Business Buying Behavior
Site: | Saylor Academy |
Course: | BUS203: Principles of Marketing |
Book: | Business Buying Behavior |
Printed by: | Guest user |
Date: | Thursday, 3 April 2025, 4:17 AM |
Description
Read this chapter, which provides an overview of business-to-business buying behavior. This chapter discusses how B2B markets differ from B2C markets, types of B2B buyers, buying centers, and stages of the B2B buying process. The chapter wraps up with a discussion of international B2B markets, e-commerce, and ethics in the B2B market. From this reading, you will learn what a buying center is and will be able to name the members of buying centers and describe their roles. Pay special attention to the concepts of the decision-making unit (DMU) and the purchase process.
Introduction
In the last chapter, we talked about the buying behavior of consumers - people like you and me who buy products for our own personal use. However, many businesses don't offer their goods and services to individual consumers at all. Instead, their customers are other businesses, institutions, or government organizations. These are the business-to-business (B2B) markets we talked about in Chapter 1 "What Is Marketing?".
This text was adapted by Saylor Academy under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License without attribution as requested by the work's original creator or licensor.
The Characteristics of Business-to-Business (B2B) Markets
Learning Objectives
- Identify the ways in which business-to-business (B2B) markets differ from business-to-consumer (B2C) markets.
- Explain why business buying is acutely affected by the behavior of consumers.
Business-to-business
(B2B) markets differ from business-to-consumer (B2C) markets in many
ways. For one, the number of products sold in business markets dwarfs
the number sold in consumer markets. Suppose you buy a
five-hundred-dollar computer from Dell. The sale amounts to a single
transaction for you. But think of all the transactions Dell had to go
through to sell you that one computer. Dell had to purchase many parts
from many computer component makers. It also had to purchase equipment
and facilities to assemble the computers, hire and pay employees, pay
money to create and maintain its Web site and advertise, and buy
insurance and accounting and financial services to keep its operations
running smoothly. Many transactions had to happen before you could
purchase your computer.
Each
of those transactions needed a salesperson. Each of those companies
have a marketing department. Thus, there are a lot more college
marketing graduates going into B2B companies than in B2C, which is
reason enough to spend some time studying the subject. There are other
differences, too.
Business
products can be very complex. Some need to be custom built or
retrofitted for buyers. The products include everything from high-dollar
construction equipment to commercial real estate and buildings,
military equipment, and billion-dollar cruise liners used in the tourism
industry. A single customer can account for a huge amount of business.
Some businesses, like those that supply the U.S. auto industry around
Detroit, have just a handful of customers - General Motors, Chrysler,
and/or Ford. Consequently, you can imagine why these suppliers become
very worried when the automakers fall on hard times.
Not
only can business products be complex, but so can figuring out the
buying dynamics of organizations. Many people within an organization can
be part of the buying process and have a say in ultimately what gets
purchased, how much of it, and from whom. Having different people
involved makes business marketing much more complicated. And because of
the quantities each business customer is capable of buying, the stakes
are high. For some organizations, losing a big account can be
financially devastating and winning one can be a financial bonanza.
How
high are the stakes? Table 4.1 "Top Five Corporations Worldwide in
Terms of Their Revenues" shows a recent ranking of the top five
corporations in the world in terms of the sales they generate annually.
Believe it or not, these companies earn more in a year than all the
businesses of some countries do. Imagine the windfall you could gain as a
seller by landing an exclusive account with any one of them.
Table 4.1 Top Five Corporations Worldwide in Terms of Their Revenues
Company | Sales (Billions of Dollars) |
---|---|
Walmart Stores | 422 |
Royal Dutch Shell | 369 |
ExxonMobil | 341 |
PetroChina | 222 |
Chevron | 189 |
Note: Numbers have been rounded to the nearest billion. |
Generally, the more high-dollar and complex the item being sold is, the longer it takes for the sale to be made. The sale of a new commercial jet to an airline company such as Southwest Airlines, Delta, or American Airlines can literally take years to be completed. Purchases such as these are risky for companies. The buyers are concerned about many factors, such as the safety, reliability, and efficiency of the planes. They also generally want the jets customized in some way. Consequently, a lot of time and effort is needed to close these deals.
Unlike many consumers, most business buyers demand that the products they buy meet strict standards. Take for example the Five Guys burger chain, based in Virginia. The company taste-tested eighteen different types of mayonnaise before settling on the one it uses. Would you be willing to taste eighteen different brands of mayonnaise before buying one? Probably not.
