1 / 19

B2B

B2B. Why Organizations Buy: Business-to-Business Markets and B2B E-Commerce. Business Markets. Generally, the same principles are true for business and consumer customers There are characteristics that make B2B buying more complex Multiple buyers Number of customers Size of purchases

havyn
Download Presentation

B2B

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. B2B • Why Organizations Buy: Business-to-Business Markets and B2B E-Commerce

  2. Business Markets • Generally, the same principles are true for business and consumer customers • There are characteristics that make B2B buying more complex • Multiple buyers • Number of customers • Size of purchases • Geographic concentration

  3. Types of Organizational Markets • Industrial Markets • Industrial firms • Reseller Market • Resellers • Government Markets • Government Units • Global Organizational Markets

  4. Type and number of organizational customers

  5. NAICS breakdown for information industries sector: NAICS code 51 (abbreviated)

  6. Key characteristics of organizational buying behavior

  7. Derived Demand • B2B demand is derived demand because a business’s demand for goods and services comes either directly or indirectly from consumers’ demands

  8. Derived Demand Demand for education Derived demand - textbooks Derived demand - paper Derived demand - pulp Derived demand - forestry products

  9. The Nature of Business Buying • The Buying Situation • The Professional Buyer • The Buying Center

  10. The Professional Buyer • Titles: purchasing agents, procurement officers, director of materials management • Focus on economic factors beyond the initial price of a product including transportation and delivery charges, accessory products or supplies, maintenance, disposal costs, etc. • Large firms practice centralized purchasing - one department does all buying

  11. The Buying Center • A cross-functional group of people in the organization who participate in the decision-making process • May include production workers, supervisors, engineers, secretaries, shipping clerks, and financial officers

  12. Roles in the Buying Center • Initiatorbegins the buying process • User needs the product • Gatekeeper controls the flow of information to other members • Influencerdispenses advice or shares expertise • Decider makes the final decision • Buyer executes the purchase

  13. The Buying Situation • A buy class framework identifies the degree of effort required of the firm’s personnel to collect information and make a purchase decision • Straight rebuy • Modified rebuy • New task buying

  14. How they buying situation affects buying center behavior

  15. ISO 9000 International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Geneva , Switzerland One standards organization per country: • USA – ANSI • Japan – JISC (MITI) • Germany – DIN • Australia – SAI

  16. Electronic B2B Commerce • Internet exchanges between two or more businesses or organizations • Allows marketers to link directly to suppliers, factories, distributors, and their customers • Reduces time necessary to order and deliver goods, track sales, and get feedback

  17. Intranets, Extranets, and Private Exchanges • An intranet is an internal corporate computer network that uses Internet technology to link company departments, employees, and databases • An extranet allows outsiders to the organization to access its intranet • A private exchange links invited groups of suppliers and partners over the Web

  18. Security Issues • Authentication - making sure only authorized individuals are allowed to access a site • Firewalls - combination of hardware and software that ensures only authorized individuals gain entry • Encryption - scrambling a message so that only another individual has the right “key” for deciphering it

  19. Comparing the stages in consumer and organizational purchases

More Related