For decades, hotel procurement followed the same channel structure: manufacturer to distributor to purchasing agent to hotel. Each intermediary added margin, added days to the timeline, and added distance between the people who make the product and the people who use it. That structure is now breaking apart.
Manufacturers are increasingly selling directly to hotel chains, management companies, and ownership groups through digital channels — bypassing the distributors, agents, and brokers who historically controlled access to hotel buyers. This is not a minor shift. It is a fundamental restructuring of how $55-59 billion in annual hotel FF&E spending (and billions more in OS&E, linens, amenities, and technology) reaches its end customer. The 2025 hotel supply industry report details the full scope of this market and the forces reshaping it.
The drivers are clear: better margins for manufacturers, lower costs for hotels, faster communication, and the ability to customize products without playing telephone through three intermediaries. E-procurement sales grew 18% between 2021 and 2022, surpassing $1 trillion in total volume. High-performing organizations aimed to boost e-procurement adoption by 80% in 2023. The digital infrastructure now exists for factories to sell directly to hotels at scale.
Why Disintermediation Is Accelerating
The Margin Math
The traditional distribution chain for hotel FF&E typically looks like this:
| Channel Stage | Entity | Typical Markup |
|---|---|---|
| Stage 1 | Manufacturer (factory) | Base cost + 15-25% margin |
| Stage 2 | Distributor / Wholesaler | +20-35% markup |
| Stage 3 | Purchasing Agent / Rep | +8-15% commission |
| Stage 4 | Hotel buyer | Pays final price |
The cumulative markup from factory to hotel can reach 40-65% above manufacturing cost. A guest room chair that costs $120 to manufacture might reach the hotel at $170-200 through traditional channels.
When the manufacturer sells directly to the hotel:
| Channel Stage | Entity | Typical Markup |
|---|---|---|
| Stage 1 | Manufacturer (factory) | Base cost + 30-40% margin |
| Stage 2 | Hotel buyer | Pays final price |
The manufacturer captures a higher margin (30-40% versus 15-25%) while the hotel pays less (15-30% below the traditional channel price). Both parties are better off. The intermediaries are the ones who lose.
This is not theoretical. Manufacturers across hospitality product categories — furniture, lighting, bathroom fixtures, amenities, technology — are building direct sales capabilities. The ones who do it well are growing faster than their distribution-dependent competitors.
The Speed Advantage
In the traditional channel, a hotel procurement director who needs to customize a product specification goes through this process:
- Contacts the distributor representative
- Distributor forwards the request to the manufacturer
- Manufacturer develops a sample or revised specification
- Sample ships to the distributor
- Distributor forwards to the hotel
- Hotel provides feedback to the distributor
- Distributor relays feedback to the manufacturer
- Cycle repeats
Each round takes 2-4 weeks. Three rounds of revision means 6-12 weeks before the product is finalized.
In a direct relationship:
- Hotel contacts manufacturer
- Manufacturer develops a sample
- Sample ships directly to the hotel
- Hotel provides feedback directly to the manufacturer
- Cycle repeats
Each round takes 1-2 weeks. Three rounds means 3-6 weeks — half the time. When hotels are operating under PIP deadlines with brand penalties for delay, speed is not a nice-to-have. It is a competitive differentiator.
The Customization Imperative
Hotel brands are increasingly demanding differentiated products. The lifestyle hotel boom — Accor had 58% of 2024 openings under lifestyle brands — means cookie-cutter product catalogs are less relevant. Hotels want custom colorways, branded amenities, bespoke furniture silhouettes, and localized design elements.
Customization requires direct communication between the designer/buyer and the manufacturer. Every intermediary in the chain introduces interpretation risk: the specification changes slightly with each handoff, the material swatch gets approximated, the finish description gets simplified. Direct relationships eliminate this game of telephone.
The Digital Tools Enabling Direct Sales
Factories are not just removing middlemen — they are replacing them with digital infrastructure that performs the same functions (discovery, evaluation, ordering, tracking) more efficiently.
