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Chapter 8
Analyzing Business
Markets and Business
Buying Behavior
Organizational Buying
• This is the decision-making process by which formal
organizations establish the need for purchased products and
services and identify, evaluate, and choose among alternative
brands and suppliers.
• For example, rather than manufacturing the parts themselves,
computer manufacturers often buy computer parts and put
them together to create a finished product.
• (Lenovo Product with Intel Processor)
The Business MarketVersusThe Consumer
Market
•For use in the operation of a
business or organization.
•To manufacture other
products
•For resale to others
Organizational
Product
For personal or
household use
Consumer
Product
Business Market
• consists of all the organizations that acquire goods and services
used in the production of other products or services that are sold,
rented, or supplied to others.
• Example:
• Mattel buys everything from plastic to paints to produce toys.
Fewer Buyers, larger Buyers
Fewer buyers: Business
marketers normally deal with
far fewer buyers than do
consumer marketers.
Larger buyers: Buyers for a few
large firms do most of the
purchasing in many industries.
Close Supplier-customer Relationship
• Business Market relationship is often are more complex
than consumer relationships, and they require superior
communication among the organizations’ personnel.
• Basic aim here is long term relationship.
• primary goal of business market relationship is to provide
advantages( lower price, quicker delivery, better quality
and reliability, customized product features, more
favorable financing terms and so on).
Geographically
Concentrated Buyers
• Certain industries locate in particular areas to be close to
customers.
• concentrated buyers Geographical concentration of
producers helps to reduce selling cost.
• Business marketers need to closely monitor regional
shifts of certain industries. Selling costs are reduced with
the geographical concentration of the producers.
Derived Demand
• Derived Demand refers to the linkage between demand for a company’s
output and its purchases of resources such as machinery, components,
suppliers and raw materials.
• Ex.The demand for computer microprocessor chips derived from the
demand for personal computer.
Inelastic Demand
• Demand throughout an industry will not change significantly due
to the price change.
• Example:
• If the price of lumber drops, a construction firm will not
necessarily buy more lumber from its supplier unless another
factor – such as low mortgage inteterest rates – causes more
consumers to purchase new homes.
Fluctuating Demand
Derived demand creates volatility in business market demand. This happens
when the demand for business goods and services tends to be more volatile
than the demand for consumer goods and services.
• Example: Assume the sales volume for a gasoline retailer is increasing at an
annual rate of 5%. Now supposed the demand for this gasoline brand slows
to a 3% annual increase.This slow down might persuade the firm to keep its
current gasoline pumps and replace them only market conditions improve.
Professional Purchasing
• In the business market, the purchases are often made by trained purchasing
officials. Purchasing policies, constraints, requirements etc are to be
followed.
• Some companies designate centralized purchasing departments to serve
the entire firm, and others allow each unit to handle its own buying. A
supplier may deal with one purchasing agent or several decision makers at
various levels. Each of these structures results in different buying behavior.
Example :
request for quotation, proposals, and purchase contacts.
Several Buying Influences
• More people typically influence business buying decisions.
Buying committees are common in the purchase of major
goods; marketers have to send well-trained sales reps and often
sales teams to deal with these well-trained buyers.
• Example: Metal supplier Phelps Dodge uses an “account
management approach” to reach all the key people who
influence business buying decisions in customer organizations.
Multiple Sales Calls
•Large sale cycles (often measured in years) for large
projects. Average industrial sale takes four sales calls to
close.
•In case of capital equipment sale for large projects,it may
take many attempts to fund a project, and the sales
cycle-between quoting a job and delivering a product.
Directed Purchasing
•Business buyers often buy directly from the
manufacturers rather than through
intermediaries.
•Example: mainframes, aircrafts etc.
Reciprocity
•Business buyers often select suppliers who also buy from
them.
•A practice of Buying from suppliers who are also
customers – is a controversial practice in a number of
procurement situations.
•An office manufacturer may favor a particular supplier of
component parts if the supplier has recently made a
major purchase of the manufacturer’s products.
Leasing
• Leasing is a process by which a firm can obtain the use of certain
fixed assets for which it must pay a series of contractual,
periodic, or tax deductible payments.
• leasing serves as an alternative method for customers looking to
use high-priced products and services .
• For example, customers often lease software products.The
process works similar to leasing a car, where customers pay a fee
over time to use the technology without owning the equipment.
At the end of the lease, the hardware is returned or purchased at
a fair market price .
Buying Situations
•Buying behavior also involves the degree of effort the
purchase decision demands and the levels within the
organization where it is made.
•1) straight rebuying 2) modified rebuying 3) new -task
buying
Systems Buying and Selling
Systems Buying
• A single provider provides the total package for the buyer’s
needs
• practice originated with government purchases of major
weapons and communications systems.
