Managing B2B Customer Groups for Better Wholesale Operations
Not all wholesale customers are equal. A first-time buyer placing a trial order has different needs, margins, and expectations than a long-standing partner ordering five figures monthly. Treating them the same leaves money on the table and creates a generic experience that serves no one particularly well. Customer groups solve this by letting you segment your B2B buyers and tailor pricing, payment terms, and shipping rules to each segment.
What Are Customer Groups?
A customer group is a segment of buyers who share common characteristics and receive the same wholesale terms. Instead of setting pricing customer by customer, you define rules at the group level and assign buyers accordingly. When a customer logs in, they automatically see the pricing, cart experience, and checkout options that match their group.
With NetWise on Shopify, customer groups integrate directly with Shopify's native customer segments and tags. This means you can leverage data you already have in your Shopify admin to build your B2B segmentation without starting from scratch.
How to Structure Your Groups
The right structure depends on your business, but most wholesale operations benefit from grouping by one or more of these dimensions:
By volume or loyalty tier. This is the most common approach. Create three to five tiers based on annual order volume or account tenure:
- Bronze: New accounts or low-volume buyers. Modest discounts (10-15%), shorter net terms (Net 7), standard shipping rates.
- Silver: Established buyers with consistent ordering. Better discounts (15-20%), Net 30 terms, reduced shipping thresholds.
- Gold: High-volume partners. Deep discounts (20-30%), Net 60 terms, free shipping on most orders.
- Platinum: Your top accounts. Best-in-class pricing, Net 90 terms, dedicated support, and custom shipping arrangements.
By geography. If your shipping costs, tax obligations, or product availability vary by region, geographic groups make sense. A domestic wholesaler and an international distributor may need entirely different price lists and shipping rules.
By business type. Retailers, distributors, and institutional buyers (hospitals, schools, government agencies) often warrant different pricing structures. A retailer buying for resale needs margin-friendly pricing, while an institutional buyer placing bulk orders for internal use may prioritize delivery terms over per-unit cost.
Setting Up Groups in NetWise
Creating and managing customer groups in NetWise is straightforward:
- Define the group. Give it a clear name and description. "Gold Tier - Annual Volume Over $50K" is better than "Group 3." Future you will appreciate the clarity.
- Assign a pricing catalog. Each group links to a pricing catalog that defines their discounts. You can set store-wide percentage discounts, collection-level pricing, or product-specific fixed-amount discounts. One group can have multiple catalog rules layered together.
- Configure payment terms. Assign net terms per group. Bronze gets prepayment or Net 7, Silver gets Net 30, and so on.
- Set shipping rules. Define custom shipping rates and free shipping thresholds for each group. Value-based and weight-based rules give you the flexibility to match shipping costs to order profiles.
- Add customers. Assign existing Shopify customers to the group manually, or use Shopify segment conditions to automate assignment based on tags, location, or order history.
Using the B2B Registration Form for Onboarding
New wholesale customers should not go directly into your best pricing tier. NetWise includes a B2B registration form that captures business details when a prospect applies for a wholesale account. When you approve the application, you choose which group to place them in. Most merchants start new accounts in the lowest tier and upgrade them as the relationship develops.
The registration form is customizable. You can collect company name, tax ID, estimated monthly volume, business type, and any other fields relevant to your approval process. This information helps you decide which group is the right fit before the first order is placed.
Keeping Groups Clean Over Time
Customer groups are not a set-and-forget system. Review them periodically:
- Promote active buyers. A Silver customer who has been consistently ordering above your Gold threshold for three months should be upgraded. The better pricing rewards their loyalty and encourages continued growth.
- Downgrade inactive accounts. If a Gold customer has not ordered in six months, consider moving them back to Silver. This protects your margins and reflects the current relationship accurately.
- Audit group membership. Occasionally review who is in each group. Customers sometimes get tagged incorrectly, or business relationships change. A quarterly review keeps your segmentation accurate.
- Monitor pricing performance. Track AOV and order frequency per group. If a tier is not performing as expected, adjust the discount structure or the qualification criteria.
Better Segmentation, Better Business
Customer groups are the backbone of a well-run wholesale operation. They let you reward your best buyers, protect your margins on smaller accounts, and create a professional B2B experience that scales as your business grows. The investment in setting them up properly pays off with every order.
Segment your wholesale buyers and automate tailored pricing.
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