Hotel suppliers face a fragmented digital marketplace. There is no single platform where every hotel buyer shops. Instead, the hospitality procurement landscape is split across specialized procurement systems, general B2B marketplaces, and industry directories — each serving different buyer types, purchase categories, and property segments.

The question for suppliers is not “which platform should I be on?” The question is “which combination of platforms matches my product categories, target buyers, and operational capacity?”

E-procurement in hospitality is not a future state. It is the present. E-procurement sales grew 18% between 2021 and 2022, surpassing $1 trillion globally. Hotel technology budgets have shifted dramatically — from 23% allocated to new software in 2022 to 69% in 2024, as documented in the 2025 hotel supply industry report. The digital procurement infrastructure is built. The buyers are transacting through it. The suppliers who list effectively capture orders. Those who do not are invisible.

This guide compares the major platforms, breaks down their economics, and provides a framework for building your multi-platform strategy.

The Major Platforms at a Glance

PlatformTypePrimary BuyersProduct FocusCost to SupplierGeographic ReachBest For
BirchStreet SystemsIntegrated procurement suiteChain hotels, managed propertiesAll categories (F&B, FF&E, OS&E, maintenance)Enterprise licensing; negotiatedNorth America, expanding globallyHigh-volume suppliers to branded chains
AvendraProcurement services / GPOMarriott, Hyatt, IHG affiliatedAll procurement categoriesMembership / commission-basedNorth America, CaribbeanSuppliers targeting major chain properties
FutureLogeTender / eRFQ platformHotel groups, independent luxuryFF&E, OS&E, amenitiesSaaS subscriptionEurope, Middle East, AsiaSuppliers responding to RFQs and tenders
FourthProcurement + AP automationMulti-unit hospitality operatorsPrimarily F&B, operational suppliesSaaS subscription52 countries, 1,200+ locationsF&B and operational supply vendors
Alibaba.comGeneral B2B marketplaceGlobal buyers (all industries)Manufacturing, bulk productsFree listing; paid tiers ($2,400-$6,000+/yr)Global (strongest in Asia sourcing)Manufacturers seeking international volume
Amazon BusinessGeneral B2B marketplaceAll business buyersAll categoriesSeller fees (8-15% referral)US, UK, EU, Japan, IndiaCommodity suppliers, maintenance items
Hotel DepotIndustry-specific marketplaceHotels, restaurantsFF&E, linens, amenities, suppliesListing fees varyPrimarily North AmericaNiche hotel supply categories
Industry DirectoriesListing / lead generationProcurement researchersAll categoriesFree to $2,000+/yrVaries by directoryBrand visibility, SEO, early-stage leads

Platform-by-Platform Breakdown

BirchStreet Systems

What it is: BirchStreet is an integrated procurement, AP automation, inventory control, and recipe management platform used by major hotel chains and management companies. It is not a marketplace where hotels browse and buy. It is the system through which hotels process purchase orders, manage approved vendor catalogs, and track spend.

How it works for suppliers: Hotels using BirchStreet add approved suppliers to their digital catalog. When a property needs to order supplies, they search the BirchStreet catalog, select products from approved vendors, and submit purchase orders electronically. The supplier receives the PO, fulfills it, and invoices through the platform.

Reach: BirchStreet processes billions of dollars in hospitality procurement annually. Major chain hotels and management companies use it as their primary procurement system.

Cost: Enterprise-level pricing. Suppliers typically need to be approved by a hotel chain or management company first, then onboarded into BirchStreet as an authorized vendor. There is no “self-service listing” option.

Pros:

  • Direct integration with hotel purchasing workflows
  • Automated PO processing reduces admin friction
  • Access to high-volume chain hotel accounts
  • Spend analytics help you understand buyer patterns

Cons:

  • Requires existing chain hotel relationships to get listed
  • Not a discovery platform — hotels search for approved vendors, not new ones
  • Implementation requires technical integration
  • Primarily transactional, not a place to build brand awareness

Verdict: Essential if you supply branded chain hotels. Not a prospecting tool — it is an order fulfillment and management system for existing relationships.