• May involve turnkey solutions
Systems Selling
• Manufacturers sell entire systems
• Supplier provides all MRO items (maintenance, repair,
operating)
Turnkey Solution
•is a type of project that is constructed so that it could be
sold to any buyer as a completed product.This is
contrasted with build to order, where the constructor
builds an item to the buyer's exact specifications, or
when an incomplete product is sold with the assumption
that the buyer would complete it.
Participants in the Business Buying Process
(The Buying Center)
1.Initiators
2.Users
3.Influencers
4.Deciders
5.Approvers
6.Buyers
7.Gatekeepers
The Buying Center
•A company’s buying center encompasses everyone
involved in any aspect of its buying activity.
•Buying center participants in any purchase seek to satisfy
personal needs, such as participation or status, as well as
organizational needs.A buying center is not part of a
firm’s formal organizational structure. It is an informal
group whose composition and size vary among purchase
situations and firms.
7 Members of the
Buying Centre
• Those who request that
something be purchased.They
may be users of others in the
organization
• These people who “initiate” or
start the buying process are
called initiators.
Initiators
7 Members of the Buying
Centre
•People in the
organization who
actually use the product
or service.
Users
7 Members of the
Buying Centre
•affect the buying
decision, usually
by helping define
the specifications
for what is bought.
Influencers
7 Members of the
Buying Centre
•have the formal
authority and
responsibility to
select the supplier
and negotiate the
terms of the
contract.
Decider
7 Members of the
Buying Centre
•People who authorize
the proposed actions of
deciders or buyers are
approvers.
•They could also be
personnel from top
management or
finance department or
the users.Approvers
7 Members of the Buying Centre
•Buyers select suppliers and
negotiate the terms of purchase.
•They are people who have formal
authority to select the supplier and
arrange the purchase terms.They
play a very important role in
selecting vendors and negotiating
and sometimes help to shape the
product specifications.
Buyers
7 Members of the Buying
Centre
•A gatekeeper is like a filter of
information. He is the one the
marketer has to pass through
before he reaches the decision
makers.
•control the flow of
information to other
members of the buying
center.
Gatekeepers
Figure 8-1:Major influences on industrial
buying behavior
Environmental
Level of demand
•Economic outlook
•Interest rate
•Rate of technological
change
•Political and
regulatory
developments
•Competitive
developments
•Social responsibility
concerns
Organizational
•Objectives
•Policies
•Procedures
•Organizational
structures
systems
Interpersonal
•Interest
•Authority
•Status
•Empathy
•Persuasive-
ness
Individual
Age
Income
Education
Job position
Personality
Risk attitudes
culture
Business
buyer
Lean Production
• Enables the company to produce a more high-quality product at lower cost,
in less time, using less labor. Lean production incorporates just-in-time (JIT)
production, stricter quality control, frequent and reliable supply delivery,
suppliers locating closer to customers, computerized purchasing, stable
production schedules made available to suppliers, and single sourcing with
early supplier involvement.
Just InTime (JIT)
An inventory strategy companies employ to increase
efficiency and decrease waste by receiving goods only as
they are needed in the production process, thereby
reducing inventory costs.
Three company purchasing orientations
(Buying Orientation)
the purchaser’s focus is short term and tactical
(Procurement orientation)
buyers simultaneously seek quality improvements and
cost reductions
(Supply Chain ManagementOrientation)
purchasing’s role is further broadened to become a more
strategic, value-adding operation
The Purchasing/
Procurement Process
Problem
Recognition
General need
description
Product
Specification
Supplier
Search
Proposal
solicitation
Supplier
Selection
Order Routine
Specification
Performance
Review
Institutional And Government Markets
•Institutional Market
•Larger buyers (Consists of schools, hospitals,
nursing homes, prisons, and other institutions
that must provide goods and services to people
in their care.)
Institutional And Government Markets
Government Market
•government market is a market where the consumers
are federal, state, and local governments.
