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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 1 Organisational Buying Behaviour Chapter 17 The similarities and differences between consumer/household behaviour and organisational buying behaviour How marketers can analyse organisational buying behaviour and apply it when developing marketing strategies The ways in which large, complex organisations approach different types of purchase decisions How certain consumer behaviour concepts can be adapted to studying and understanding organisational buying behaviour
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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 2 Overall Model of Organisational Buying Behaviour
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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 3 Organisational Culture and Organisational Decisions
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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 4 Organisational Values Different values create different corporate cultures ôIBM versus apple – IBM is corporate, formal and takes itself seriously – Apple is less formal, creative and promotes a more open organisational style
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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 5 Organisational Demographics Organisational characteristics ô size ô activities and objectives ô location ô industry category Organisational composition characteristics ô gender ô age ô education ô income distribution of employees
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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 6 Reference Groups Like consumer behaviour, organisational behaviour and purchasing decisions are influenced by reference groups In industrial markets, the most powerful type of reference group is that of lead users Trade associations Financial analysts
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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 7 Lead Users Lead users are innovative organisations that derive a great deal of their success from leading change. As a result, their adoption of a new product, service, technology, or manufacturing process is watched and emulated by the majority.
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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 8 Internal Factors Influencing Organisational Culture Shared values and value conflicts Perception Motives and emotions—organisational decisions tend to be less emotional than many consumer purchase decisions Learning—organisations learn through their experiences and perceptions.
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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 9 Purchase Situation Straight-rebuy ôlow-involvement decisions ômade by a single person in the organisation Modified-re-buy ÷decision requires that buyer organisation expends more effort and includes more people because of an important modification to the product, delivery, price or terms and conditions New task ÷first time buy ÷lots of individuals influencing and involved with decision-making process
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Copyright 2002 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy 3e by Neal, Quester and Hawkins 10 Organisational Decision Process Problem recognition Information search Alternative evaluation Purchase decision Product usage Evaluation
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