Digital Product Catalogs
Static PDF catalogs sent via email are being replaced by interactive digital catalogs with:
- 360-degree product views and zoom-to-detail imagery
- Material and finish configurators (select wood species, fabric, hardware in real time)
- Specification sheets auto-generated based on selected configuration
- Real-time pricing that adjusts based on quantity, material selection, and delivery location
- Integration with CAD software so designers can place products directly into room renderings
These are not consumer e-commerce sites. They are B2B platforms designed for professional procurement workflows, with role-based access (designer view vs. procurement view vs. accounting view), quote management, and approval hierarchies.
Virtual Showrooms and Factory Tours
The pandemic accelerated virtual showroom adoption, and it has stuck. Manufacturers now offer:
- 360-degree virtual showrooms where buyers can browse product lines as if walking a physical space
- Live virtual factory tours via video conferencing, allowing buyers to see production quality, capacity, and compliance without travel
- AR product placement that lets buyers see how a piece of furniture looks in an actual hotel room using augmented reality on a tablet or phone
- Video-based product demonstrations showing durability testing, fire-resistance testing, and material quality up close
For international manufacturers — particularly those in China, Vietnam, Turkey, and Mexico — virtual capabilities reduce the need for buyers to make expensive factory visits before placing orders. For suppliers in any geography, virtual tools extend reach to buyers who would never visit a physical showroom.
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Direct Digital Outreach
The most significant shift is in how manufacturers find and engage hotel buyers. Traditional sales relied on trade show booths, distributor relationships, and cold calls through switchboards. Direct digital outreach uses:
- LinkedIn and professional networks to identify and connect with procurement directors, VP of design, and brand standard managers
- Email outreach with personalized product recommendations based on the hotel’s brand, segment, and renovation timeline
- AI-powered prospecting that monitors construction pipeline data, building permits, and brand announcements to identify hotels entering procurement windows
- Content marketing (case studies, specification guides, sustainability documentation) that establishes the manufacturer as a credible direct vendor
This is where the real transformation is happening. The distributor’s core value was access — they knew the hotel buyers and the buyers knew them. Digital tools are democratizing that access, allowing any manufacturer with good products and smart outreach to reach the buyer directly.
Traditional vs. Direct Channel Comparison
| Dimension | Traditional (Distributor) Channel | Direct (Factory-to-Buyer) Channel |
|---|---|---|
| Margin to manufacturer | 15-25% | 30-40% |
| Cost to hotel | Higher (40-65% above factory cost) | Lower (30-40% above factory cost) |
| Customization speed | 6-12 weeks (multiple handoffs) | 3-6 weeks (direct communication) |
| Product discovery | Distributor catalog, trade show | Digital catalog, virtual showroom, search |
| Buyer relationship | Owned by distributor | Owned by manufacturer |
| Market intelligence | Filtered through distributor | Direct from buyer conversations |
| Order tracking | Via distributor systems | Direct real-time visibility |
| After-sales support | Distributor handles (variable quality) | Manufacturer handles (consistent quality) |
| Scalability | Limited by distributor sales force | Limited by digital platform capability |
| Switching cost for hotel | Low (switch to another distributor) | Higher (custom specifications, direct integration) |
The direct channel is superior on nearly every dimension except one: the hotel’s time investment. Working with a distributor who manages multiple product categories is simpler for a procurement director who buys 500 SKUs across 40 product categories. Direct relationships are more efficient per category but require the hotel to manage more vendor relationships.
This is why the hybrid model is emerging: hotels work directly with manufacturers for their highest-spend categories (furniture, linens, bathroom fixtures) where the savings and customization benefits justify the relationship management overhead, and continue using distributors for lower-spend, higher-SKU categories (janitorial supplies, paper products, small kitchen items).
Impact on Traditional Distributors
Distributors are not disappearing — but their role is changing fundamentally.
