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Guest Column | Leading Forward

Riding the Ripples: How Reps Are Navigating Consolidation Without Losing Their Footing

By Danielle Good
One Step at a Time
Photo courtesy of Nuthawut Somsuk / iStock / Getty Images Plus
July 13, 2026

For independent manufacturers’ reps, consolidation is no longer something you read about in trade publications — it’s something you experience in real time.

One year you’re supporting a manufacturer that has operated independently for decades. The next year it’s part of a larger platform with new leadership, new expectations, and a different view of the rep network. At the same time, distributors you’ve worked with for years may be acquired, bringing new layers of management and shifting where decisions are actually made.

For reps, these changes can feel like a constant series of ripple effects. Line cards change. Access to decision makers shifts. Relationships that once drove business may suddenly require new approvals or new structures.

But while consolidation is undeniably reshaping the channel, it hasn’t reduced the importance of strong rep firms. What it has done is raise the bar. The role of the rep is evolving — and the firms that are thriving are the ones that have adjusted their approach.

The Manufacturer Side: When Line Cards Suddenly Change

When manufacturers consolidate, rep firms are often among the first to feel the impact.

Two companies combine and suddenly there are overlapping products, duplicate territories, or multiple rep firms covering similar markets. Sometimes the overlap is manageable. Other times it forces difficult decisions about representation, product focus, or territory alignment.

Peter McMillan, vice President, wholesale sales, with Oatey shared that as the company expands its platform of businesses and product categories, decisions like these aren’t just about structure—they require a deeper look at what truly serves the market.

"We’re placing increasing emphasis on an agency’s vision and how they see their role evolving alongside us, not just where we sit on a line card today,” McMillan said. “Historically, we asked agencies why they wanted to partner with Oatey. The strongest partners have positioned themselves to ask the same of us – challenging us on our strategy, our priorities, and how we plan to grow the business for another 110 years.”

For many rep firms, this has turned the line card into a strategic exercise rather than simply a collection of manufacturers.

Firms are increasingly stepping back to evaluate where they bring the most value. Instead of asking, “How long have we represented this company?” they’re asking more strategic questions: Does this line strengthen our overall position? Does it complement the rest of our portfolio? Are we helping this manufacturer grow the market, or simply maintaining existing business?

Consolidation tends to accelerate these conversations because manufacturers that merge often review their entire go-to-market strategy. They look closely at performance, market coverage, and how effectively their rep partners are driving growth.

In that environment, the rep firms that stand out are the ones that can clearly demonstrate their impact.

Distributor Consolidation: Access Is the New Challenge

If manufacturer consolidation affects the line card, distributor consolidation affects something just as important: access.

For decades, the rep-to-distributor relationship was built largely around the branch level. Branch managers often had the authority to decide which products to promote, which programs to run, and which suppliers to emphasize.

As distribution companies consolidate, that autonomy is often reduced. Strategic decisions are increasingly made by regional leadership teams or corporate category managers responsible for multiple locations.

For reps, that shift changes how relationships are built.

Maintaining strong connections at the branch level is still essential — but it’s no longer enough on its own.

Corporate leaders are shaping the long-term direction of product categories, vendor partnerships, and growth initiatives. Understanding those priorities has become critical for reps who want to position their manufacturers effectively.

A More Layered Rep-to-Distributor Relationship

As consolidation reshapes the channel, the rep-to-distributor relationship is becoming more layered than it once was.

The traditional model was heavily relationship-driven, centered around trust built over years of working together. Those relationships are still important, but they are now operating within larger organizational structures.

Successful rep firms have learned to work across those structures rather than relying on a single point of contact.

At the corporate level, they focus on understanding strategic priorities.

At the regional level, they help translate those strategies into practical initiatives.

And at the local level, they continue building the day-to-day relationships that support contractor engagement and product movement.

This multi-level approach requires more coordination and communication than in the past — but it also allows reps to create value in more places within the organization.

Raising the Bar for the Rep Model

There’s no question that consolidation introduces challenges. It can reduce the number of independent players in the market, compress margins, and create uncertainty around long-standing partnerships.

But it also highlights the firms that are truly adding value.

In a more consolidated environment, the difference between high-performing rep firms and those simply maintaining relationships becomes much more visible.

That’s where another shift is taking place — toward data-driven insight. When asked how his expectations of rep firms have evolved over the past five to ten years, McMillan pointed to this as a defining change.

“The biggest shift has been around data and technology adoption. With limited resources, we have to be targeted in where and how we invest our time and effort. Rep partners who can provide meaningful market insights — grounded in data — help us make better, faster decisions. There was a time when visibility just meant activity, like social media posts or basic reporting. Today, we’re focused on partners who can clearly demonstrate where opportunities exist, why they matter, and how we can win in those markets together.”

The firms that are succeeding today tend to share several characteristics. They invest in training and professional development. They use CRM systems and data tools to track market activity. They focus on category expertise rather than simply representing individual products. And they position themselves as strategic partners to both manufacturers and distributors.

Consolidation will continue to reshape the industry for the foreseeable future. Companies will merge, distribution networks will expand, and decision-making will evolve.

But one thing remains consistent: manufacturers still need market insight and pull-through demand, distributors still need support to grow product categories, and contractors still rely on knowledgeable partners who can help them solve problems in the field.

Independent reps who understand how to navigate that changing landscape—while continuing to build relationships and deliver measurable value — will remain an essential part of the channel.

The environment may be shifting, but the opportunity for reps who adapt has never been clearer.

KEYWORDS: AIM/R distribution distributors leadership manufacturers representative

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Danielle good headshot

Danielle Good has spent the past 10 years as a manufacturer’s representative at Repcor in Northern California. She is passionate about bettering the industry through leadership, company culture, and workforce development...because let’s face it, happy employees make happy customers, and happy customers make everyone’s life easier. Danielle speaks about employee retention and the expectations of the next generation workforce, offering a perspective that’s both authentic and slightly biased — she is part of that next generation herself. She knows what keeps young professionals engaged, motivated, and wondering if there’s a better way to do things.

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