Governments purchase both goods and services from
the private sector. Governments buy the same types
of products and services as private sector consumers,
plus some more exotic products such as aircraft
carriers, fighter jets, tanks, spy satellites, and nuclear
weapons
Reference
• Marketing Management by Philip
Kotler (11th Edition)
• Marketing Management: A South
Asian Perspective by Kotler, Keller
Koshy, Jha (13th Edition)
• Marketing Management by Kotler,
Keller (14th Edition)
• Marketing Management by Philip
Kotler (Millenium Edition)
• Principles of Contemporary
Marketing by David L. Kurtz (15th
Edition)
• www.slidshare.com
• www.investopedia.com
• www.wikipedia.com
• www.cunsomerhandbook.com
• www.learntechnicaltrading.com

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Analyzing Business Markets

  • 1. Chapter 8 Analyzing Business Markets and Business Buying Behavior
  • 2. Organizational Buying • This is the decision-making process by which formal organizations establish the need for purchased products and services and identify, evaluate, and choose among alternative brands and suppliers. • For example, rather than manufacturing the parts themselves, computer manufacturers often buy computer parts and put them together to create a finished product. • (Lenovo Product with Intel Processor)
  • 3. The Business MarketVersusThe Consumer Market •For use in the operation of a business or organization. •To manufacture other products •For resale to others Organizational Product For personal or household use Consumer Product
  • 4. Business Market • consists of all the organizations that acquire goods and services used in the production of other products or services that are sold, rented, or supplied to others. • Example: • Mattel buys everything from plastic to paints to produce toys.
  • 5. Fewer Buyers, larger Buyers Fewer buyers: Business marketers normally deal with far fewer buyers than do consumer marketers. Larger buyers: Buyers for a few large firms do most of the purchasing in many industries.
  • 6. Close Supplier-customer Relationship • Business Market relationship is often are more complex than consumer relationships, and they require superior communication among the organizations’ personnel. • Basic aim here is long term relationship. • primary goal of business market relationship is to provide advantages( lower price, quicker delivery, better quality and reliability, customized product features, more favorable financing terms and so on).
  • 7. Geographically Concentrated Buyers • Certain industries locate in particular areas to be close to customers. • concentrated buyers Geographical concentration of producers helps to reduce selling cost. • Business marketers need to closely monitor regional shifts of certain industries. Selling costs are reduced with the geographical concentration of the producers.
  • 8. Derived Demand • Derived Demand refers to the linkage between demand for a company’s output and its purchases of resources such as machinery, components, suppliers and raw materials. • Ex.The demand for computer microprocessor chips derived from the demand for personal computer.
  • 9. Inelastic Demand • Demand throughout an industry will not change significantly due to the price change. • Example: • If the price of lumber drops, a construction firm will not necessarily buy more lumber from its supplier unless another factor – such as low mortgage inteterest rates – causes more consumers to purchase new homes.
  • 10. Fluctuating Demand Derived demand creates volatility in business market demand. This happens when the demand for business goods and services tends to be more volatile than the demand for consumer goods and services. • Example: Assume the sales volume for a gasoline retailer is increasing at an annual rate of 5%. Now supposed the demand for this gasoline brand slows to a 3% annual increase.This slow down might persuade the firm to keep its current gasoline pumps and replace them only market conditions improve.
  • 11. Professional Purchasing • In the business market, the purchases are often made by trained purchasing officials. Purchasing policies, constraints, requirements etc are to be followed. • Some companies designate centralized purchasing departments to serve the entire firm, and others allow each unit to handle its own buying. A supplier may deal with one purchasing agent or several decision makers at various levels. Each of these structures results in different buying behavior. Example : request for quotation, proposals, and purchase contacts.
  • 12. Several Buying Influences • More people typically influence business buying decisions. Buying committees are common in the purchase of major goods; marketers have to send well-trained sales reps and often sales teams to deal with these well-trained buyers. • Example: Metal supplier Phelps Dodge uses an “account management approach” to reach all the key people who influence business buying decisions in customer organizations.
  • 13. Multiple Sales Calls •Large sale cycles (often measured in years) for large projects. Average industrial sale takes four sales calls to close. •In case of capital equipment sale for large projects,it may take many attempts to fund a project, and the sales cycle-between quoting a job and delivering a product.
  • 14. Directed Purchasing •Business buyers often buy directly from the manufacturers rather than through intermediaries. •Example: mainframes, aircrafts etc.
  • 15. Reciprocity •Business buyers often select suppliers who also buy from them. •A practice of Buying from suppliers who are also customers – is a controversial practice in a number of procurement situations. •An office manufacturer may favor a particular supplier of component parts if the supplier has recently made a major purchase of the manufacturer’s products.
  • 16. Leasing • Leasing is a process by which a firm can obtain the use of certain fixed assets for which it must pay a series of contractual, periodic, or tax deductible payments. • leasing serves as an alternative method for customers looking to use high-priced products and services . • For example, customers often lease software products.The process works similar to leasing a car, where customers pay a fee over time to use the technology without owning the equipment. At the end of the lease, the hardware is returned or purchased at a fair market price .
