1 / 29

Principles of Marketing

6. Principles of Marketing. Business Markets and Business Buyer Behavior. Business Markets. Business buying process is the process where business buyers determine which products and services are needed to purchase and then find, evaluate, and choose among alternative brands. 6-4.

kritchey
Download Presentation

Principles of Marketing

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. 6 Principles of Marketing Business Markets and Business Buyer Behavior

  2. Business Markets Business buying process is the process where business buyers determine which products and services are needed to purchase and then find, evaluate, and choose among alternative brands 6-4

  3. Business Markets Differ from consumer markets in: • Market structure and demand • Nature of the buying unit • Types of decisions and the decision- making process Impact - look at tires 6-5

  4. Business Markets Market Structure and Demand • Fewer and larger buyers - more professionsal • Geographic concentration • Derived demand • Inelastic demand - price of leather • Fluctuating demand • Buyer and seller dependency - close link 6-6

  5. Business Markets Market Structure and Demand Supplier development is the systematic development of networks of supplier-partners to ensure an appropriate and dependable supply of products and materials that they will use in making their own products or resell 6-7

  6. Business Buyer Behavior Marketing Stimuli Similar to consumer buying, business buying consists of the four Ps • Product • Price • Place • Promotion 6-8

  7. Business Buyer Behavior Business buyer behavior refers to the buying behavior of the organizations that buy goods and services for use in production of other products and services that are sold, rented, or supplied to others. Also included are retailing and wholesaling firms that acquire goods to resell or rent to others for profit. 6-9

  8. Business Buyer Behavior Marketing Stimuli Additional stimuli include major economic forces • Political • Economic • Technological • Cultural • Competitive 6-10

  9. Business Buyer Behavior Buyer Responses to Marketing Stimuli • Product or service choice • Supplier choice • Order quantities • Delivery • Service • Payment terms 6-11

  10. Business Buyer Behavior Buyer Responses to Marketing Stimuli Marketers must understand what happens within the organization and turn stimuli into purchase responses 6-12

  11. Business Buyer Behavior Major Types of Buying Situations Straight rebuy is a routine purchase decision such as a reorder without any modification Modified rebuy is a purchase decision that requires some research where the buyer wants to modify the product specification, price, terms, or suppliers New task is a purchase decision that requires thorough research such as a new product 6-14

  12. Business Buyer Behavior Major Types of Buying Situations Systems selling involves the purchase of a packaged solution from a single seller Two-step process of selling: • Interlocking products • System of production, inventory control, distribution, and other services to meet the buyer’s need for a smooth-running operation 6-15

  13. Business Buyer Behavior Participants in the Business Buying Process Users are those that will use the product or service Influencers help define specifications and provide information for evaluating alternatives Buyers have formal authority to select the supplier and arrange terms of purchase Deciders have formal or informal power to select and approve final suppliers Gatekeepers control the flow of information 6-17

  14. Business Buyer Behavior Participants in the Business Buying Process Buying center provides a major challenge • Who participates in the process • Their relative authority • What evaluation criteria each participant uses • Informal participants 6-18

  15. Economic factors: Price Service Personal factors: Emotion Business Buyer Behavior Major Influences on Business Buyers 6-20

  16. Demand for product Economic outlook Cost of money Resource availability Technology Culture Politics Competition Business Buyer Behavior Major Influences on Business Buyers Environmental Factors 6-21

  17. Business Buyer Behavior Major Influences on Business Buyers Organizational factors • Objectives • Policies • Procedures • Structure • Systems 6-22

  18. Business Buyer Behavior Major Influences on Business Buyers Interpersonal factors • Motives • Perceptions • Preferences • Age • Income • Education • Attitude toward risk 6-23

  19. Business Buyer Behavior The Buying Process* • Problem recognition • General need description • Product specification • Value analysis • Supplier search • Proposal solicitation • Supplier selection • Order-routine specifications • Performance review 6-24

  20. Business Buyer Behavior Problem recognition occurs when someone in the company recognizes a problem or need - let’s use HHU as an example • Internal stimuli • Need for new product or production equipment • External stimuli • Idea from a trade show or advertising 6-25

  21. Business Buyer Behavior The Buying Process General need description describes the characteristics and quantity of the needed item Product specification describes the technical criteria Value analysis is an approach to cost reduction where components are studied to determined if they can be redesigned, standardized, or made with less costly methods of production 6-26

  22. Business Buyer Behavior The Buying Process Supplier search involves compiling a list of qualified suppliers Proposal solicitation is the process of requesting proposals from qualified suppliers 6-27

  23. Business Buyer Behavior The Buying Process Supplier selection is the process when the buying center creates a list of desired supplier attributes and negotiates with preferred suppliers for favorable terms and conditions Order-routine specifications is the final order with the chosen supplier and lists all of the specifications and terms of the purchase 6-28

  24. Business Buyer Behavior The Buying Process Performance review involves a critique of supplier performance to the purchase terms 6-29

  25. Business Buyer Behavior E-Procurement and Buying on the Internet Online purchasing • Company buying sites • Extranets 6-30

  26. Business Buyer Behavior E-Procurement and Buying on the Internet Advantages • Access to new suppliers • Lowers costs • Speed in order processing and delivery • Share information • Sales • Service and support 6-31

  27. Business Buyer Behavior E-Procurement and Buying on the Internet Disadvantages • Can erode relationships as buyers search for new suppliers • Security 6-32

  28. Institutional and Government Markets Institutional markets consist of hospitals, nursing homes, and prisons that provide goods and services to people in their care • Characteristics • Low budgets • “Captive” audience 6-33

  29. Institutional and Government Markets Government marketstend to favor domestic suppliers and require suppliers to submit bids and normally award to the lowest bidder • Carefully monitored • Affected by similar environmental factors • Good credit • Non-economic factors • Minority suppliers • Depressed suppliers • Small businesses • /30 6-34

More Related