Dispensaries that rely on third-party platforms like Weedmaps or Leafly for their ordering traffic pay 15 to 20 percent per transaction and receive no customer data in return. When a customer orders through those platforms, the platform owns the relationship. Switching to a direct ordering channel, where customers place orders through your storefront and you capture their contact info, purchase history, and preferences, typically increases repeat order rates by 2 to 3 times within the first six months.
The Third-Party Platform Deal Nobody Reads Twice
Weedmaps reported hundreds of millions in annual platform revenue, per their investor filings. That sounds like a win for cannabis retail. It is not a win for the dispensary on the receiving end of those orders. That volume runs through their platform, not yours.
Here is how the math actually works. A customer finds your dispensary on Weedmaps. They browse your menu, add to cart, and check out. The platform charges you a listing fee, a transaction fee, or both, depending on your tier. The customer receives a receipt from Weedmaps. You receive an order. The platform keeps the customer.
You cannot email that customer. You cannot text them a restock alert. You cannot build a loyalty program that follows them home. The next time they want to order, they open Weedmaps again, and the platform serves them your three nearest competitors alongside your listing.
Every order you fulfill through a third-party platform is an order that trains your customer to come back to the platform, not to you.
What You Actually Lose When You Don’t Own the Channel
The margin hit is visible. The customer loss is not, and that is the one that compounds.
A dispensary doing $80,000 per month through third-party platforms at a 15 percent fee is paying $12,000 per month for the privilege of not knowing who their customers are. Over a year, that is $144,000 in fees. That number is easy to calculate. What is harder to see: every one of those customers is being reconditioned to think of the platform as the store.
According to McKinsey, omnichannel customers who engage directly with a brand shop 1.7 times more than customers who only interact through a single third-party channel. Cannabis is not exempt from this dynamic. The mechanism is the same: when a customer goes direct, they build a relationship with the brand. When they go through a marketplace, they build a relationship with the marketplace.
Dispensaries in markets where Weedmaps has pulled back or raised fees have discovered this the hard way. The customer base they thought they had did not follow them. The platform kept it.
What a Direct Ordering Channel Actually Looks Like
A direct ordering channel means customers place orders through a storefront you own, on a domain you control, with customer data flowing into systems you hold.
The Storefront Layer
This is your menu, your brand, your checkout. It does not need to be a six-month custom build. Full-stack dispensary storefronts can now be deployed in days, not months, with inventory sync, age verification, and compliance baked in. The customer experience is indistinguishable from ordering through a polished app. The difference is that the data belongs to you.
The Retention Layer
Owning the channel is only valuable if you use what you capture. A customer who places a direct order gives you their contact information, order history, and product preferences. That is enough to send a restock alert when their preferred strain comes back in stock, a loyalty offer on their birthday, or a text when you run a flash sale. None of this is possible when the order went through a third party.
Dispensaries running direct ordering with an SMS retention loop report that customers who receive even one post-purchase text are 40 percent more likely to place a second order within 30 days.
Direct vs. Third-Party: What Changes When You Switch
| Factor | Third-Party Platform | Direct Ordering Channel |
|---|---|---|
| Transaction fee | 15 to 20% per order | 0 to 3% (payment processing only) |
| Customer data | Platform owns it | You own it |
| Repeat purchase path | Customer returns to platform | Customer returns to your storefront |
| Loyalty program | Not possible | Fully yours |
| Menu control | Platform-dependent | Instant updates |
| Compliance | Platform-managed | Your responsibility |
| Brand visibility | Alongside competitors | Standalone |
| Setup time | Immediate | Days to weeks |
The compliance row is worth pausing on. On a third-party platform, compliance is largely handled for you. Going direct means owning age verification, purchase limits, and local regulatory requirements. This is manageable, and modern ordering infrastructure handles most of it automatically, but it is not zero lift on your side.
What to Look for in a Cannabis Direct Ordering Platform
Not all direct ordering platforms are built for regulated retail. Cannabis has requirements that standard e-commerce does not: age gates, purchase limits, real-time inventory sync with your POS, and in some markets, delivery compliance. Before choosing a platform, confirm it handles these five things natively.
