CRM stands for customer relationship management, and most CRMs are built around one idea: winning new customers, one sale at a time. That is fine for a business chasing fresh leads. It is the wrong shape for a wholesale or distribution merchant, whose business runs on the same accounts ordering again and again. A wholesale CRM is the version built for how you actually trade.
What makes a CRM a wholesale CRM
The difference is what sits at the centre of the system. A generic CRM centres on the deal: a new prospect, a pipeline, a one-off close. A wholesale CRM centres on the trade account: an ongoing relationship with a customer who reorders, on their own pricing, on their own terms.
In practice that means a wholesale CRM is built around:
- Trade accounts, not one-off contacts. The customer record assumes a continuing relationship, not a single sale.
- Customer-specific pricing, because trade customers do not all pay the same, and the system has to respect that.
- Quotes and repeat orders, the day-to-day rhythm of merchant trade, rather than a sales funnel for net-new business.
- Order history per account, so you can see at a glance what a customer buys and when.
A generic CRM can be bent to approximate some of this, but you spend your time fighting the tool. A wholesale CRM starts where merchants actually are.
Signs your merchant business needs one
You probably do not need a formal definition to know whether this is you. The signs are practical:
- Trade customers, quotes and orders live across spreadsheets, inboxes and someone's head, with no single source of truth.
- Things slip: a quote never followed up, a customer not chased, an order detail lost in an email thread.
- No one can see the whole picture of a customer in one place: who they are, what they buy, what is outstanding.
- You are growing, and the informal system that worked with twenty accounts is creaking at eighty.
If two or more of those ring true, the spreadsheets have stopped scaling and a wholesale CRM is what replaces them.
What to look for
Not all CRMs sold to merchants are equal. The things that matter most:
- Built for trade, not a generic CRM with the word "wholesale" added to the marketing.
- Flat pricing with unlimited users, so the warehouse and the trade counter can use it without each login adding to the bill. (See: the hidden cost of per-seat pricing.)
- A trade-ready website in the same platform, so your public site and your customer records are joined up rather than two separate tools you pay for and stitch together. (See: CRM and website in one.)
That last point is the one merchants most often overlook, and it is where the biggest savings usually sit.
This is exactly what Jeanus is built for: a wholesale CRM and a trade website in one, with flat pricing and unlimited users. See Jeanus for wholesale.