Setup checklist for blended B2B stores

This checklist is for businesses that want to set up a blended store. A blended store is a single Shopify store that's used for both B2B and D2C customers and orders.

Choosing a store type is a key decision in using Shopify B2B. Make sure to review the differences between blended and dedicated stores.

Before you start

Step 1: Create companies and company locations

You can set up your B2B customers in Shopify using companies and company locations. A company is the parent organization for one or more company locations. A company location is the business that you're selling to in a B2B transaction. Each company location can have its own tax ID, tax exemptions, ship-to and billing address, pricing, and payment terms. You can create companies and locations in your Shopify admin, or import them in bulk using Matrixify, a third-party app.

Option 1: Set up companies from your Shopify admin

Option 2: Import companies using Matrixify

Step 2: Create catalogs

Catalogs determine the pricing and products your B2B customers have access to in your online store. You can assign up to 25 catalogs to a single company location.

Step 3: Activate login and accounts for B2B customers

Customer accounts allow B2B customers to authenticate themselves before accessing B2B-specific pricing, products, and account information, and manage their account online after they login. To use Shopify B2B, you must activate customer accounts.

If you’re using legacy customer accounts in your store, then you can continue to use them for D2C customers and activate customer accounts just for B2B customers. You can keep legacy customer accounts turned on, and then add the customer accounts login URL anywhere in your online store to activate customer accounts and allow B2B customers to log in.

Step 4: Set up payment and shipping methods

Set up the payment and shipping methods available to your customers at checkout. These settings apply to all customers by default.

You can customize the availability of specific payment and shipping methods for B2B and D2C customers using the free Checkout Blocks app, or custom or third-party app that uses payment or delivery Functions. For example, you can make PayPal available to logged in B2B customers, but not D2C customers.

Step 5: (Optional) Customize your online store

Your store theme remains the same for both B2B and D2C customers, but you can customize store content for B2B and D2C to share different product information, promotions, banners, and messages.

If you use a free Shopify theme (version 11.0+), then you can customize your online store using the theme editor. Some features, such as quantity rules and volume pricing, can be added from the theme editor using these themes. If you use a custom theme, then you need to use Liquid code to access the same features and customizations.

For free Shopify themes (version 11.0 or later):

For custom themes:

Step 6: (Optional) Activate sales staff ordering in your Shopify admin

If you employ sales staff, then you can give them restricted access to your Shopify admin. Your staff can take orders and manage accounts for the company locations they manage, and access a central source of customer, product, pricing, and inventory data. You control staff access to your Shopify admin using staff permissions.

Step 7: (Optional) Add additional features and functionality to your B2B store

You can install apps from the Shopify App Store to support additional workflows in your online store and streamline order processing. If you want to offer discounts on top of catalog prices, then you need to contact Plus Support to activate discounts in your store. Discounts apply to all customers by default, but you can customize their availability for B2B and D2C customers using customer segmentation.

Step 8: Test and finalize your store setup

Before you launch your online store, login as a customer and place some test orders to preview the customer experience.

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