When hotel suppliers discuss their sales channels, online B2B marketplaces inevitably enter the conversation. Alibaba, Amazon Business, ThomasNet, and a handful of hospitality-specific platforms promise access to millions of buyers with minimal effort. List your products, optimize your storefront, and wait for purchase orders to arrive.

For some suppliers, marketplaces generate real revenue. For most, they generate frustration. The promise of frictionless buyer access collides with the reality of price compression, zero differentiation, and an inability to build the kind of buyer relationships that sustain a hospitality supply business over decades. With the global hotel market at $1.7 trillion and a record construction pipeline, as detailed in our hotel supply industry report, suppliers need to understand where marketplaces fit — and where they fall short.

This is not an argument against marketplaces. They serve a function. But understanding exactly what that function is — and where it ends — is the difference between a supplier who uses marketplaces strategically and one who depends on them to their detriment.

The Major B2B Hotel Supply Marketplaces

Alibaba and Alibaba.com

What it is: The world’s largest B2B marketplace, connecting primarily Asian manufacturers with global buyers. Alibaba.com (the B2B platform, distinct from the consumer-facing Taobao/Tmall) hosts millions of suppliers across every product category relevant to hotels: FF&E, linens, amenities, technology, and operating supplies.

MetricDetails
Buyer reach40+ million active buyers across 190+ countries
Supplier count200,000+ suppliers (B2B platform)
Hotel supply categoriesFF&E, linens, towels, amenities, lighting, flooring, electronics, cleaning supplies
Pricing modelFree basic listing; Gold Supplier membership $2,000 - $6,000/year
Transaction protectionTrade Assurance (escrow-like payment protection)
Minimum order typicalVaries widely; many suppliers set MOQs at 100-500 units

Strengths:

Weaknesses:

Amazon Business

What it is: Amazon’s B2B purchasing platform, offering business pricing, multi-user accounts, tax-exempt purchasing, and integration with procurement systems. Amazon Business has grown rapidly since launch and now serves millions of business buyers including hotels and hospitality companies.

MetricDetails
Buyer reach6+ million business customers globally
Hotel relevanceModerate; hotels increasingly use Amazon Business for operating supplies, amenities, electronics
Pricing modelSeller fees (8-15% referral fee by category) + optional FBA fees
Key advantageHotels already have Amazon accounts; frictionless purchasing
Competitive moatPrime delivery, buyer trust, procurement system integration

Strengths:

Weaknesses:

ThomasNet

What it is: North America’s leading industrial B2B sourcing platform, connecting buyers with suppliers across manufacturing, industrial, and commercial categories. ThomasNet is more relevant for FF&E, fixtures, and manufactured components than for soft goods or amenities.

MetricDetails
Buyer reach1.5+ million registered buyers (North America focused)
Supplier count500,000+ supplier profiles
Hotel relevanceModerate for FF&E, fixtures, and manufactured goods; low for soft goods
Pricing modelFree basic listing; premium profiles and advertising available
Key advantageEngineering and manufacturing buyer audience; RFQ system

Strengths:

Weaknesses:

Hospitality-Specific Marketplaces

Several platforms focus specifically on the hotel and hospitality supply vertical:

PlatformFocusBuyer ReachSupplier ModelNotable Feature
Hotel DepotHotel operating supplies, FF&ESmall-to-mid hotels, U.S. focusedMarketplaceCurated for hospitality; less noise
FurnitureForHotels.comHotel furniture and FF&EInternationalDirectory/marketplaceDesign-focused; connects with designers
EC21B2B global tradeInternationalDirectoryKorean-origin platform; strong APAC presence
HotelSupplier.comBroad hotel supply categoriesInternationalDirectoryCategory-organized supplier listings
Procurement platforms (Avendra, Birch Street, Fourth)All hotel procurement categoriesMajor chains, management companiesVetted supplier networksIntegrated with hotel PMS/procurement workflows

Strengths of niche marketplaces:

Weaknesses of niche marketplaces:

Why Marketplaces Alone Are Not Enough

The fundamental limitation of every marketplace listed above is the same: they are reactive channels. You list products and wait for buyers to find you. In a market where the most valuable procurement events — PIP-driven renovations, brand conversions, ownership transitions — create compressed buying windows of 3-6 months, waiting for inbound discovery is structurally disadvantaged.