What distributors are losing:
- Exclusive access to hotel buyers (digital channels bypass them)
- Markup margins on high-value product categories (manufacturers going direct)
- Information asymmetry (hotels now have direct access to factory pricing and capabilities)
What distributors are becoming:
- Logistics specialists — consolidating shipments from multiple manufacturers into single deliveries for hotels with complex, multi-category orders
- Compliance and quality assurance layers — verifying manufacturer certifications, conducting quality inspections, managing warranty claims
- Technology integrators — providing the e-procurement platforms, inventory management systems, and spend analytics that connect hotels to their supplier base
Leading hospitality procurement platforms like Avendra, Birch Street Systems, and Fourth — compared in detail in our B2B platform guide — are evolving from traditional distributors into technology-enabled procurement hubs. They still sit between manufacturer and hotel, but the value they provide is shifting from access and markup to data, logistics, and compliance.
Distributors who do not adapt will be squeezed from both sides: manufacturers who no longer need them to reach buyers, and hotels who no longer need them to find manufacturers.
How Manufacturers Can Build a Direct Channel
Step 1: Audit Your Current Channel Economics
Calculate your margin through each channel: direct sales (if any), distributor sales, GPO sales, agent/rep sales. Identify which channels deliver the highest margin per dollar of revenue and which ones you depend on for volume. Do not abandon distribution overnight — build direct capabilities alongside existing channels.
Step 2: Invest in Digital Sales Infrastructure
At minimum, you need:
- A professional B2B website with product configurators, specification downloads, and quote request functionality
- A digital catalog that replaces your PDF product binder
- High-quality product photography and 360-degree views for your top 20% of SKUs (which likely represent 80% of revenue)
- A CRM system to track buyer relationships, quote status, and pipeline
Step 3: Build a Content Library
Hotel procurement directors do not buy from cold emails. They buy from suppliers they trust. Content builds trust:
- Case studies showing your products installed in recognizable hotel properties
- Specification guides formatted for each major brand’s documentation standards
- Sustainability certifications (hotels pursuing LEED, Green Key, EarthCheck need documented proof)
- Testing and compliance documentation (fire ratings, ADA compliance, durability testing)
Step 4: Develop Direct Outreach Capabilities
The construction pipeline data is public. Lodging Econometrics, STR, and brand development websites publish upcoming projects with property names, locations, room counts, and expected opening dates. A record 15,820 projects are in the global pipeline. Each one has a procurement decision-maker.
The question is whether you find that person and present your products before your competitor does — or before a distributor presents their preferred manufacturer’s products instead of yours. InnLead.ai’s market intelligence automates this exact workflow, surfacing procurement contacts and buying signals before the competition reaches them.
Step 5: Start With New-Build and Conversion Projects
Existing hotel relationships are often locked into distributor agreements. New-build and conversion projects are greenfield opportunities — the procurement process is starting fresh, vendor lists are being assembled, and the buyer is actively seeking options. Target the brands with the most active conversion programs:
- Hilton Spark: 100+ properties and growing
- IHG Garner: Targeting 500 hotels over 10 years
- Marriott Four Points Flex: Targeting 50+ hotels by 2026
- Wyndham HQ Hotels: New lifestyle conversion brand
The Future of Hotel Supply Distribution
The disintermediation trend in hotel procurement mirrors what has already happened in nearly every other B2B industry. Industrial supply, office products, foodservice equipment, medical devices — all have seen manufacturers build direct channels while traditional distributors either evolved into technology-and-logistics companies or lost relevance.
Hospitality is following the same pattern, accelerated by three forces: the digital procurement infrastructure is mature, hotel tech budgets are growing (from 23% allocated to new software in 2022 to 69% in 2024), and the construction pipeline is at record levels, creating thousands of new procurement events where incumbency offers no advantage.
For manufacturers: the time to build direct sales capabilities is now, while the pipeline is rich with new projects — including the record-setting hotel renovation boom — that do not have established vendor relationships.
For distributors: the time to reinvent your value proposition around technology, logistics, and compliance is now, before manufacturers and hotels discover they do not need the access you once controlled.
For hotel buyers: the leverage is shifting in your favor. You have more options, more transparency, and more negotiating power than at any point in the industry’s history. Use it.
Use these related guides to keep moving through the same procurement, sales, or market research thread.
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