Avendra (Now Aramark Hospitality)

What it is: Avendra is the largest hospitality procurement services company in North America, operating as a group purchasing organization (GPO). It was originally a joint venture between Marriott and Hyatt, later acquired by Aramark. Avendra manages over 2,000 vetted suppliers and negotiates pricing on behalf of its member hotels.

How it works for suppliers: Suppliers apply to become Avendra-approved vendors. Avendra negotiates category contracts and pricing. Hotels affiliated with Marriott, Hyatt, IHG, and other participating brands can purchase from Avendra’s vetted supplier list, often at negotiated rates. Suppliers benefit from volume aggregation across thousands of properties.

Reach: Thousands of hotel properties in North America and the Caribbean, anchored by Marriott International (which signed 1,200+ deals in 2024 representing 162,000 rooms, with a pipeline of 596,000 rooms).

Cost: Commission-based model. Avendra takes a percentage of transactions processed through its platform. The exact structure is negotiated per category and supplier.

Pros:

  • Access to massive purchasing volume from major chains
  • Credibility signal — Avendra approval signals quality vetting
  • Simplified sales process once approved
  • Up to 15% cost savings marketed to hotel buyers (driving purchase volume)

Cons:

  • Margin pressure from negotiated pricing
  • Long approval process with rigorous vetting
  • Limited to Avendra-affiliated hotel brands
  • Less control over pricing and terms

Verdict: High-volume opportunity for suppliers who can compete on price at scale. The approval process is worth pursuing for any supplier whose products align with major chain demand.

FutureLog

What it is: FutureLog is a SaaS-based eTender and eRFQ (electronic Request for Quotation) platform designed specifically for the hospitality industry. It connects hotel groups with supplier networks for competitive bidding on FF&E, OS&E, amenities, and operating supplies.

How it works for suppliers: Hotels post tender requests (RFQs) for specific product categories. Registered suppliers receive notifications for relevant tenders, submit bids with pricing and specifications, and negotiate online. The platform manages the entire RFQ-to-award process digitally.

Reach: Strongest in Europe, Middle East, and Asia-Pacific. Used by hotel groups, luxury independents, and hospitality project management firms.

Cost: SaaS subscription model. Pricing varies based on supplier size and volume.

Pros:

  • Purpose-built for hospitality procurement
  • Direct access to active purchasing needs (RFQs represent real demand)
  • Online price negotiation tools
  • Connects to hotel groups you might not reach through other channels
  • Particularly strong for FF&E and project-based procurement

Cons:

  • Competitive bidding can create price pressure
  • Smaller network than general marketplaces
  • Primarily useful for larger orders and project-based procurement
  • Less effective for repeat consumable orders

Verdict: Excellent for FF&E suppliers, project-based sellers, and suppliers targeting European and Middle Eastern hotel markets. The RFQ model means every interaction represents genuine buyer intent. For a deeper look at how AI is reshaping what these platforms can do, see our AI in hotel procurement guide.

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Fourth (formerly Fourth Hospitality)

What it is: Fourth is a procurement and AP automation platform processing over 5 million purchase orders annually across 1,200+ hospitality locations in 52 countries. It focuses heavily on food and beverage procurement, with digitized supplier catalogs featuring real-time pricing.

How it works for suppliers: Fourth digitizes supplier catalogs and makes them available to hotel and restaurant operators on its platform. Hotels order through the system, and Fourth manages the purchase order, delivery, and invoicing workflow.

Reach: 52 countries, primarily multi-unit hospitality operators.

Cost: SaaS subscription model for the platform. Supplier onboarding costs vary.

Pros:

  • Massive transaction volume (5M+ POs annually)
  • Real-time pricing updates keep catalog current
  • Strong in F&B categories
  • International reach across 52 countries

Cons:

  • Heavily F&B focused — limited traction for FF&E and amenity suppliers
  • Requires onboarding into the Fourth ecosystem
  • Better suited for consumable/repeat-order products than project-based procurement

Verdict: Strong platform for food and beverage suppliers, cleaning product manufacturers, and operational consumables vendors. Less relevant for FF&E, furniture, or design-oriented products.