The Five Marketplace Limitations

1. Race to the bottom on price. When a hotel procurement manager searches “hotel bed sheets queen 300TC” on Alibaba, they see 50+ results sorted by price. Your product, which uses superior cotton and has a 2x longer lifespan, is buried below suppliers undercutting you by 15%. Marketplaces reward the lowest price, not the best value.

2. No timing intelligence. Marketplaces do not tell you when a hotel is buying. A listing on Amazon Business generates the same visibility whether the hotel buyer is in active procurement mode or casually browsing. You cannot target properties in PIP windows, post-ownership-change procurement cycles, or brand conversion timelines.

3. Commoditization of differentiation. Your sustainability certifications, custom branding capability, 48-hour emergency fulfillment, and 20-year track record with luxury hotels are reduced to a text blurb on a product page. Marketplaces strip context. They flatten the competitive landscape into price-specification-shipping speed.

4. No relationship building. In hospitality procurement, the relationship is the moat. A hotel owner who trusts you will pay a premium, forgive a late shipment, and give you first right of refusal on their next property. Marketplace transactions build no relationship equity. The next order goes to whoever has the lowest price that day.

5. Limited targeting. You cannot use a marketplace to specifically reach the 2,028 hotels currently in active renovation, the 303,330 rooms undergoing conversion, or the 349 Saudi Arabian projects in their procurement windows. Marketplaces offer broad exposure. They do not offer precision.

Where Marketplaces Do Work

Marketplaces are effective for:

The mistake is not using marketplaces. The mistake is relying on them as your primary or sole sales channel.

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What Complements Marketplace Listings

The most successful hotel suppliers treat marketplaces as one layer in a multi-channel strategy. Marketplaces handle passive, inbound demand. Other channels handle proactive, targeted demand generation.

Channel 1: Direct Outreach (Signal-Driven)

Instead of waiting for hotels to search for your products, identify hotels that are entering procurement windows and reach them directly.

SignalWhat It MeansOutreach Timing
Renovation permit filedActive renovation; FF&E procurement in 60-120 daysContact within 2 weeks of permit filing
Ownership change recordedPIP likely; full supplier reevaluationContact within 30 days of closing
Brand conversion announcedConversion PIP issued; all product categories in playContact within 30 days of announcement
Management company changeNew management reviews all vendor contractsContact within 30 days of transition
Brand standard update publishedSystem-wide compliance procurementContact within 60 days of publication

Direct outreach to signal-identified leads converts at 3-5x the rate of cold outreach and 2-3x the rate of marketplace inquiries because the buyer is in an active buying window and the outreach references their specific situation. InnLead.ai automates this signal detection and outreach so suppliers can focus on closing deals.

Channel 2: Content Marketing and SEO

Content marketing builds inbound demand from hotel buyers who are researching purchase decisions but have not yet entered a marketplace search.

Suppliers who own these search terms capture buyers upstream of the marketplace — before price comparison begins and while the buyer is still evaluating options based on expertise and trust, not unit cost.

Channel 3: Procurement Platform Relationships

The major hotel procurement platforms — Avendra (2,000+ vetted suppliers, up to 15% cost savings to clients), Birch Street Systems, and Fourth (5 million purchase orders annually across 1,200+ locations in 52 countries) — are the closest thing to guaranteed deal flow in hotel supply.

Getting onboarded to these platforms requires application, vetting, and often competitive pricing commitments. But once approved, your products are visible to procurement teams at hundreds or thousands of hotel properties, with integrated ordering workflows that reduce friction to near zero.

Unlike open marketplaces, procurement platform suppliers are vetted, which reduces price-only competition. Buyers on these platforms are choosing between 5-10 approved suppliers, not 500 Alibaba listings.

Channel 4: Trade Shows (Targeted)

Trade shows remain valuable for relationship initiation and product demonstration. But the approach should shift from “collect badges and follow up” to “pre-book meetings with signal-identified targets attending the show.”

The top hotel supply trade shows by relevance:

ShowFocusTimingWhy Attend
HD Expo + ConferenceHospitality design, FF&EMay (Las Vegas)600 exhibitors, 25+ industry sectors; design decision-makers
BDNYBoutique hotel designNovember (New York)550 exhibitors; boutique/lifestyle buyers
HITECHospitality technologyJune (varies)325+ tech companies; technology procurement
The Hotel Show DubaiMENA hospitalityMay/June (Dubai)1,000+ exhibitors; Middle East market access
ATM DubaiTravel industry (includes hospitality procurement)April/May (Dubai)2,800+ exhibitors; 55,000+ visitors from 166 nations

A trade show generates 5-10x more ROI when every meeting on your calendar is with a pre-qualified buyer who you know is in an active procurement window. AI-driven pre-show targeting turns trade shows from networking events into closing events.

