Chapter 5. Understanding Organizational Markets and Buying Behavior. Copyright 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Similar documents
ANALYZING BUSINESS MARKETS

Chapter Six. Business Markets and Business Buying Behavior. i t s good and good for you 6-1

Business Markets and Business Buyer Behavior. Chapter 7

After studying this chapter you will be able to

Products and Services for Businesses

8 The Buying Process and Buyer Behavior

Contents. Consumer Choice: Individual and Market Demand- Demand and Elasticity. I) Markets and Prices. II) Demand Side. III) The Supply Side

Chapter 2 The Role of IMC in the Marketing Process. Learning Objectives. Learning Objectives

strategy execution results build your brand grow your sales

BAFS Elective Part Business Management Module Marketing Management

Marketing Management, 4e (Winer/Dhar) Chapter 5 Organizational Buying Behavior

CHAPTER 11: SUPPLY-CHAIN MANAGEMENT TRUE/FALSE

6. MARKETING CONCEPTION A PHILOSOPHY OF BUSINESS, CUSTOMERS AND CONSUMERS, MARKETING AND SELLING, PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT PROCESS - STRATEGY, TACTICS

Supply and Demand. Chapter 3. McGraw-Hill/Irwin. Copyright 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Marketing Process and Consumer Behavior

Chapter 4. Demand, Supply and Markets. These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook

MGT301 Solved 3 rd Quiz solved By Cuter Killer and Masood Khan June 2011

Products, Services, and Brands

ECON (ENT) COURSE LESSON THREE. Supply and Demand. CHAPTER 7 Supply and Demand. Lesson Three Supply and Demand 93

Section 10.1 Introduction to Marketing

CUSTOMER ANALYSIS. Course: Marketing Management.

Chapter 1 Introduction to Supply Chain Management

Marketing: Helping Buyers Buy

Outsourcing: Managing Interorganizational Relations

Copyright 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 14-

Chapter 4: Consumer and industrial

Perfectly Competitive Supply. Chapter 6. Learning Objectives

Roxborough Manayunk Real Estate Market Report

A better marketplace for almonds

Essentials of Marketing. Chapter 1 Marketing s Value to Consumers, Firms, and Society. McGraw-Hill/Irwin

McGraw-Hill/Irwin 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.

Chapter Ten. Pricing: Understanding and Capturing Customer Value. i t s good and good for you 10-1

Financial Accounting. John J. Wild. Sixth Edition. Copyright 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Supply Management. Where We Are Now CHAPTER TEN. Measurement. Organizational. Sustainability. Management. Globalization.

LCS International, Inc. PMP Review. Chapter 9 Conducting Procurements and Sharing Information. Presented by David J.

Supply and Demand. Chapter 3. Learning Objectives

ORGANIZING YOUR THOUGHTSII Use the diagram to help you take notes. Supply and prices are related. Indicate how they are related in the diagram.

A Preface to Marketing Management

Elasticity and Its Applications. Copyright 2004 South-Western

Chapter 1 Marketing: Creating and Capturing Customer Value

Chapter 1 A Business Marketing Perspective

A market is any arrangement that enables buyers and sellers to get information and do business with each other.

CHAPTER 5 SUPPLIER PARTNERSHIP

Marketing Exam Study Guide

Chapter 2 Market Forces: Demand and Supply

Pricing. Principles of Marketing Global Edition Kotler and Armstrong. Chapter 10: Understanding and Capturing Customer Value

Chapter 4: Demand Section 3

Organisational Buying Behaviour. Week - 3

Chapter 6 Elasticity: The Responsiveness of Demand and Supply

Monopoly. Firm s equilibrium. Muhammad Rafi Khan

Principles of Marketing Seventeenth Edition

DEMAND AND SUPPLY. Chapter 3. Principles of Macroeconomics by OpenStax College is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.

