difficult to replace.

Switching costs increase when companies integrate:

  • credit systems
  • inventory management
  • logistics
  • procurement history

This often creates stronger customer retention compared to consumer marketplaces.

Better Monetisation

B2B companies monetise across multiple layers:

  • transaction margins
  • SaaS tools
  • financing
  • logistics
  • procurement optimisation

That diversified monetisation structure can produce more durable economics.

The Operational Challenges Remain Significant

The sector’s scale does not eliminate its risks.

Logistics Costs Are Extremely Difficult

India’s fragmented infrastructure makes last-mile B2B delivery expensive, particularly outside major urban clusters.

Several industry discussions around Udaan highlight how warehousing and logistics costs can materially impact unit economics.

Credit Risk Is Structural

Trade credit is central to Indian commerce, but collections remain difficult.

The challenge intensifies when startups scale aggressively without tight underwriting discipline.

Many platforms have since become more selective about credit distribution, focusing on higher-quality repeat buyers.

Category Complexity Matters

Not all B2B categories behave similarly.

Industrial procurement, pharmaceuticals, construction materials, and FMCG distribution each have different:

  • demand cycles
  • margins
  • return behaviour
  • inventory requirements
  • pricing volatility

This is one reason why specialised vertical B2B models are increasingly gaining attention.

India’s B2B Startups Are Becoming Infrastructure Companies

Perhaps the biggest shift is conceptual.

These startups are no longer merely “marketplaces.”

They increasingly resemble digital infrastructure for commerce.

A modern B2B platform may simultaneously function as:

  • a procurement engine
  • a logistics coordinator
  • a financing provider
  • a data intelligence layer
  • a supplier discovery network

This evolution mirrors what happened in China, where B2B commerce platforms eventually became foundational economic infrastructure.

India may now be entering a similar phase — though adapted to its own fragmented SME-driven economy.

The Future of B2B Commerce in India

Several macro trends are likely to shape the next decade.

Manufacturing Growth

India’s manufacturing ambitions, supported by PLI schemes and supply chain diversification, could significantly expand industrial procurement demand.

That benefits companies operating manufacturing and sourcing networks.

Formalisation of SMEs

GST digitisation and digital payments are increasing transparency in business transactions, improving underwriting capabilities and procurement visibility.

Embedded Finance Expansion

UPI-linked credit systems and Account Aggregator frameworks could accelerate B2B lending innovation.

Consolidation Is Likely

The sector may ultimately favour fewer but larger players with:

  • strong logistics infrastructure
  • financing capabilities
  • deep category expertise
  • sustainable margins

Scale alone is unlikely to be enough.

Operational efficiency will matter more.

Conclusion

India’s B2B commerce startups rarely generate the same cultural visibility as consumer internet brands.

But economically, they may prove even more consequential.

These companies are digitising the underlying systems powering India’s SME economy — procurement, manufacturing, trade finance, logistics, and industrial sourcing.

The category has already produced billion-dollar businesses, profitable unicorns, and infrastructure-scale platforms.

And unlike earlier startup cycles driven largely by consumer subsidies, the next phase of Indian technology growth may increasingly come from companies solving operational problems deep inside the real economy.

The most important Indian startup businesses of the next decade may not be the loudest consumer apps.

They may be the invisible platforms quietly powering how India buys, manufactures, distributes, and finances everything.

Also Read : Why Indian SaaS Startups Are Hiring Fewer Engineers in the AI Era

Last Updated on Monday, May 25, 2026 4:10 pm by Startup Newswire Team

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