Few markets have ever exploded so fast. In barely 10 years, the value of purchases made through online Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) platforms has gone from near-zero to over $300 billion, with expectations that demand will almost double in the next three years.1 The vast majority of those BNPL transactions have been in consumer retail, with pioneers such as Klarna, Affirm and Afterpay riding high on that wave, only to be challenged recently by industry giants PayPal with PayPal Credit and Apple with Apple Pay Later.
But, in many ways, that is just the first chapter of the BNPL story. With the value of business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce estimated to be several times larger than that of business-to-consumer (B2C)2 , there are confident predictions that the B2B BNPL market size will reach well beyond those heights.
It’s important to understand, though, that while they are both based on the same basic concept – of providing credit financing to customers in order to encourage sales – commercial BNPL and consumer BNPL are very different animals. As well as having separate target audiences, B2B BNPL and B2C BNPL are enabled by distinct sets of technologies and processes, by different approaches to checking customer creditworthiness and arrangements for funding credit, and by their own ways of protecting against the risk of late payments or defaults.