Alibaba.com

What it is: The world’s largest B2B marketplace, connecting manufacturers (primarily in Asia) with global buyers across all industries. Alibaba hosts millions of products from hundreds of thousands of suppliers.

How it works for suppliers: Create a supplier storefront on Alibaba.com. List products with descriptions, specifications, images, and pricing. Buyers search, compare, and contact suppliers directly. Alibaba offers Trade Assurance for payment protection and verified supplier badges for credibility.

Reach: Truly global. Millions of active business buyers.

Cost:

TierAnnual CostFeatures
Free Basic$0Limited listings, basic storefront
Standard Membership~$2,400/yearMore listings, keyword advertising credits, Trade Assurance
Premium/Gold Plus$4,000-6,000+/yearPriority ranking, enhanced storefront, advanced analytics

Pros:

  • Enormous buyer traffic across all geographies
  • Good for manufacturers seeking international distribution
  • Trade Assurance reduces buyer risk perception
  • Strong for price-competitive, bulk manufacturing

Cons:

  • Extreme competition — hundreds of suppliers per product category
  • Reputation for price-driven transactions, not relationship selling
  • Less credibility with premium/luxury hotel buyers
  • Time-intensive to manage inquiries (many unqualified leads)
  • Hotel-specific buyers represent a small fraction of total traffic

Verdict: Best for manufacturers who compete on price and volume, particularly those based in Asia selling to global hotel development projects. Not ideal for premium suppliers selling on quality, service, or brand differentiation.

Amazon Business

What it is: Amazon’s B2B marketplace for business buyers, offering bulk pricing, business-only products, tax-exempt purchasing, and purchase approval workflows. Over 5 million business customers globally.

How it works for suppliers: List products on Amazon as a professional seller or through Amazon’s vendor program. Business buyers can purchase with net payment terms, bulk pricing, and integrated purchasing controls.

Reach: US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Japan, India, Canada.

Cost:

Fee TypeAmount
Professional seller account$39.99/month
Referral fees8-15% per category
FBA fees (optional)Variable based on size/weight
Advertising (optional)CPC bidding

Pros:

  • Massive buyer base with business purchasing workflows
  • Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) handles logistics
  • Business Prime benefits drive repeat purchasing
  • Good for commodity, maintenance, and operational supplies
  • Built-in reviews and ratings build credibility

Cons:

  • High competition on price
  • Amazon controls the customer relationship
  • Referral fees compress margins
  • Not a platform for custom, high-value, or specification-driven products
  • No hotel-industry-specific features

Verdict: Effective for commodity hotel supplies — cleaning products, maintenance items, basic operational supplies. Not the right platform for custom FF&E, specification-driven products, or high-value categories where relationships and service differentiate.

Industry Directories and Niche Platforms

Several hospitality-specific directories and niche platforms serve as discovery and research tools for hotel buyers:

Hotel Tech Report: Technology-focused directory. Less relevant for physical product suppliers, but important for tech-enabled supply chain products.

HotelMinder: Connects hotels with service providers and technology vendors. Directory listing plus advisory content.

Hospitality Design Product Directory: Tied to HD Expo (600 exhibitors, 25+ industry sectors). Listing here reaches architects, designers, and hotel brand standards teams. Strong for FF&E and design-oriented products.

CoStar / STR Supplier Directories: Industry data platforms with supplier directory functions. Reaching procurement researchers.

Cost: Ranges from free basic listings to $500-2,000+/year for premium placements.

