Business organizations do not only sell; they also buy vast quantities of raw materials, manufactured components, plant and equipment, supplies, and business services. According to the Census Bureau, there are roughly 6 million businesses with paid employees in the United States alone. To create and capture value, sellers need to understand these organizations’ needs, resources, policies, and buying procedures.
Business-software
giant Oracle became an industry leader by offering a whole range of products
and services to satisfy customer needs for enterprise software. Known
originally for its flagship database management systems, Oracle spent $30
billion in recent years to buy 56 companies, including $7.4 billion to buy Sun
Microsystems, doubling the company’s revenue to $24 billion and sending its
stock soaring in the process. To become a one-stop shop for all kinds of
business customers, Oracle seeks to offer the widest ranges of products in the
software industry. It now sells everything from server computers and data
storage devices to operating systems, databases, and software for running
accounting, sales, and supply-chain management. At the same time, Oracle has
launched “Project Fusion” to unify its different applications, so customers can
reap the benefits of consolidating many of their software needs with Oracle.
Oracle’s market power has sometimes raised both criticism from customers and
concerns from government regulators. At the same time, its many long-time
customers speak to its track record of product innovation and customer
satisfaction.
What Is Organizational Buying?
Frederick E. Webster Jr. and Yoram Wind define organizational buying as 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
The Business Market versus the Consumer Market
The 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. The major industries making up the business market are agriculture, forestry, and fisheries; mining; manufacturing; construction; transportation; communication; public utilities; banking, finance, and insurance ; distribution ; and services.
More dollars and items change hands in sales to business buyers than to consumers. Consider the process of producing and selling a simple pair of shoes. Hide dealers must sell hides to tanners, who sell leather to shoe manufacturers, who sell shoes to wholesalers, who sell shoes to retailers, who finally sell them to consumers. Each party in the supply chain also buys many other goods and services to support its operations.
Given the highly
competitive nature of business-to-business markets, the biggest enemy to
marketers here is commoditization. Commoditization eats away margins and
weakens customer loyalty. It can be overcome only if target customers are
convinced that meaningful differences exist in the marketplace, and that the
unique benefits of the firm’s offerings are worth the added expense. Thus, a
critical step in business-to-business marketing is to create and communicate
relevant differentiation from competitors. Here is how Navistar has adjusted
its marketing to reflect the economic crisis and a different customer mind-set.
Business marketers face many of the same challenges as consumer marketers. In particular, understanding their customers and what they value is of paramount importance to both. A survey of top business-to-business firms identified the following as challenges they faced
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Understanding
deep customer needs in new ways; |
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2. |
Identifying
new opportunities for organic business growth; |
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3. |
Improving
value management techniques and tools; |
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4. |
Calculating
better marketing performance and accountability metrics; |
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5. |
Competing and
growing in global markets, particularly China; |
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6. |
Countering the
threat of product and service commoditization by bringing innovative
offerings to market faster and moving to more competitive business models;
and |
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7. |
Convincing
C level executives to embrace the marketing concept and support robust
marketing programs. |
Business
marketers contrast sharply with consumer markets in some ways, however :
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Fewer, larger buyers. The business
marketer normally deals with far fewer, much larger buyers than the consumer
marketer does, particularly in such industries as aircraft engines and
defense weapons. The fortunes of Goodyear tires,Cummins engines, Delphi
control systems, and other automotive part suppliers depends on getting big
contracts from just a handful of major automakers. |
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Close supplier–customer relationship. Because of the
smaller customer base and the importance and power of the larger customers,
suppliers are frequently expected to customize their offerings to individual
business customer needs. Through its Supplier Added Value Effort ($AVE)
program, Pittsburgh-based PPG industries challenges its suppliers of
maintenance, repair, and operating (MRO) goods and services to deliver on
annual value-added/cost-savings proposals equaling at least 5 percent of
their total annual sales to PPG. One preferred supplier submitted a
suggestion to $AVE that reduced costs for a lighting project by $160,000 by
negotiating discounted prices for new fixtures and fluorescent bulbs.7 Business
buyers often select suppliers that also buy from them. A paper manufacturer
might buy from a chemical company that buys a considerable amount of its
paper. |
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Professional purchasing. Business goods
are often purchased by trained purchasing agents, who must follow their
organizations’ purchasing policies, constraints, and requirements. Many of
the buying instruments—for example, requests for quotations, proposals, and
purchase contracts — are not typically found in consumer buying. Professional
buyers spend their careers learning how to buy better.Many belong to the
Institute for Supply Management, which seeks to improve professional buyers’
effectiveness and status. This means business marketers must provide greater technical
data about their product and its advantages over competitors’ products. |
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Multiple buying influences. More people
typically influence business buying decisions. Buying committees consisting
of technical experts and even senior management are common in the purchase of
major goods. Business marketers need to send well-trained sales
representatives and sales teams to deal with the well-trained buyers. |
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Multiple sales calls. A study by
McGraw-Hill found that it took four to four and a half calls to close an
average industrial sale. In the case of capital equipment sales for large
projects, it may take many attempts to fund a project, and the sales cycle—between
quoting a job and delivering the product—is often measured in years. |
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Derived demand. The demand for
business goods is ultimately derived from the demand for consumer goods. For
this reason, the business marketer must closely monitor the buying patterns
of ultimate consumers. Pittsburgh-based Consol Energy’s coal business largely
depends on orders from utilities and steel companies, which, in turn, depend
on broader economic demand from consumers for electricity and steel-based
products such as automobiles, machines, and appliances. Business buyers must
also pay close attention to current and expected economic factors, such as
