Quick answer: Modern buyers don't choose between sales and self-service purchasing - they move between both. The strongest commerce experiences combine human expertise for complex decisions with self-service buying for routine transactions, all inside one connected system rather than four disconnected processes.
For years, organizations assumed customers bought in one of two ways.
They either:
That distinction is becoming increasingly outdated.
Modern buyers move constantly between both. A customer may research independently, attend a demo, speak with sales, and explore options. Then later, they'll purchase online, manage subscriptions themselves, reorder without assistance, and update their account digitally.
The challenge isn't choosing between sales and self-service.
The challenge is creating a buying experience that supports both.
This article breaks down how buying behavior has shifted, why most businesses struggle to keep up, and what a connected purchasing experience actually looks like in practice.
Customers increasingly expect five things from the purchasing experience:
Here's what's changed underneath all of that.
Today's buyer often completes most of their research before engaging sales. They read, compare, and shortlist on their own. By the time they talk to a person, they already know what they want.
They engage people selectively. Not because they dislike sales - because they want support only when it adds value.
The key insight: modern buying journeys are no longer linear. Buyers loop, pause, jump ahead, and double back. They don't follow a tidy funnel, and they don't think in terms of your internal stages.
The problem is rarely intent. Most teams want to deliver a smooth experience. The problem is structural.
Many organizations separate their operations into distinct systems:
Each function runs its own tools, its own data, and its own process. Internally, that can feel organized. Externally, it creates friction.
The result is a fragmented experience. Customers face multiple handoffs, duplicated information, inconsistent interactions, and unnecessary delays.
You've probably seen this play out:
Here's the part that matters most.
The customer experiences one journey. Most businesses operate four separate processes. That gap is where the experience breaks down.
It's simpler than it sounds. Customers want two things:
They want advice for complex decisions. They want self-service for routine transactions. The trick is knowing which is which - and letting the customer decide.
Consider a typical journey. A customer may want guidance before their first purchase, when the stakes feel high and the options feel unclear. After they become familiar with the product, they want complete independence. Forcing them back into a sales conversation for a simple reorder feels like friction, not service.
The most successful businesses support both modes - and let customers switch between them without penalty.
Self-service purchasing has moved from "nice to have" to "assumed."
Customers increasingly expect to handle routine tasks on their own:
All without contacting support.
The operational benefits are just as compelling. Self-service reduces workload on your teams, speeds up transactions, and improves the overall customer experience at the same time.
The key insight: self-service is becoming a competitive expectation rather than a differentiator. A few years ago, offering a customer portal set you apart. Now, not having one sets you back.
This is where a lot of organizations get it wrong.
The best companies are not removing sales. They're redirecting it.
Instead of spending time on routine transactions, sales teams focus on the work that actually requires a human:
Meanwhile, customers self-manage the routine stuff.
Think of it this way:
The strongest buying experiences combine both. You don't trade one for the other - you let each do what it does best.
This is exactly the problem CommercePro is built to solve.
CommercePro helps organizations support a full range of buying behaviors inside a connected HubSpot environment:
Because it runs natively in HubSpot, customers can interact with sales, purchase digitally, manage their accounts, and self-serve when appropriate - without moving between disconnected systems. The data stays unified. The experience stays consistent.
The key insight: CommercePro enables flexibility rather than forcing customers into a single buying process. It doesn't decide how your customers should buy. It supports however they choose to.
A connected buying experience pays off across the entire organization - not just for the customer.
For customers:
For sales teams:
For operations teams:
For leadership teams:
When the experience is connected, everyone benefits from the same thing: less friction, more value.
The debate is no longer this:
Should customers buy through sales or ecommerce?
The better question is this:
Can customers buy the way they want to buy?
The organizations winning today are not choosing one model. They're supporting both.
The key insight: modern commerce is becoming customer-directed rather than process-directed. The businesses that recognize this early will build the buying experiences everyone else has to catch up to.
Modern customers don't think in terms of sales channels, ecommerce channels, or operational departments.
They simply want the easiest path to an outcome.
The strongest organizations are responding by building flexible buying experiences that combine human expertise, digital convenience, self-service, and relationship-driven selling into one connected journey.
That's the shift. Not sales versus self-service - but sales and self-service, working together.
Hybrid buying is when customers move between human-assisted and self-service purchasing throughout a single journey. They may speak with sales for complex decisions, then switch to self-service for routine tasks like reordering or managing subscriptions - often within the same relationship.
No. Self-service handles routine transactions, which frees sales teams to focus on complex opportunities, relationship building, and high-value conversations. Self-service removes friction; sales creates value. The strongest commerce experiences use both.
When sales, commerce, service, and finance run on separate systems, customers face handoffs, duplicated information, and inconsistent interactions. The customer experiences one journey, but the business runs several separate processes - and that gap creates friction.
Account-based purchasing lets customers buy, reorder, and manage transactions through a dedicated account, often with specific pricing, history, and permissions tied to their organization. It supports recurring B2B relationships rather than one-off transactions.
CommercePro enables sales-assisted buying, self-service purchasing, account-based purchasing, subscriptions, and customer account management inside a connected HubSpot environment. Customers can move between sales support and self-service without switching systems, because all the data stays unified.