B2B commerce is a $68T market barely started on its digital shift – Volta is building the full-stack sales automation layer to own the transition.
ENTRY ANGLES
AI platforms for distributors and wholesalers · AI-powered digital sales staff for wholesale operations · Automation of B2B inbound inquiries, quotes, and order processing
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
AI/automation technology, B2B sales process expertise, Order and quote management systems
VOLTA FOUNDER
“Convenience is the new loyalty.”
Volta set out to "change the future of B2B sales" – and it's done so with some momentum behind it. The Italian startup just raised €6 million in pre-seed funding, reportedly the largest pre-seed round in Italian startup history.
The Volta platform is a full-stack B2B sales automation suite with AI throughout: a digital product catalog, CRM, warehouse and pricing management, an online order intake system with full cycle tracking, an AI assistant for task prioritization, decision support, customer communication drafting, and a mobile app for sales reps.
Critically, the platform integrates seamlessly with whatever enterprise systems a B2B company already runs – it doesn't replace them. It layers on top as a more ergonomic, faster interface for working across all of them.
Early pilot customers have already reported an 18% increase in sales alongside time savings of roughly 7 hours per employee per week – translating to a reported 9x return on their investment in the platform.
One investor described Volta in a LinkedIn post as "Shopify, but for B2B" – an analogy that captures both the product and the timing. Shopify arrived at exactly the right moment to unlock B2C e-commerce: it gave anyone a simple storefront builder and a suite of tools for managing online retail. Volta is making a similar bet on B2B, where the online transition is happening now but the tooling hasn't caught up.
One of Volta's founders puts the gap between B2B and B2C commerce at 15 years. Most B2B operations still run on manual processes, and most B2B sellers still rely primarily on personal relationships, phone calls, and buyer loyalty that predates the internet.
The market is shifting fast. 49% of B2B procurement volume already happens digitally, 68% of B2B buyers say they plan to increase online purchasing, and within five years the online share of B2B sales is projected to reach 57%. But here's the friction: 46% of B2B buyers are dissatisfied with current online purchasing because a modern interface often masks the same slow manual processes underneath. 45% say buying online from their B2B suppliers has actually become more difficult than buying offline.
Meanwhile, traditional buyer loyalty is eroding. 40% of B2B buyers have already switched suppliers in the past 12 months, and 47% cite convenient online purchasing as one of the primary reasons for switching. Much of this is generational – 71% of today's B2B buyers are millennials or Gen Z, and they find the traditional B2B purchasing experience genuinely baffling. As one Forbes piece put it: "Convenience is the new loyalty."
The broad direction: build platforms that automate and modernize B2B sales online – making buying easier for customers and more efficient for sellers.
The market size adds urgency. Wholesale commerce will exceed $53 trillion this year and is projected to reach $68 trillion by 2028.
Volta is far from the only startup working this angle, and the active field is a feature, not a bug. Plato ([covered here](/review/zachem-iskat-slozhnuju-zadachu-esli-mozhno-reshit-prostuju)) raised €6 million in November on an AI platform for distributors and wholesalers. Seals ([covered here](/review/bolshie-dengi-krutjashhiesja-pod-pokrovom-tishiny)) graduated from Y Combinator this summer building AI-powered digital sales staff for wholesale operations. Catalog ([covered here](/review/a-chto-prodavat-srednim)) raised €3 million in May to help B2B sellers handle inbound inquiries, generate quotes, and enter order data. Default ([covered here](/review/trend-razvernulsja-v-druguju-storonu)) raised $11.3 million to automate the processing of inbound B2B requests and orders.
The existence of these players isn't a reason to hold back – it's evidence that the market is real and moving. The space is early enough that there's still plenty to build and differentiate. Working examples to learn from are an advantage, not a deterrent.