The Wholesale Option: What It Is and When It Fits

The Wholesale Option is TechTrust’s primary remedy for the conflicts of interest built into the tech supply chain. It replaces the traditional channel cost structure with a transparent, buyer-aligned alternative.

Here is how it works in plain terms. TechTrust operates as a channel partner for the purpose of transacting with providers. That means the provider sees a partner of record on the paperwork, which is what most providers require. But unlike a traditional reseller, TechTrust does not keep the embedded sales costs. We charge a transparent fee (typically seven percent) for the procurement service, and we return the rest (tier discounts, deal registration bonuses, any incentives that would normally become reseller compensation) to you.

The difference is structural. A traditional reseller makes more money when the price is higher and the incentive stack is fatter. TechTrust makes the same seven percent regardless. That single change in economic alignment produces the whole effect. We have no reason to recommend the provider with the biggest bonus. We have no reason to push you into a longer term or a deeper bundle than you need. We have no reason to avoid negotiating hard on your behalf, because we don’t depend on provider incentives for our own margin.

The Wholesale Option fits cleanly in some situations and less cleanly in others.

It fits when the reseller’s role in your current arrangement is primarily transactional. You have in-house IT capability. You know what you want. You are using the reseller to process orders, handle renewals, and manage provider paperwork. If that describes your reseller’s actual function, the Wholesale Option will produce significant savings with almost no operational change.

It fits less cleanly when the reseller’s role is deeply entangled with ongoing services you actually use. If your MSP is running your environment day to day, and the product resale is bundled with the management, unbundling them gets complicated. The entanglement test (covered in its own article) determines whether the Wholesale Option makes sense in your specific situation.

It does not fit at all for direct-only providers. If the provider has no channel, there is no channel layer to optimize, and the Wholesale Option has nothing to act on.

The decision is not ideological. The Wholesale Option is a remedy for a specific set of conflicts, and it applies where those conflicts are present and separable. Where it applies, the savings are substantial and the operational disruption is minimal. Where it doesn’t, we tell you so.

More To Explore

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The Wholesale Option: What It Is and When It Fits

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The 1-2-3 Formula: How We Execute Your Wholesale Option

Want to See How This Translates to Your World?

We’re happy to show you. Give us a few minutes and we’ll map the conflicts around your providers, what they’re costing you, and what your options are.

No commitment, no runaround, just clarity.