Marketing process & consumer behaviour

Chapter 5. Final Consumers and Their Buying Behavior

Transfer Pricing Cost Accounting Horngreen, Datar, Foster

The Foundations of Microeconomics

Compiled by: Shubhanshi Gaudani 1. Marketing Mix: Four marketing decisions needed for effective marketing of the product

Marketing: Managing Profitable Customer Relationships 1

Learning Objectives. Learning Objectives 17/03/2016. Chapter 1 An Introduction to Integrated Marketing Communications

2013 Pearson. Why did the price of coffee soar in 2010 and 2011?

MARKETS AND SOCIETY Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 3 rd Edition

MGT301 - Principles of Marketing Final Paper of Feb 2010

Presentation by: Supichaya Smerchuar

Financing Renewable Energy Projects. Part I: Government Subsidies

Understanding Inventory Fundamentals

Chapter 2. E-Marketplaces: Structures, Mechanisms, Economics, and Impacts

Principles of Marketing

Business Plan Development: Marketing Plan. Session 8. Powerpoint Presentation by: RD VELASCO Entrepreneurship and Business Planning

Community-Based Renewable Energy

INTERNATIONAL MARKETING (PART-7) CHANNELS OF DISTRIBUTION

Organizational Intelligence

One business model. Three industries.

Introduction to. marketing. theory and practice. Second edition. Adrian Palmer OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

STUDENT BUSINESS PLAN PART 1: THE CONTEMPORARY BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT

Chapter 1. The Demand for Audit and Other Assurance Services

Chapter 2 E-Marketplaces: Structure, Mechanisms, Economics, and Impacts

Chapter 1. Learning Objectives 1/3/2018. The Growing Complexity of Marketing Research. Marketing Research for Managerial Decision Making

CHAPTER 3 MARKET INSTITUTIONS Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition

How to Do Business with The Orlando Utilities Commission

Changes in Consumer Demand. What is a supply chain? Supply Chain Management

Managerial Accounting: An Overview

Foundations of Operations Management, 4e Cdn. (Ritzman) Chapter 2: Supply Chain Management. 2.1 End-of-Chapter Problems

ELECTRONIC REVERSE AUCTIONS: FACTORS OF SUCCESS

Managerial Economics, 01/12/2003. A Glossary of Terms

The Meaning of Price Analysis

INFORMATION SHEET DIPLOMA IN DIGITAL MEDIA DESIGN DDM DIGITAL ADVERTISING DESIGN 3.0 SEGMENTATION, TARGETING & MARKETING MIX

Personal Selling and Sales Management

SOLUTIONS TO TEXT PROBLEMS 6

New Product Development Process

Solution Manual for Auditing and Assurance Services 14th Edition by Arens

Competitive Markets. Jeffrey Ely. January 13, This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License.

Chapter 6: Combining Supply and Demand

The Financial Market

Learning Objectives. 1. Explain how lean systems improve internal and supply chain operations

MARK SCHEME for the May 2013 series

ACCOUNTING FOR MERCHANDISING OPERATIONS

Economics Review. Part 2

Chapter 6. Competition

Buying Power. Bringing Big-Business Electricity Choices to Small and Mid-size Businesses

1) Executive summary. 2) Analysis of the situation and PEST. Example. Questions. Demand trends, social factors, psychographics

Transcription:

Chapter 5 Understanding Organizational Markets and Buying Behavior McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Who Is the Customer? A comparison of organizational versus consumer markets The crucial differences from a marketing viewpoint are: The motivations of the buyer: what the organization will do with the product and the benefits it seeks to obtain. The demographics of the market. The nature of the purchasing process and the relationship between buyer and seller. 5-2

Who Is the Customer? Purchase motives Derived demand Demand for industrial goods and services is: Derived from the demand for consumer goods and services. Relatively inelastic. More erratic because small increases or decreases in consumer demand can, over time, strongly affect the demand for manufacturing plants and equipment. More cyclical. 5-3