the level of production, investment, and consumer spending and the interest
rate. In a recession, they reduce their investment in plant, equipment, and
inventories. Business marketers can do little to stimulate total demand in
this environment. They can only fight harder to increase or maintain their
share of the demand. |
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Inelastic demand. The total
demand for many business goods and services is inelastic—that is, not much
affected by price changes. Shoe manufacturers are not going to buy much more leather
if the price of leather falls, nor will they buy much less leather if the
price rises unless they can find satisfactory substitutes. Demand is
especially inelastic in the short run because producers cannot make quick
changes in production methods. Demand is also inelastic for business goods
that represent a small percentage of the item’s total cost, such as shoelaces. |
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Fluctuating demand. The demand for
business goods and services tends to be more volatile than the demand for
consumer goods and services. A given percentage increase in consumer demand
can lead to a much larger percentage increase in the demand for plant and
equipment necessary to produce the additional output. Economists refer to
this as the acceleration effect. Sometimes a rise of only 10 percent
in consumer demand can cause as much as a 200 percent rise in business demand
for products in the next period; a 10 percent fall in consumer demand may
cause a complete collapse in business demand. |
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Geographically concentrated buyers. For years,
more than half of U.S. business buyers havebeen concentrated in seven states:
New York, California, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio, New Jersey, and Michigan. The
geographical concentration of producers helps to reduce selling costs.At the same time,
business marketers need to monitor regional shifts of certain industries. |
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Direct purchasing. Business
buyers often buy directly from manufacturers rather than through
intermediaries, especially items that are technically complex or expensive
such as mainframes or aircraft |
Buying Situations
The business
buyer faces many decisions in making a purchase. How many depends on the
complexity of the problem being solved, newness of the buying requirement,
number of people involved, and time required. Three types of buying situations
are the straight rebuy, modified rebuy, and new task.
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Straight rebuy. In a straight
rebuy, the purchasing department reorders supplies such as office supplies
and bulk chemicals on a routine basis and chooses from suppliers on an
approved list. The suppliers make an effort to maintain product and service
quality and often propose automatic reordering systems to save time. “Out-suppliers”
attempt to offer something new or exploit dissatisfaction with a current
supplier. Their goal is to get a small order and then enlarge their purchase
share over time. |
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Modified rebuy. The buyer in a modified rebuy wants to change product specifications, prices, delivery requirements, or other terms. This usually requires additional participants on both sides. The in-suppliers become nervous and want to protect the account. The out-suppliers see an opportunity to propose a better offer to gain some business. |
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New task. A new-task
purchaser buys a product or service for the first time (an office building, a
new security system). The greater the cost or risk, the larger the number of
participants, and the greater their information gathering—the longer the time
to a decision |
The business buyer makes the fewest decisions in the straight rebuy situation and the most in the new-task situation. Over time, new-buy situations become straight rebuys and routine purchase behavior.
New-task buying is the marketer’s greatest opportunity and challenge. The process passes through several stages: awareness, interest, evaluation, trial, and adoption. Mass media can be most important during the initial awareness stage; salespeople often have their greatest impact at the interest stage; and technical sources can be most important during the evaluation stage. Online selling efforts may be useful at all stages.
In the new-task
situation, the buyer must determine product specifications, price limits,
delivery terms and times, service terms, payment terms, order quantities,
acceptable suppliers, and the selected supplier. Different participants
influence each decision, and the order in which these decisions are made
varies.
Because of the
complicated selling required, many companies use a missionary sales force consisting
of their most effective salespeople. The brand promise and the manufacturer’s
brand name recognition will be important in establishing trust and the customer’s
willingness to consider change. The marketer also tries to reach as many key
participants as possible and provide helpful information and assistance.
Once a customer has been acquired, in-suppliers are continually seeking ways to add value to their market offer to facilitate rebuys. Data storage leader EMC successfully acquired a series of computer software leaders to reposition the company to manage—and not just store—information, often by giving customers customized information
Customers considering dropping six or seven figures on one transaction for big-ticket goods and services want all the information they can get. One way to entice new buyers is to create a customer reference program in which satisfied existing customers act in concert with the company’s sales and marketing department by agreeing to serve as references. Technology companies such as HP, Lucent, and Unisys have all employed such programs.
Business
marketers are also recognizing the importance of their brand and how they must
execute well in a number of areas to gain marketplace success. Boeing, which
makes everything from commercial airplanes to satellites, implemented the “One
Company” brand strategy to unify all its different operations with a one-brand
culture. The strategy was based in part on a triple helix representation: (1)
enterprising spirit (why Boeing does what it does), (2) precision performance
(how Boeing gets things done), and (3) defining the future (what Boeing
achieves as a company). NetApp is another good example of the increased
importance placed on branding in business-tobusiness marketing.
NetApp
NetApp is a Fortune 1000 company providing data management and storage solutions to medium- and large-sized clients. Despite some marketplace success, the company found its branding efforts in disarray by 2007. Several variations of its name were in use, leading to a formal name change to NetApp in 2008. Branding consultants Landor also created a new identity, architecture, nomenclature, tone of voice, and tagline (“Go further, faster.”) for the brand and its new name. Messages emphasized NetApp’s superior technology, innovation, and customer-centric “get things done” culture. Some of the marketing efforts supporting the brand, however, still left some things to be desired. The Web sites were called “Frankensites” because they had been worked on and modified by so many developers over a 12-year period. Web site makeovers streamlined and organized the company’s presentation and made it easier to make changes and updates. The new Web site was estimated to increase sales leads from inquiries by fourfold. Investing heavily in marketing communications despite the recession, NetApp ran print and online ads and tapped into a number of social media outlets—communities and forums, bloggers, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.