When every vendor uses the same generic language, price becomes the only differentiator – and that's a race to the bottom.
ENTRY ANGLES
Tools for improving B2B product websites to support self-directed buying · Platforms for building digital sales rooms · B2B product comparison platforms with AI + human expert review model
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
AI for comparison work and data population, Domain expertise for review and refinement, Platform infrastructure for digital sales environments
Strangely enough, B2B sales don't depend only on how good your salespeople are. Company websites have to sell too. And most B2B websites don't do it particularly well.
When does a B2B site fail to sell? When a potential buyer can't tell what makes this product different from the competitors they've already seen – because the same generic language gets used everywhere. When everything sounds the same, price becomes the only differentiator. And competing on price is a losing game: you can win the deal and still make nothing.
Brand Stori built a tool to help B2B companies improve their websites so they don't look like everyone else – and actually stick in a buyer's mind, regardless of price.
Here's how it works. Brand Stori's AI analyzes a homepage in 90 seconds.
It then scores the site from a corporate buyer's perspective, using proprietary algorithms grounded in the methodology of advertising legend David Ogilvy, benchmarked against top-performing B2B sites.
The scoring covers: clarity of the offer, conversion potential, relevance to the target audience, interface coherence, effectiveness of calls to action, and SEO suitability.
The analysis doesn't stop at a score. The AI then generates a prioritized list of recommendations – what to change, and how, to make the site more compelling to a potential buyer.
Accessing those recommendations requires signing up for Brand Stori. The free tier covers evaluation and recommendations for up to two sites.
Paid tiers with additional evaluations, competitive comparisons, and advanced features are coming – but haven't launched yet, as the platform is currently in limited beta. The public announcement dropped on Product Hunt just yesterday.
At the start of this review, the observation was that salespeople aren't the only ones doing the selling. The reality is actually harsher: salespeople don't really sell at all. They shepherd an already-interested prospect through to a final decision.
The actual "warming up" happens earlier – during the anonymous research phase that buyers go through before speaking to anyone. That's the most important stage of the purchase decision. And what buyers use during that phase are, above all, vendor websites.
The data is stark. Buyers complete nearly 70% of their decision-making journey before ever contacting a salesperson. 81% of buyers have already made their choice before the first conversation with a sales rep.
And yet they're typically not down to one option at that point. The average shortlist has 4–5 products. Salespeople come in to help narrow from shortlist to purchase. In 90% of cases, companies end up buying something that was already on the shortlist. All other sales outreach accounts for just 10% of deals.
For B2B sellers, the only thing that actually matters is making the shortlist in the first place – during the independent research phase. And making the shortlist requires a website compelling enough to earn a spot. That's exactly what Brand Stori is built to help with.
This dynamic is part of a broader shift. Corporate buyers don't want to talk to salespeople 43% of B2B buyers prefer to make purchase decisions without engaging a sales rep at all. And the preference intensifies with age: fewer than 30% of baby boomers avoid salespeople, versus nearly 60% of millennials.
Sellers consistently overestimate the role of their own teams. 44% of sellers believe salespeople are the primary source of product information for buyers. Only 37% of buyers agree.
Sellers simultaneously underestimate the web. Only 23% of sellers consider their online presence a primary information channel. Meanwhile, 40% of buyers say they prefer learning about products online, including from vendor websites.
Even in the late stages – when buyers are moving from shortlist to final decision – they don't want a heavy sales process. According to Gartner, by 2026, 30% of B2B deals will be closed through "digital rooms" – dedicated buyer portals where sellers deposit all relevant information and buyers work through it on their own terms.
Aligned ([related review](/review/prodazhniki-popadajut-v-ignor-i-chto-delat)) raised $8M in January for a platform that builds exactly these kinds of digital sales rooms.
Trumpet ([related review](/review/nuzhno-ne-prodavat-a-pomogat-pokupat)) raised $6.4M last summer on a similar platform.
The overall direction is clear: the old playbook of selling B2B products primarily through outbound salespeople is losing effectiveness. Buyers want to choose on their own terms, without the pressure of a sales engagement.
The corresponding opportunity: build platforms that help B2B companies sell by the new rules.
First-order plays: tools for improving product websites, like Brand Stori. Second-order plays: platforms for building digital sales rooms, like Aligned and Trumpet.
But there are other adjacent concepts worth examining.
Stackfix ([related review](/review/pomogi-im-pokupat-na-1-trillion-dollarov-v-god)) raised £2.4M in its first round for a B2B product comparison platform. The real play here is two-fold: a specialized AI does the initial comparison work, which human domain experts then review and refine – making it easy to keep comparisons current as products evolve. And the platform carries zero advertising, meaning vendors can't buy their way to better rankings. Everything stays genuinely objective.
TestBox ([related review](/review/saas-dlja-prinjatija-reshenija-o-pokupke-saas)) raised $12.7M for a platform where AI populates trial environments with synthetic data that closely mirrors a prospective buyer's real data – so buyers can test a product against something that feels real, not just click through empty demo screens.
Sagetap ([related review](/review/ne-pomogaj-prodavat-luchshe-pomogi-pokupat)) raised $12.5M for a B2B buyer marketplace where AI surfaces relevant product options, buyers can engage with vendors anonymously to ask detailed questions, and only reveal their identity when they're ready to shortlist.
Some of these concepts clearly complement each other. Digital room functionality would slot naturally into Sagetap. Stackfix would benefit from adding tools that help vendors improve their site content and product positioning. Mix, match, and recombine.
So – which product for the new rules of B2B selling would you actually want to build? There's a lot of money on this market.