Who Is the Customer? Market demographics: Organizational buyers, when compared with buyers of consumer goods, are: Fewer in number. Larger. Geographically concentrated. 5-4

Who Is the Customer? Purchasing processes and relationships Organizational markets are characterized by the following: Use of professional buying specialists following prescribed procedures. Closer buyer seller relationships. Presence of multiple buying influences. More apt to buy on specifications. 5-5

Who Is the Customer? Companies selling to organizational markets needs to keep one eye on: Possible changes in organizations buying behavior for its product. Trends in the underlying consumer markets. Organizational marketers tend to: Use direct selling. Be heavy users of highinvolvement media. 5-6

Who Is the Customer? Participants in the organizational purchasing process: Users Influencers Gatekeepers Buyers Deciders 5-7

Who Is the Customer? The organizational buying center The individuals in this group share knowledge and information relevant to the purchase of a particular product or service. Marketing implications Which individuals to target. How and when each should be contacted. What kinds of information and appeals each is likely to find most useful and persuasive. 5-8

How Organizational Members Make Purchase Decisions Types of buying situations A straight rebuy involves purchasing a common product or service the organization has bought many times before. A modified rebuy occurs when the organization s needs remain unchanged, but buying center members are not satisfied with the current product or the supplier. New-task buying occurs when an organization faces a new and unique need or problem. 5-9

The Organizational Decision-Making Process for New-Task Purchases 5-10

How Organizational Members Make Purchase Decisions Marketing implications of different purchasing situations Extensive purchasing process applies primarily to new-task purchases. Such situations are relatively favorable to potential new suppliers who have never sold to the organization. At the other extreme is the straight rebuy. In, suppliers have a major competitive advantage. Out suppliers must attempt to interest the buyer in modifying the purchase criteria. 5-11

How Organizational Members Make Purchase Decisions Developing long-term buyer supplier relationships Trust between supplier and customer develops person-to-person Conditions favoring trust and commitment A firm is more likely to trust and develop a long-term commitment to a supplier when that supplier makes dedicated, customer-specific investments. 5-12

How Organizational Members Make Purchase Decisions Government markets Government organizations tend to require more documentation and paperwork. Typically require bids, and contracts are usually awarded to the lowest bidder. Negotiated or cost-plus contract basis. Standard marketing strategies and tools are less relevant. 5-13

Selling Different Kinds of Goods and Services to Organizations Raw materials Purchased primarily by processors and manufacturers, they are inputs for making other products. The two types are natural products and farm products Implications for marketing decision makers The limited supply of most natural products gives producers the power to limit supplies and administer prices. 5-14

Selling Different Kinds of Goods and Services to Organizations Component materials and parts Purchased by manufacturers as inputs for making other products. Component materials have been processed to some degree before they are sold. Component parts are manufactured items assembled as part of another product without further changes in form. 5-15

Selling Different Kinds of Goods and Services to Organizations Implications for marketing decision makers Most components are bought in large quantities they are usually sold direct. Sellers must ensure a steady, reliable supply, especially when a just-in-time (JIT) management system is used by the buyer. 5-16

Selling Different Kinds of Goods and Installations Services to Organizations Buildings and major capital equipment that manufacturers and service producers use. Implications for marketing decision makers Many installations are custommade. Long period of negotiation. Firms usually provide many postsale services. Promotional emphasis on personal selling. High-caliber, well-trained salespeople. 5-17

Selling Different Kinds of Goods and Services to Organizations Operating supplies They do not become a part of the buyer s product or service, nor are they used directly in producing it. They facilitate the buying organization s dayto-day operations. Implications for marketing decision makers Wholesale middlemen are typically used to distribute these supplies. Price is usually the critical decision variable. 5-18

Selling Different Kinds of Goods and Business services Services to Organizations Implications for marketing decision makers The supplier s qualifications, past performance, and reputation are critical determinants. Price is less important. Price often serves as an indicator of quality. Personal selling and negotiation are important. 5-19