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| Source: 6sense |
6sense published the findings of its "2025 B2B Buyer Experience Study" (the "2025 Study") earlier this month. The 2025 Study is the third edition of 6sense's B2B buyer experience research. Previous studies were conducted in 2024 and 2023.
The objective of the 2025 Study - as with the earlier studies - was to capture insights regarding how B2B buyers actually make business purchases.
Study Methodology and Participant Profile
The 2025 Study was based on two surveys. The primary study received nearly 4,000 responses from B2B buyers. 6sense also conducted a supplementary survey to specifically examine how artificial intelligence and economic uncertainty were affecting B2B buyer behaviors, and that survey produced an additional 766 responses.
Here's an overview of the survey respondents' attributes:
- Respondents represented a wide range of levels and roles in their organization, with nearly half (49%) being VP-level or above.
- Respondents were located in North America (46%), Continental Europe (20%), the UK and Ireland (20%), and Asia-Pacific (14%).
- Nearly half of the respondents (49%) worked for companies having from $10 million to $500 million in annual revenues.
- 80% of the respondents worked for companies providing technology (42%) or services (38%).
- Respondents included buyers of services (41%), software (33%), and physical goods (26%).
What Has Changed
The 2025 Study revealed two significant shifts in B2B buyer behavior compared to the earlier 6sense studies.
Buying Cycles Were Shorter
Globally, the average length of the buying cycle in 2025 was 10.1 months, down from 11.3 months in the 2024 edition of the study. In North America, the length of the buying cycle was virtually unchanged - 11.1 months in 2025 vs. 11.4 months in 2024.
The shorter average buying cycle was due in part to a change in the mix of purchases represented in the 6sense studies. There were more purchases of physical goods in the 2025 Study compared to the 2024 study, and the buying cycle length for physical goods was shorter than for the other types of solutions represented in the research.
More importantly, the 2025 Study showed that economic uncertainty played a significant role in shortening the average buying cycle. Nearly half of the surveyed buyers (49%) said economic conditions had led to shorter buying cycles.
The study report states: "Many organizations with approved budgets may have been eager to commit funds quickly, before potential pullbacks due to tariffs, cost-cutting, or other macroeconomic risks."
Buyers Engaged With Sellers Earlier
The second major shift in buyer behavior revealed in the 2025 Study was that buyers initiated contact with sellers earlier in the buying process. In the 2025 Study, the average "point of first contact" between buyers and sellers occurred when buyers were 61% through their buying process. That was down from 69% in the earlier 6sense studies.
Survey respondents pointed to two factors driving the earlier seller engagement.
- 58% of the survey respondents said their need to evaluate how prospective vendors were implementing artificial intelligence in their solutions caused them (buyers) to engage earlier.
- Nearly 62% of the respondents said they engaged earlier because of economic uncertainty.
What Hasn't Changed
The 2025 Study revealed that many of the B2B buying patterns and buyer behaviors identified by 6sense in its prior studies remained largely unchanged. For example, the 2025 Study found that:
- The surveyed buyers evaluated an average of five prospective vendors.
- Buying groups filled four of the five spots on their vendor shortlist on Day 1 of the buying process.
- 94% of the surveyed buyers said they ranked their shortlist vendors according to preference before contacting any vendor.
- 79% of the surveyed buyers said they initiated contact with prospective vendors. They contacted their top-ranked vendor first about 80% of the time, and they ultimately bought from their top-ranked vendor 77% of the time.
An Important Resource
The 6sense study represents a genre of research that we need more of in B2B. Much of the popular research in the B2B space consists of surveys of marketers. While it's useful to know how other marketers are thinking and what they are doing, it's far more valuable to understand how business buyers actually make purchase decisions.
That's what the 6sense study addresses, and I strongly recommend that you take the time to review the full study report.
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