At MPE 2026, Sanket Barmma, part of the e-payments division of Würth Group, shared his insights on digital transformation and the future of payments from the perspective of a massive B2B enterprise. For context, Würth is a family-owned leader in fasteners and assembly materials, operating on an international scale with over 400 legal entities, approximately 80,000 employees, and 20 billion euros in revenue.
Since Würth’s customers are businesses of all sizes who undergo robust credit checks, traditional fraud is not a major concern but instead, the company’s focus is on achieving unified commerce. Würth aims to push sales toward digital channels for better margins and productivity, but they must maintain the personal touch provided by their traditional sales reps who currently make up half their workforce. Unified commerce means a customer should see the exact same product availability and information whether they are speaking to a sales rep, using the online shop, the app, or customer service.
To be future-ready, Barmma stressed the “underappreciated” power of metadata and data as in their specialized field, customers know exactly what they need, they are not browsing for a “pretty blue nut”. For example, the use case of a hexagonal nut depends on specific metadata like material grade, compliance standard, and plating (e.g., stainless steel for marine use versus zinc-plated for timber). Barmma argued that having these precise data points is essential for human customers and, critically, for the new generation of search agents to find the right products.
This push for unified commerce necessitates frictionless payments, with checkouts and payment methods being consistent across all platforms while confirming that Würth is adopting BNPL to meet customer demand, but he noted challenges with the model. Specifically, he pointed out issues around who owns the money, as transferring collection liability to a BNPL provider risks losing “customer connect”. He also highlighted the growing trend of B2B marketplaces in Europe, following the lead of emerging markets in LATAM and Asia
On the topic of agentic commerce, Würth adopted a “realistic expectation” rather than a pessimistic one. While excited by the rapid evolution demonstrated by companies like Shopify, OpenAI, and Stripe, his main reservation is that LLMs are probabilistic, not deterministic. He explained that in a complex financial transaction chain, involving inventory, discounts, payment orchestration, and more, where each step relies on a probabilistic LLM, the compounding chances of error increase significantly. In the world of banking and payments, these errors are costly and problematic and Würth believes that challenges like this, and identity fraud related to agents, need to be solved collaboratively by the payments experts, identity providers, and merchants gathered at MPE 2026.
MPE 2026 also provided Würth with concrete insights from a workshop on B2B marketplaces, specifically related to how Würth could potentially offer financial products and financing if they remain involved in the money flow.
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