Pros:

  • Highly targeted hospitality audience
  • SEO benefit (backlinks from industry-relevant domains)
  • Low-cost brand visibility
  • Complement to larger platform strategies

Cons:

  • Lower traffic than major marketplaces
  • Inquiry volume is modest
  • Often require manual follow-up on leads

Building Your Multi-Platform Strategy

No single platform is sufficient. Each serves a different function in the buyer’s journey:

Buyer StagePlatform RoleRecommended Platforms
Discovery (“Who makes this?”)Brand visibility, search presenceIndustry directories, Alibaba, your website
Research (“Are they credible?”)Credibility validationLinkedIn, your website, Amazon reviews
Specification (“Does it meet requirements?”)Technical product informationYour website, FutureLog, direct communication
Bidding/RFQ (“What’s the price?”)Competitive pricing, formal proposalsFutureLog, Avendra, direct RFQ
Ordering (“Place the PO”)Transaction processingBirchStreet, Fourth, Amazon Business
Reordering (“Same again”)Automated replenishmentBirchStreet, Fourth, Amazon Business

Platform Selection Framework

Use this decision matrix to prioritize which platforms to invest in:

If You Are…PrioritizeSecondarySkip
FF&E manufacturer (furniture, fixtures)FutureLog, industry directoriesAlibaba, your website SEOAmazon Business
Amenity/toiletry supplierAvendra, FutureLogAmazon Business, industry directoriesAlibaba (unless Asia-based)
Linen/textile supplierBirchStreet (via chain approval), AvendraFutureLog, your website
F&B supplierFourth, BirchStreetAvendraAlibaba
Maintenance/operational suppliesAmazon Business, BirchStreetFourthFutureLog
Technology/smart room productsHotel Tech Report, your websiteLinkedIn advertisingAlibaba, Amazon

Implementation Priority

Immediate (Month 1-2):

  1. Ensure your own website has a professional product catalog (this is the foundation)
  2. Claim listings on relevant industry directories
  3. Evaluate which transactional platforms your existing hotel customers use

Short-term (Month 3-6): 4. Apply for Avendra supplier approval if targeting major chains 5. Create an Alibaba or Amazon Business listing for appropriate product categories 6. Register on FutureLog if targeting European/Middle Eastern markets

Ongoing: 7. Monitor platform performance quarterly (leads, orders, ROI per platform) 8. Adjust investment toward platforms generating qualified opportunities 9. Never abandon your own website in favor of any third-party platform

The Platform Trap to Avoid

The most common mistake hotel suppliers make is over-investing in a single platform and neglecting their own website. Third-party platforms can change terms, raise fees, alter algorithms, or lose relevance. Your own website is the only digital asset you fully control.

Use platforms as distribution channels, not as your brand foundation. Manufacturers who are building direct-to-hotel sales capabilities alongside their platform presence capture more margin and stronger buyer relationships. Every platform listing should drive buyers back to your website for full product information, certifications, case studies, and direct contact.

The hospitality procurement ecosystem will continue to fragment and digitize simultaneously. The global hotel pipeline is at an all-time high — 15,820 projects and 2,438,189 rooms as of Q4 2024, fueled by the ongoing renovation boom and record brand conversion activity. Every one of those projects needs suppliers. The suppliers who are visible across multiple platforms, with a strong owned website at the center, will capture a disproportionate share of that demand. Contact InnLead.ai to learn how we help suppliers get found.

Be everywhere your buyers look. But own the destination they end up at.

More On This Topic

Use these related guides to keep moving through the same procurement, sales, or market research thread.

Technology & AI Hotel Procurement Software 2026: Supplier Guide Supplier-focused breakdown of top hotel procurement platforms in 2026 -- BirchStreet, FutureLog, Avendra, Fourth, and Order.co -- with optimization tips. Sales Strategy Beyond Alibaba: Best B2B Hotel Supply Marketplaces Honest evaluation of B2B hotel supply marketplaces -- Alibaba, Amazon Business, ThomasNet. Their strengths, limits, and why listings alone are not enough. Sales Strategy B2B Lead Generation for Hotel Suppliers: 12 Strategies That Actually Work The complete B2B lead generation playbook for hotel product suppliers. Covers SEO, content, LinkedIn, signal monitoring, ABM, referrals, and trade-show economics — with realistic ROI per channel. Sales Strategy Content Marketing for Hotel Supply Companies Complete content marketing strategy for hotel suppliers. Topic selection, content formats, distribution channels, and tactics that turn buyers into leads.

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