Another characteristic of B2B markets is the level of personal selling that goes on. Salespeople personally call on business customers to a far greater extent than they do consumers. Most of us have had door-to-door salespeople call on us occasionally. However, businesses often have multiple salespeople call on them in person daily, and some customers even provide office space for key vendors' salespeople. Table 4.2 "Business-to-Consumer Markets versus Business-to-Business Markets: How They Compare" outlines the main differences between B2C and B2B markets.
Consumer Market | Business Market |
---|---|
Many customers, geographically dispersed | Fewer customers, often geographically concentrated, with a small number accounting for most of the company's sales |
Smaller total dollar amounts due to fewer transactions | Larger dollar amounts due to more transactions |
Shorter decision cycles | Longer decision cycles |
More reliance on mass marketing via advertising, Web sites, and retailing | More reliance on personal selling |
Less-rigid product standards | More-rigid product standards |
The Demand for B2B Products
Even
though they don't sell their products to consumers like you and me, B2B
sellers carefully watch general economic conditions to anticipate
consumer buying patterns. The firms do so because the demand for
business products is based on derived demand. Derived demand is demand
that springs from, or is derived from, a source other than the primary
buyer of a product. When it comes to B2B sales, that source is
consumers. If consumers aren't demanding the products produced by
businesses, the firms that supply products to these businesses are in
big trouble.
Fluctuating
demand is another characteristic of B2B markets: a small change in
demand by consumers can have a big effect throughout the chain of
businesses that supply all the goods and services that produce it.
Often, a bullwhip type of effect occurs. If you have ever held a whip,
you know that a slight shake of the handle will result in a big snap of
the whip at its tip. Essentially, consumers are the handle and
businesses along the chain compose the whip - hence the need to keep
tabs on end consumers. They are a powerful purchasing force.
For
example, Cisco makes routers, which are specialized computers that
enable computer networks to work. If Google uses five hundred routers
and replaces 10 percent of them each year, that means Google usually
buys fifty routers in a given year. What happens if consumer demand for
the Internet falls by 10 percent? Then Google needs only 450 routers.
Google's demand for Cisco's routers therefore becomes zero. Suppose the
following year the demand for the Internet returns to normal. Google now
needs to replace the fifty routers it didn't buy in the first year plus
the fifty it needs to replace in the second year. So in year two,
Cisco's sales go from zero to a hundred, or twice normal. Thus Cisco
experiences a bullwhip effect, whereas Google's sales vary only by 10
percent.
Because
consumers are such a powerful force, some companies go so far as to try
to influence their B2B sales by directly influencing consumers even
though they don't sell their products to them. Intel is a classic case.
Do you really care what sort of microprocessing chip gets built into
your computer? Intel would like you to, which is why it has run a long
series of commercials on TV to think about what chip is inside your
computer. The following video clip shows how they've continued to
promote "Intel Inside" even though their actual product has changed. The
commercial isn't likely to persuade a computer manufacturer to buy
Intel's chips. But the manufacturer might be persuaded to buy them if
it's important to you. Derived demand is also the reason Intel demands
that the buyers of its chips put a little "Intel Inside" sticker on each
computer they make - so you get to know Intel and demand its products.
Video Clip
Intel Animations Over the Years
Does this commercial make you want to buy a computer with "Intel Inside"? Intel hopes so.
B2B
buyers also keep tabs on consumers to look for patterns that could
create joint demand. Joint demand occurs when the demand for one product
increases the demand for another. For example, when a new video console
like the Xbox comes out, it creates demand for a whole new crop of
video games.
Video Clip
The History of Pong
Watch
this video to see the first video game ever invented, Pong, and learn
about its maker. Of course, Pong got old pretty fast, so more games were
quickly developed and continue to be, especially when new gaming
systems hit the market.
Key Takeaway
B2B
markets differ from B2C markets in many ways. There are more
transactions in B2B markets and more high-dollar transactions because
business products are often costly and complex. There are also fewer
buyers in B2B markets, but they spend much more than the typical
consumer does and have more-rigid product standards. The demand for
business products is based on derived demand. Derived demand is demand
that springs from, or is derived from, a secondary source other than the
primary buyer of a product. For businesses, this source is consumers.
Fluctuating demand is another characteristic of B2B markets: a small
change in demand by consumers can have a big effect throughout the chain
of businesses that supply all the goods and services that produce it.
