Tony Wood examines B2B agentic commerce - autonomous agents representing organisations in procurement and negotiation. The multi-principal problem and inter-organisational trust architecture..
| Dimension | Traditional UX | Agentic Experience Design (AXD) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary material | Attention and affordance | Trust and delegation |
| User state | Present, navigating | Absent, delegating |
| Design output | Screens and interfaces | Outcomes and constraints |
| Temporal model | Session-based | Relationship-based |
| Success metric | Task completion | Trust calibration |
B2B agentic commerce is the domain of autonomous commerce in which AI agents represent organisations - not individual consumers - in procurement, negotiation, supplier evaluation, contract management, and fulfilment. Unlike B2C agentic shopping where a single human delegates to a single agent, B2B agentic commerce involves multiple principals (procurement teams, finance departments, compliance officers), multiple agents (procurement agents, supplier agents, logistics agents), and complex delegat
B2B agentic commerce differs from B2C in four fundamental ways: (1) Multiple principals - the agent represents an organisation, not an individual, creating competing authority structures. (2) Complex delegation chains - authority cascades through organisational hierarchies with different approval thresholds and constraints at each level. (3) Agent-to-agent negotiation - both buyer and seller are represented by autonomous agents, creating a market of machine customers interacting with machine ven
The multi-principal problem occurs when an agent must serve multiple principals with potentially conflicting objectives. In B2B agentic commerce, a procurement agent may serve the procurement team (who want the lowest price), the engineering team (who want the highest quality), the compliance team (who want regulatory conformity), and the finance team (who want predictable cash flow). Each principal has different objectives, different authority levels, and different risk tolerances. The agent mu
B2B agentic commerce is the domain of autonomous commerce in which AI agents represent organisations - not individual consumers - in procurement, negotiation, supplier evaluation, contract management, and fulfilment. Unlike B2C agentic shopping where a single human delegates to a single agent, B2B agentic commerce involves multiple principals (procurement teams, finance departments, compliance officers), multiple agents (procurement agents, supplier agents, logistics agents), and complex delegat
B2B agentic commerce differs from B2C in four fundamental ways: (1) Multiple principals - the agent represents an organisation, not an individual, creating competing authority structures. (2) Complex delegation chains - authority cascades through organisational hierarchies with different approval thresholds and constraints at each level. (3) Agent-to-agent negotiation - both buyer and seller are represented by autonomous agents, creating a market of machine customers interacting with machine ven
The discourse around agentic commerce has been dominated by the consumer narrative: the AI shopping agent that buys coffee, books hotels, and manages household supplies on behalf of an individual human. This narrative is important - it captures the imagination and illustrates the fundamental design challenges of delegation, trust, and absent-state interaction. But it is not the whole story. The larger, faster-growing, and arguably more consequential domain of agentic commerce is not consumer-facing. It is business-to-business. This essay examines why B2B agentic commerce presents design challenges that are fundamentally different from - and in many ways more complex than - the consumer-facing scenarios that have dominated the B2B commerce is accelerating toward agent-mediated transactions faster than consumer commerce, for structural reasons. B2B procurement is already heavily systematised: enterprise resource planning systems, procurement platforms, supplier management databases, and automated approval workflows have been standard for decades. The infrastructure for agent-mediated commerce already exists in B2B - what is changing is the intelligence and autonomy of the agents that operate within it. The economic incentive is also stronger. A consumer shopping agent that saves a customer £5 on coffee beans is a convenience. A procurement agent that saves an enterprise £5 million on raw materials is a competitive advantage. The return on investment for B2B agentic commerce is orders of magnitude higher than for B2C, which is why enterprise adoption of AI procurement agents is outpacing consumer adoption of AI shopping assistants. Gartner projects that by 2028, 15% of day-to-day work decisions will be made autonomously through agentic AI, with B2B procurement identified as a primary adoption domain. McKinsey estimates that AI-driven procurement optimisation can reduce costs by 5-10% across categories. These projections are driving rapid investment in B2B agentic syste