  • 17. Buying Situations •Buying behavior also involves the degree of effort the purchase decision demands and the levels within the organization where it is made. •1) straight rebuying 2) modified rebuying 3) new -task buying
  • 18. Systems Buying and Selling Systems Buying • A single provider provides the total package for the buyer’s needs • practice originated with government purchases of major weapons and communications systems. • May involve turnkey solutions Systems Selling • Manufacturers sell entire systems • Supplier provides all MRO items (maintenance, repair, operating)
  • 19. Turnkey Solution •is a type of project that is constructed so that it could be sold to any buyer as a completed product.This is contrasted with build to order, where the constructor builds an item to the buyer's exact specifications, or when an incomplete product is sold with the assumption that the buyer would complete it.
  • 20. Participants in the Business Buying Process (The Buying Center) 1.Initiators 2.Users 3.Influencers 4.Deciders 5.Approvers 6.Buyers 7.Gatekeepers
  • 21. The Buying Center •A company’s buying center encompasses everyone involved in any aspect of its buying activity. •Buying center participants in any purchase seek to satisfy personal needs, such as participation or status, as well as organizational needs.A buying center is not part of a firm’s formal organizational structure. It is an informal group whose composition and size vary among purchase situations and firms.
  • 22. 7 Members of the Buying Centre • Those who request that something be purchased.They may be users of others in the organization • These people who “initiate” or start the buying process are called initiators. Initiators
  • 23. 7 Members of the Buying Centre •People in the organization who actually use the product or service. Users
  • 24. 7 Members of the Buying Centre •affect the buying decision, usually by helping define the specifications for what is bought. Influencers
  • 25. 7 Members of the Buying Centre •have the formal authority and responsibility to select the supplier and negotiate the terms of the contract. Decider
  • 26. 7 Members of the Buying Centre •People who authorize the proposed actions of deciders or buyers are approvers. •They could also be personnel from top management or finance department or the users.Approvers
  • 27. 7 Members of the Buying Centre •Buyers select suppliers and negotiate the terms of purchase. •They are people who have formal authority to select the supplier and arrange the purchase terms.They play a very important role in selecting vendors and negotiating and sometimes help to shape the product specifications. Buyers
  • 28. 7 Members of the Buying Centre •A gatekeeper is like a filter of information. He is the one the marketer has to pass through before he reaches the decision makers. •control the flow of information to other members of the buying center. Gatekeepers
  • 29. Figure 8-1:Major influences on industrial buying behavior Environmental Level of demand •Economic outlook •Interest rate •Rate of technological change •Political and regulatory developments •Competitive developments •Social responsibility concerns Organizational •Objectives •Policies •Procedures •Organizational structures systems Interpersonal •Interest •Authority •Status •Empathy •Persuasive- ness Individual Age Income Education Job position Personality Risk attitudes culture Business buyer
  • 30. Lean Production • Enables the company to produce a more high-quality product at lower cost, in less time, using less labor. Lean production incorporates just-in-time (JIT) production, stricter quality control, frequent and reliable supply delivery, suppliers locating closer to customers, computerized purchasing, stable production schedules made available to suppliers, and single sourcing with early supplier involvement.
  • 31. Just InTime (JIT) An inventory strategy companies employ to increase efficiency and decrease waste by receiving goods only as they are needed in the production process, thereby reducing inventory costs.
  • 32. Three company purchasing orientations (Buying Orientation) the purchaser’s focus is short term and tactical (Procurement orientation) buyers simultaneously seek quality improvements and cost reductions (Supply Chain ManagementOrientation) purchasing’s role is further broadened to become a more strategic, value-adding operation
  • 33. The Purchasing/ Procurement Process Problem Recognition General need description Product Specification Supplier Search Proposal solicitation Supplier Selection Order Routine Specification Performance Review
  • 34. Institutional And Government Markets •Institutional Market •Larger buyers (Consists of schools, hospitals, nursing homes, prisons, and other institutions that must provide goods and services to people in their care.)
  • 35. Institutional And Government Markets Government Market •government market is a market where the consumers are federal, state, and local governments. Governments purchase both goods and services from the private sector. Governments buy the same types of products and services as private sector consumers, plus some more exotic products such as aircraft carriers, fighter jets, tanks, spy satellites, and nuclear weapons
  • 36. Reference • Marketing Management by Philip Kotler (11th Edition) • Marketing Management: A South Asian Perspective by Kotler, Keller Koshy, Jha (13th Edition) • Marketing Management by Kotler, Keller (14th Edition) • Marketing Management by Philip Kotler (Millenium Edition) • Principles of Contemporary Marketing by David L. Kurtz (15th Edition) • www.slidshare.com • www.investopedia.com • www.wikipedia.com • www.cunsomerhandbook.com • www.learntechnicaltrading.com

Editor's Notes

  1. A Buying center may include the architect who designs a new research laboratory, the scientist who works in the facility, the purchasing manager who screens contractor proposals, the chief executive officer who makes the final decision, and the vice president of research who signs in the formal contracts for the project.