Channel 5: AI-Powered Prospecting

The fifth channel — and the one that amplifies all others — is systematic, AI-driven market intelligence that monitors renovation signals, identifies procurement contacts, and initiates outreach at scale.

With 15,820 active hotel projects globally, 303,330 rooms in conversion/renovation, and a $12-15 billion PIP backlog, the volume of buying activity exceeds what any human sales team can monitor. As we explore in our guide to AI in hotel procurement, weekly generative AI use in procurement increased 44 percentage points from 2023 to 2024. Now, 94% of procurement executives use AI at least once weekly. The buyers are using AI. The suppliers should be, too.

Building a Multi-Channel Hotel Supply Sales Strategy

The optimal channel mix depends on your product category, target segment, and geographic focus. But the framework is consistent:

ChannelRoleInvestment LevelTimeline to Results
Marketplaces (Alibaba, Amazon Business, niche)Passive inbound; volume commodity ordersLow-Medium1-3 months
Direct outreach (signal-driven)Proactive targeting of high-value renovation/PIP accountsMedium1-3 months
Content marketing / SEOUpstream demand capture; authority buildingMedium6-18 months
Procurement platforms (Avendra, Birch Street, Fourth)Vetted supplier access to chain procurementMedium-High3-12 months (onboarding)
Trade shows (targeted)Relationship initiation; product demonstrationHigh (per event)6-18 months
AI-powered prospectingSignal monitoring, lead scoring, automated outreachMedium2-4 weeks setup; results in 30 days

The critical shift: Move marketplace presence from “primary channel” to “one of six.” Use marketplaces to capture the commodity-seeking, price-sensitive segment of the market. Use direct outreach, content, and AI-powered prospecting to capture the value-seeking, relationship-oriented segment that represents the highest lifetime value accounts.

The Marketplace Ceiling vs. The Outreach Floor

Marketplaces impose a ceiling on your business. You can grow to a certain revenue level based on marketplace traffic, but beyond that, growth requires either cutting price (reducing margin) or increasing advertising spend (reducing net margin). The marketplace owns the relationship, sets the rules, and captures a percentage of every transaction.

Direct, signal-driven outreach has no ceiling. The number of hotels undergoing renovation, changing ownership, or converting brands is growing. The global pipeline is at an all-time record. The PIP backlog is still being worked through. The Middle East is building an entirely new hospitality infrastructure. India has 514 projects in the pipeline. Europe’s conversions surged 26% in a single quarter.

The floor for direct outreach is zero — it takes effort, intelligence, and tools to execute. But the ceiling is the full $137-142 billion hotel supply market, constrained only by your product capability and go-to-market execution.

Alibaba is a channel. Amazon Business is a channel. They are useful channels. But a channel is not a strategy. The suppliers who will capture the most value from the largest hotel construction and renovation cycle in history are the ones who combine passive marketplace presence with proactive, intelligence-driven outreach that reaches the right hotel buyer, with the right product, at the exact moment they are ready to buy.

That combination is what separates suppliers who grow from suppliers who compete on price until there is no margin left to compete with. To learn how manufacturers are building these direct capabilities, read our analysis of factory-to-buyer direct sales channels.

More On This Topic

Use these related guides to keep moving through the same procurement, sales, or market research thread.

Sales Strategy Win Hotel Supply Contracts: RFP Response Guide Advanced RFP strategy for hotel suppliers. Covers response structure, pricing psychology, sustainability differentiation, follow-up timelines, and negotiation. Sales Strategy Hotel Purchasing Managers: What They Want Deep dive into hotel purchasing manager personas. Covers their daily responsibilities, KPIs, pain points, and what makes them say yes or no to suppliers. Sales Strategy Content Marketing for Hotel Supply Companies Complete content marketing strategy for hotel suppliers. Topic selection, content formats, distribution channels, and tactics that turn buyers into leads. Technology & AI Hospitality B2B Platforms Compared for Suppliers Head-to-head comparison of top hospitality B2B platforms: BirchStreet, FutureLog, Alibaba, Amazon Business. Includes cost, reach, and buyer types.

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