First, real-time menu sync. If your online menu is not synced to your POS inventory, you will fulfill orders for products you do not have. This erodes trust faster than any third-party fee.
Second, compliant age verification. A checkout flow that asks customers to self-certify their age is not the same as one that runs an ID check. Know which you are deploying and whether your market requires the latter.
Third, customer data ownership. Read the terms. Some “direct” ordering platforms retain rights to aggregate customer data across their merchant base. That is a marketplace by another name.
Fourth, SMS and email integration. The retention layer only works if your ordering system connects to your outreach tools. Platforms that keep customer data in a closed system are trapping your retention potential.
Fifth, phone order support. A significant share of dispensary customers, particularly older demographics, still prefer to call. An AI phone host that can take orders, answer menu questions, and log the transaction to the same system as online orders closes that gap without adding headcount.
What Merchants Who Own Their Channel Have in Common
The mechanics vary by vertical, location, and order volume, but the outcome is consistent: merchants who own the customer relationship outperform those who rent it, in repeat order rates, in customer lifetime value, and in resilience when platform terms change.
Owning the channel is not about cutting off discovery entirely. Third-party platforms still drive new customer acquisition. The shift is in where the second order happens, and the third, and the tenth. Customers who place even one direct order with a brand convert to repeat buyers at measurably higher rates. The data is yours to act on, and the relationship is yours to build.
The dispensaries that tripled their repeat order rates did not do it by spending more on Weedmaps. They did it by giving their best customers a reason and a path to come back directly.
FAQ
How does the AI know what’s currently in stock?
Your current inventory is entered and maintained in the ordrsAI merchant portal. When you mark a product as unavailable, the AI stops offering it. When new products arrive, you add them. The system reflects your current inventory in real time, which means callers asking about availability get accurate answers rather than stale information.
Can AI legally take phone orders at a cannabis dispensary?
In most legal cannabis states, automated order intake systems are permitted for pre-ordering and inquiry handling, provided they don’t perform functions requiring a licensed employee (like medical consultations or ID verification). OrdrsAI’s intake system handles product information and order placement; compliance-sensitive functions route to staff. Always verify your specific state’s regulations with a compliance officer before deployment.
What if a customer calls asking for specific medical guidance?
The AI is configured to handle factual product questions (potency, format, ingredients) but not medical guidance or dosing recommendations. When a call moves toward medical advice territory, the AI routes it to a staff member with a brief explanation. The caller stays connected; the conversation continues with a qualified person. You define the threshold for these escalations in your configuration settings.
How long does it take to set up a direct ordering storefront?
Modern full-stack platforms can deploy a compliant dispensary storefront in days, not months. POS integration, menu sync, age verification, and checkout are included in most current platforms. A custom build from scratch takes longer, but that is no longer the only option.
Do I need a separate system for phone orders?
Not anymore. AI phone hosts can now handle inbound order calls, answer menu questions, and log transactions to the same system as online orders, so your inventory and customer data stay unified regardless of how the customer chose to order.
What does it cost to run a direct ordering channel for a dispensary?
Payment processing fees typically run 2 to 3 percent per transaction, compared to 15 to 20 percent on most third-party platforms. Platform and software costs vary, but most dispensaries that model the switch find they break even on fees within the first month of volume, before accounting for the retention gains.
Will my customers actually switch from Weedmaps to ordering directly?
Most will, with the right incentive. A discount on the first direct order, a loyalty point system that only works through your storefront, or a faster reorder flow are all proven conversion levers. Customers switch when the direct experience is at least as good and offers something the platform does not.
Can I use Weedmaps and run a direct ordering channel at the same time?
Yes. Most dispensaries that switch to direct ordering keep their third-party listings active for discovery. The strategy is to use third-party platforms to acquire new customers, then convert them to direct ordering through loyalty incentives, SMS follow-up, and a better checkout experience on your own storefront.
Ready to run your orders on infrastructure you own?
ordrs deploys a full direct ordering channel, including storefront, phone host, and customer retention tools, for merchants who are done building someone else’s customer list.






