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CHAPTER 6 Business-to-Business (B2B) Marketing Chapter Objectives 1
Explain each of the components of the business-to-business (B2B) market. Describe the major approaches to segmenting B2B markets. Identify the major characteristics of the business market and its demand. 4 Discuss the decision to make, lease, or buy. Describe the major influences on business buying behavior. Outline the steps in the organizational buying process. 7 Classify organizational buying situations. Explain the buying center concept. Discuss the challenges and strategies for marketing to government, institutional, and international buyers. 5 8 2 9 6 3
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• Business-to-business (B2B) market is significantly larger than the consumer market.
• Example: U.S. companies spend more than $300 billion annually just for office and maintenance supplies. • Example: Department of Defense budget in a recent year was $500 billion. • Business-to-business (B2B) marketing Organizational sales and purchases of goods and services to support production of other products, to facilitate daily company operations, or for resale.
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NATURE OF THE BUSINESS MARKET
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NATURE OF THE BUSINESS MARKET
• Companies also buy services, such as legal, accounting, office-cleaning, and other services. • Some firms focus entirely on business markets. • Example: Caterpillar, which makes construction and mining equipment. • Diverse market, everything from a box of paper clips to thousands of parts for an automobile manufacturer.
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COMPONENTS OF THE BUSINESS MARKET
• Four main components: • Commercial market Individuals and firms that acquire products to support, directly or indirectly, production of other goods and services. • Largest segment of the business market. • Trade industries Retailers or wholesalers that purchase products for resale to others. • Also called resellers, marketing intermediaries that operate in the trade sector. • Government—all domestic levels (federal, state, local) and foreign governments; also act as sellers—e.g., confiscated goods. • Public and private institutions, such as hospitals, churches, colleges and universities, and museums.
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B2B MARKETS: THE INTERNET CONNECTION
• More than 94 percent of all Internet sales are B2B transactions. • Opens up foreign markets to sellers. • Largest segment of the business market. DIFFERENCES IN FOREIGN BUSINESS MARKETS • May differ due to variations in regulations and cultural practices. • Businesses must be willing to adapt to local customs and business practices and research cultural preferences.
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SEGMENTING B2B MARKETS SEGMENTATION BY DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS
• Segmentation helps marketers develop the most appropriate strategy. SEGMENTATION BY DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS • Grouping by size based on sales revenues or number of employees. SEGMENTATION BY CUSTOMER TYPE • Grouping in broad categories, such as by industry. • Customer-based segmentation Dividing a business-to-business market into homogeneous groups based on buyers’ product specifications.
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North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)
• Federal government developed Standard Industrial Classification in 1930s to subdivide business market into detailed segments. • Replaced by NAICS with implementation of NAFTA. • North American Industry Classification System Classification used by NAFTA countries to categorize the business marketplace into detailed market segments.
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SEGMENTATION BY END-USE APPLICATION
• End-use application segmentation Segmenting a business-to-business market based on how industrial purchasers will use the product. • Example: A supplier of industrial gases that sells hydrogen to some companies and carbon dioxide to others. SEGMENTATION BY PURCHASE CATEGORIES • Segmenting according to organizational buyer characteristics. • Example: Whether a company has a designated central purchasing department or each unit within the company handles its own purchasing. • Businesses increasingly segment customers according to the stage in their relationship. • Example: Whether a customer is new or a long-term partner.
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CHARACTERISTICS OF THE B2B MARKET
GEOGRAPHIC MARKET CONCENTRATION • Business market more concentrated than consumer market. • Example: Companies that sell to the federal government are often located near Washington, D.C. • Businesses becoming less geographically concentrated as Internet technology improves. SIZES AND NUMBER OF BUYERS • Business market has smaller number of buyers than consumer market. • Many buyers are large organizations, such as Boeing, which buys jet engines.
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THE PURCHASE DECISION PROCESS
• Sellers must navigate organizational buying processes that often involve multiple decision makers. • Purchasing process usually more formal than in consumer market. • Purchases may require bidding and negotiations. BUYER-SELLER RELATIONSHIPS • Often more complex than in consumer market. • Greater reliance on relationship marketing. EVALUATING INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MARKETS • Business purchasing patterns differ from country to country. • Global sourcing Purchasing goods and services from suppliers worldwide. • Can bring significant cost savings but requires adjustments.
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BUSINESS MARKET DEMAND
• Demand characteristics vary from market to market.
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DERIVED DEMAND VOLATILE DEMAND
• The linkage between demand for a company’s output and its purchases of resources such as machinery, components, supplies, and raw materials. • Example: Demand for computer microprocessor chips is derived from demand for personal computers. • Organizational buyers purchase two types of items: • Capital items—long-lived business aspects that depreciate. • Expense items—items consumed within short time periods. VOLATILE DEMAND • Derived demand creates volatility. • Example: Demand for gasoline pumps may be reduced if demand for gasoline slows.
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JOINT DEMAND INELASTIC DEMAND
• Results when the demand for one business product is related to the demand for another business product used in combination with the first item. • Example: If lumber supply falls, then decrease in construction will affect concrete market. INELASTIC DEMAND • Demand throughout an industry will not change significantly due to a price change. • Example: Construction firms will not necessarily buy more lumber if prices fall unless overall housing demand also increases.
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INVENTORY ADJUSTMENTS
• Just-in-time (JIT) inventory policies boost efficiency by cutting inventory and requiring vendors to deliver inputs as they are needed. • Often use sole sourcing, buying a firm’s entire stock of a product from just one supplier. • Latest inventory trend: JIT II, suppliers to place representatives at the customer’s facility to work as part of an integrated, on-site customer–supplier team. • Inventory adjustments are also vital to wholesalers and retailers.
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