B2B firms keep talking about product-led growth (PLG) and product-led sales (PLS). Their digital commerce experience tells a very different story.

If buyers still can’t discover, trial, and purchase without hitting opaque pricing, forced sales interactions, or clunky onboarding, then the problem isn’t your PLG strategy. It’s your digital commerce model, because digital commerce is where PLG and PLS get real or get exposed.

In a strategy deck, PLG sounds compelling: Let the product drive acquisition, conversion, and expansion. But buyers don’t judge strategy. They judge experience. Can they access the product? Can they reach value quickly? Can they move forward without friction? If not, you’re still sales-led, just with a trial button.

Most firms underestimate this. They launch self-service portals, add trials, and experiment with freemium offers. But underneath, the experience is still built for a different reality: complex pricing models, heavy configuration, slow onboarding, and disconnected data.

Digital commerce doesn’t hide that. It amplifies it. And that’s exactly why so many PLG initiatives stall. The issue isn’t a lack of ambition. It’s a mismatch between product-led intent and commerce reality.

First, portfolios don’t translate into self-service. Products designed for negotiation and customization rarely work in digital channels without redesign. When pushed unchanged into e-commerce or portals, they create friction long before value is realized.

Second, the digital buying experience breaks before it begins. If pricing isn’t transparent, onboarding isn’t intuitive, or the path to value isn’t clear, buyers drop — quietly, quickly, and often before sales ever engages.

Third, the organization cannot act on what it sees. Digital commerce generates signals (trial usage, activation, drop-off, expansion interest), but most firms lack the integration to turn those signals into action. Sales engages too late. Marketing optimizes the wrong stages. Product never closes the loop.

So the real failure is not PLG. It’s that digital commerce isn’t built to carry product-led growth. The leaders who get this right take a different approach:

  • They stop treating digital commerce as a transaction layer and start using it as a growth engine. They don’t launch broad PLG motions.
  • They run focused digital commerce experiments: one product, one segment, one controlled buying journey.
  • They observe where buyers engage, where they stall, and the signals that justify sales’s involvement.
  • Then they iterate — fast.
  • They redesign offers into simpler, self-service-ready packages.
  • They create guided onboarding that drives early value.
  • They align pricing, packaging, and digital touchpoints around how buyers actually behave, not how internal teams prefer to sell.
  • Most importantly, they connect the system.

Product usage feeds marketing. Marketing signals sales. Sales engages based on evidence, not intuition. Digital commerce becomes the backbone that aligns product, revenue teams, and data. That’s when PLG and PLS stop being concepts and start producing revenue.

So here’s the uncomfortable truth: If your digital commerce experience doesn’t let buyers discover, try, and scale value on their own terms, your PLG strategy isn’t failing. It’s being exposed.

The next wave of B2B growth won’t come from adding more trials. It will come from redesigning digital commerce to make product-led buying actually possible and using the resulting signals to continuously adapt. Everything else is just theater.

If you’re a Forrester client, you can read the full reports below to see how to operationalize PLG and PLS through digital commerce, or reach out to discuss what this means for your organization!

Make Digital B2B Commerce Product‑Led Or Accept Slower Growth | Forrester

Turn Product-Led Ambition Into Measurable Growth | Forrester