1 / 14

7 Business Marketing

7 Business Marketing. Professor Close. Business Marketing. Organization market is larger than consumer market (B2B marketing/industrial marketing) Easy to define need: do not have the “less rational” needs of consumers (fewer customers) Organizations purchase for: Resale Use in business

Download Presentation

7 Business Marketing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 7Business Marketing Professor Close

  2. Business Marketing • Organization market is larger than consumer market (B2B marketing/industrial marketing) • Easy to define need: do not have the “less rational” needs of consumers (fewer customers) • Organizations purchase for: • Resale • Use in business • Or to produce other items • B2B internet marketing is huge (disintermediation)

  3. Internet B2B Trends

  4. Relationship Marketing • Decrease in costs: changes in traditional relationship (long-term interaction, not just 1 transaction) • Cooperation (strategic alliances): • Mutual goals (still difficult; why Japanese experience during troubled times) • Info. Sharing: • Provide data to enhance decisions (web – Dell) • Potential for abuse (GM sends specs to others) • Keiretsu

  5. Relationship Commitment • Adaptations: • Make changes for one customer (NUMMI; McDonald’s & China potatoes) • May hedge bets with multiple suppliers • Operational linkages (outsourcing: train other jobs; IBM) • Ties with internal processes (place people in plants) • Allows better coordination (Mark @ VSU, windshields, Rubbermaid)

  6. McDonald’s in Saudi Arabia

  7. Legal Bonds • Firestone-Ford, Maytag-Hoover, B2C, over $150, 2 round trip tickets 200,000) • Formalized? But locked in • “Hand shake” allows flexibility (other risks) +

  8. Business Customers • Producers • Resellers • Governments • Institutions

  9. NAICS • North American Industry Classification System • Utility maximization: • Personal selling: customized, large orders • Purchasing specs: precise description of what firm wants • Demand: derived, inelastic, or joint • More volume • B2B = geographically concentrated

  10. Buying Center • Roles – auto parts • Users: work with product, often generate specs (line workers) • Influencers: can modify outcome; dev. Specs, evaluate alternatives (engineers) • Buyers: complete transaction, negotiate (purchasing manager) • Deciders: select or approve (upper/middle management; may be same as buyer) • Gatekeepers: control info. Within buying center (secretary)

  11. Buying Situations (1) • Buying process: 3 types (goes with individual as well) • Straight rebuy • Small, recurring items like office supplies • Little buyer’s time, little info needed • Reminder ads, automate process • Purchasing manager and no one else

  12. Buying Situations (2) • Modified rebuy (contract with dining hall ends) • Some review • Dissatisfy: look for opportunity • Comparison ads: your product • Your client: protect, attention to changing needs • New task buying (plant overseas) • Unique situation • Lots of information, effort, and time • Develop product and vendor specs • Many influences

  13. Dell Commercial

  14. Summary • Types of business products, negotiations • B2B and the internet • Buying situations • Multiple influences – roles • Relationship marketing • NAICS • Buying center • Any questions?

More Related