Review Questions
- Why are there more transactions in B2B markets than B2C markets? Why are there fewer buyers?
- Explain what derived demand is.
- Why do firms experience a bullwhip effect in the demand for their products when consumers demand changes?
Types of B2B Buyers
Learning Objectives
- Describe the major categories of business buyers.
- Explain why finding decision makers in business markets is challenging for sellers.
Business buyers can be either nonprofit or for-profit businesses. To help you get a better idea of the different types of business customers in B2B markets, we've put them into four basic categories: producers, resellers, governments, and institutions.
Producers
Producers are companies that purchase goods and services that they transform into other products. They include both manufacturers and service providers. Procter & Gamble, General Motors, McDonald's, Dell, and Delta Airlines are examples. So are the restaurants around your campus, your dentist, your doctor, and the local tattoo parlor. All these businesses have to buy certain products to produce the goods and services they create. General Motors needs steel and hundreds of thousands of other products to produce cars. McDonald's needs beef and potatoes. Delta Airlines needs fuel and planes. Your dentist needs drugs such as Novocain, oral tools, and X-ray machines. Your local tattoo parlor needs special inks and needles and a bright neon sign that flashes "open" in the middle of the night.
Resellers
Resellers
are companies that sell goods and services produced by other firms
without materially changing them. They include wholesalers, brokers, and
retailers. Walmart and Target are two big retailers you are familiar
with. Large wholesalers, brokers, and retailers have a great deal of
market power. If you can get them to buy your products, your sales can
exponentially increase.
Every
day, retailers flock to Walmart's corporate headquarters in
Bentonville, Arkansas, to try to hawk their products. But would it
surprise you that not everybody wants to do business with a powerhouse
like Walmart? Jim Wier, one-time CEO of the company that produces
Snapper-brand mowers and snowblowers, actually took a trip to Walmart's
headquarters to stop doing business with the company. Why? Snapper
products are high-end, heavy-duty products. Wier knew that Walmart had
been selling his company's products for lower and lower prices and
wanted deeper and deeper discounts from Snapper. He believed Snapper
products were too expensive for Walmart's customers and always would be,
unless the company started making cheaper-quality products or
outsourced their manufacturing overseas, which is something he didn't
want to do.
"The
whole visit to Wal-Mart's headquarters is a great experience," said
Wier about his trip. "It's so crowded, you have to drive around, waiting
for a parking space. You have to follow someone who is leaving, walking
back to their car, and get their spot. Then you go inside this
building, you register for your appointment, they give you a badge, and
then you wait in the pews with the rest of the peddlers, the guy with
the bras draped over his shoulder". Eventually, would-be suppliers were
taken into small cubicles where they had thirty minutes to make their
case. "It's a little like going to see the principal, really," he
said.
Governments
Can
you guess the biggest purchaser of goods and services in the world? It
is the U.S. government. It purchases everything you can imagine, from
paper and fax machines to tanks and weapons, buildings, toilets for NASA
(the National Aeronautics and Space Administration), highway
construction services, and medical and security services. State and
local governments buy enormous amounts of products, too. They contract
with companies that provide citizens with all kinds of services from
transportation to garbage collection. (So do foreign governments,
provinces, and localities, of course). Business-to-government (B2G)
markets, or when companies sell to local, state, and federal
governments, represent a major selling opportunity, even for smaller
sellers. In fact, many government entities specify that their agencies
must award a certain amount of business to small businesses, minority-
and women-owned businesses, and businesses owned by disabled veterans.
There
is no one central department or place in which all these products are
bought and sold. Companies that want to sell to the U.S. government
should first register with the Central Contractor Registry at
http://www.CCR.gov. They should then consult the General Services
Administration (GSA) Web site (http://www.gsa.gov). The GSA helps more
than two hundred federal agencies buy a wide variety of products
purchased routinely. The products can include office supplies,
information technology services, repair services, vehicles, and many
other products purchased by agencies on a regular basis. Consequently,
it is a good starting point. However, the GSA won't negotiate a contract
for the NASA toilet or a fighter jet. It sticks to routine types of
purchases.
Figure 4.2

The
General Services Administration (GSA) is a good starting point for
companies that want to do business with the federal government. The U.S.
Small Business Administration (SBA) also offers sellers a great deal of
information on marketing to the government, including online courses
that explain how to do it.
