Transcript B2B - MSc
chapter 4 B2B buying behaviour learning objectives • Understand the nature and structure of B2B buying • Appreciate the differences between B2B buying and consumer buying • Analyze the buying process and the reasons why purchasing varies across different buying situations • Link B2B buying with the development of marketing strategy 4-2 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 B2B Marketing Defined B2B marketing is the management process responsible for the facilitation of exchange between producers of goods and services and their organisational customers 4-3 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Flybe chose Embraer to supply its new aircraft 4-4 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 B2B and Consumer Markets_1 B2B customers Consumer customers • Purchase products to meet specific business needs • Purchase products to meet individual or family needs • Emphasize economic benefits • Emphasize psychological benefits • Use formal, lengthy purchasing policies and processes • Buy on impulse or with minimal processes 4-5 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 B2B and Consumer Markets_2 B2B customers Consumer customers • Involve large groups in purchasing decisions • Purchase as individuals or as a family unit • Buy large quantities infrequently • Buy small quantities frequently • Want a customised product package • Are content with standardised product packages 4-6 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 B2B and Consumer Markets_3 B2B customers Consumer customers • Experience major problems if supply fails • Experience minor irritation is supply fails • Find switching suppliers difficult • Find switching suppliers easy • Negotiate on price • Accept stated price 4-7 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 B2B and Consumer Markets_4 B2B customers Consumer customers • Purchase direct from suppliers • Purchase from intermediaries • Justify an emphasis on personal selling • Justify an emphasis on mass media 4-8 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Types of B2B Customers • Commercial enterprises • Government bodies • Institutions 4-9 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Figure 4.2 A Clothing Manufacturer and its Suppliers Suppliers of labour Suppliers of raw materials and components Suppliers of manufacturing equipment Manufacturer Suppliers of services 4-10 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Suppliers of other equipment and supplies Characteristics of B2B Markets Nature of demand Structure of demand Complexity of buying process Buyer-seller relationships 4-11 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Derived Demand Goodyear’s RunOnFlat Tyres are featured on •BMWs, •Ferraris, •Corvettes, •Maseratis, and •Mercedes Source: © Goodyear Dunlop Tyres Europe B.V. http://eu.goodyear.com 4-12 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Joint Demand Demand for Samsung’s Solid State Disk (SSD) is tightly coupled with the demand for computers and other devices with memory chips 4-13 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Inelastic Demand Elasticity of demand refers to the extent to which the quantity of a product demanded changes when its price changes; If a product has inelastic demand, demand does not change due to price changes 4-14 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Should a company purchase from multiple suppliers? Supplier categories at Phillips: • Supplier-partners • Preferred suppliers • Commercial suppliers 4-15 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Advantages of Single Sourcing • Improved communications • Increased responsiveness • Shared design of quality control systems • Elimination of supplier switching costs 4-16 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 • Improvement in product cost effectiveness • Reduced prices through larger volume • Reduced prices through reduced supplier costs • Enhanced ability to implement JIT systems Disadvantages of Single Sourcing • Increased costs through lack of competitive pressure • Increased supply vulnerability 4-17 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 • Reduced market intelligence and flexibility • Improved supplier appraisal capacity Advantages and Disadvantages of Multiple Sourcing Advantages Disadvantages • Increased competitive pressure • Perceived lack of commitment • Improved supply continuity • Increased costs • Improved market intelligence • Improved supplier appraisal effectiveness 4-18 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 • Less supplier investment • Reduced willingness to adapt • Higher operating costs Purchase Significance New Task Modified re-buy 4-19 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Routine re-buy Buying Decision-Making Process Precipitation Product specification Supplier selection Commitment 4-20 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Roles in the Buying Process • Purchasing - handle relationships with suppliers • Production/operations - meeting targets for the end product in both quantity and quality terms • Engineering - the specification and design • Research and Development (R&D) – look for new solutions to problems • Finance - devolve budgets to appropriate managers • Marketing - outputs of the production process 4-21 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Buyer-Seller Contact in B2B Markets (Unit Production Model) Supplier Buyer Production engineering Production engineering Design Design Sales Purchasing Quality Quality etc. etc. Source: Adapted from Johanson (1982), copyright 1982 © John Wiley & Sons Limited. Reproduced with permission. 4-22 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Buyer-Seller Contact (Mass Production Model) Production engineering Design Sales Purchasing Quality etc. Source: Adapted from Johanson (1982), copyright 1982 © John Wiley & Sons Limited. Reproduced with permission. 4-23 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Figure 4.7 Commodity Positioning Matrix 4-24 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Buying Centres Consumer B2B Initiator User Influencer Influencer Decider Decider Purchaser Buyer User Gatekeeper 4-25 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Buying Criteria: Economic Influences Appropriate prices Product specification Quality consistency Supply reliability and continuity Customer service 4-26 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Buying Criteria: Non-Economic Influences Prestige Career security Friendship Other personal needs Trust 4-27 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Approaches to Supplier Handling Adversarial Collaborative • Multiple suppliers • Few suppliers • Regular price quotes • Long-term relationship • Adversarial negotiations • Partnerships • Sporadic communication • • Little cooperation Frequent, planned communication • Quality and time scales to meet lowest expectations • Integrated operations • Quality and time scales ‘designed in’ • Emphasis on lowest overall cost • Emphasis on lowest unit price 4-28 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Relationship Life Cycle Awareness Exploration Expansion Commitment Dissolution 4-29 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Key Terms_1 • Activities directed towards marketing by one organisation to another are called _____. B2B marketing • A group of individuals that contribute towards or take direct responsibility for organisational purchasing decisions is called a _____. Buying centre • Another term for buying centre is _____. Decision making unit 4-30 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Key Terms_2 • What form of demand for products or components in B2B markets depends on consumer demand further down the chain? Derived demand • What form of demand for one product or component in a B2B market is dependent on the supply or availability of another? Joint demand 4-31 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Key Terms_3 • A _____ occurs when goods and services are purchased relatively infrequently by organisations that reevaluate their choices before making a repeat purchase decision. Modified re-buy • _____ is the sourcing of a particular B2B product from more than one supplier simultaneously. Multiple sourcing 4-32 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Key Terms_4 • _____ occurs when products are purchased infrequently by organisations, and involve a high level of formalised information collection and analysis before a purchasing decision is made. New task purchasing • The criteria to which an organisational purchase must conform in terms of quality, design, compatibility, performance, price, etc is called _____. Product specification 4-33 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Key Terms_5 • _____ refers to an organisation's preferences, systems, and procedures for purchasing. Purchasing policy • The evolution of buyer-seller relationships in B2B markets, through stages including awareness, exploration, expansion, commitment and dissolution is called the _____. Relationship lifecycle 4-34 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006 Key Terms_6 • A _____ occurs when products are purchased frequently by organisations from established suppliers, with little or no formal decision-making involved in the repeat purchase. Routine re-buy • The sourcing of a particular B2B product from only one supplier is called _____. Single sourcing 4-35 Brassington & Pettitt, Principles of Marketing 4e, © Pearson Education 2006