The
existence of the GSA doesn't mean the agencies it works with don't have
any say over what is purchased for them. The agencies themselves have a
big say, so B2B sellers need to contact them and aggressively market
their products to them. After all, agencies don't buy products, people
do. Fortunately, every agency posts on the Internet a forecast of its
budget, that is, what it is planning on spending money on in the coming
months. The agencies even list the names, addresses, and e-mails of
contact persons responsible for purchasing decisions. Many federal
agencies are able to purchase as much as $25,000 of products at a time
by simply using a government credit card. This fact makes them a good
target for small businesses.
It's
not unusual for each agency or department to have its own procurement
policies that must be followed. Would-be sellers are often asked to
submit sealed bids that contain the details of what they are willing to
provide the government and at what price. But contrary to popular
belief, it's not always the lowest bid that's accepted. Would the United
States want to send its soldiers to war in the cheapest planes and
tanks, bearing the lowest-cost armor? Probably not. Like other buyers,
government buyers look for the best value.
Yet
selling to the government is not always easy. The GSA has its own red
tape, as does each government division, and many purchases come with
additional regulations or specifications written into the legislation
that funded them. Because many purchases can be rather large, decision
cycles can be very long and involve large buying centers. Some
businesses avoid selling to the government because the perceived hassle
is too great to warrant the effort. Other businesses, though, realize
that learning the ins and outs of government purchases can become a
sustainable competitive advantage.
Institutions
Institutional
markets include nonprofit organizations such as the American Red Cross,
churches, hospitals, charitable organizations, private colleges, civic
clubs, and so on. Like government and for-profit organizations, they buy
a huge quantity of products and services. Holding costs down is
especially important to them. The lower their costs are, the more people
they can provide their services to.
The
businesses and products we have mentioned so far are broad
generalizations to help you think about the various markets in which
products can be sold. In addition, not all products a company buys are
high dollar or complex. Businesses buy huge quantities of inexpensive
products, too. McDonald's, for example, buys a lot of toilet paper,
napkins, bags, employee uniforms, and so forth. Pretty much any product
you and I use is probably used for one or more business purposes (cell
phones and cell-phone services, various types of food products, office
supplies, and so on). Some of us own real estate, and so do many
businesses. But very few of us own many of the other products businesses
sell to one another: cranes, raw materials such as steel, fiber-optic
cables, and so forth.
That
said, a smart B2B marketer will look at all the markets we have
mentioned to see if they represent potential opportunities. The Red
Cross will have no use for a fighter jet, of course. However, a company
that manufactures toilet paper might be able to market it to both the
Red Cross and the U.S. government. B2B opportunities abroad and online
B2B markets can also be successfully pursued. We will discuss these
topics later in the chapter.
Who Makes the Purchasing Decisions in Business Markets?
Figuring
out who exactly in B2B markets is responsible for what gets purchased
and when often requires some detective work for marketing professionals
and the salespeople they work with. Think about the college textbooks
you buy. Who decides which ones ultimately are purchased by the students
at your school? Do publishers send you e-mails about certain books they
want you to buy? Do you see ads for different types of chemistry or
marketing books in your school newspaper or on TV? Generally, you do
not. The reason is that even though you buy the books, the publishers
know that professors ultimately decide which textbooks are going to be
used in the classroom. Consequently, B2B sellers largely concentrate
their efforts on those people.
That's
not to say that to some extent the publishers don't target you. They
may offer you a good deal by packaging a study guide with your textbook
or some sort of learning supplement online you can purchase. They might
also offer your bookstore manager a discount for buying a certain number
of textbooks. However, a publishing company that focused on selling its
textbooks directly to you or to a bookstore manager would go out of
business. They know the true revenue generators are professors.
The
question is, which professors? Some professors choose their own books.
Adjunct professors often don't have a choice - their books are chosen by
a course coordinator or the dean or chair of the department. Still
other decisions are made by groups of professors, some of whom have more
say over the final decision than others. Are you getting the picture?
Figuring out where to start in B2B sales can be a little bit like a
scavenger hunt.
Key Takeaway
Business
buyers can be either nonprofit or for-profit businesses. There are four
basic categories of business buyers: producers, resellers, governments,
and institutions. Producers are companies that purchase goods and
services that they transform into other products. They include both
manufacturers and service providers. Resellers are companies that sell
goods and services produced by other firms without materially changing
them. They include wholesalers, brokers, and retailers. Local, state,
and national governments purchase large quantities of goods and
services. Institutional markets include nonprofit organizations such as
the American Red Cross, churches, hospitals, charitable organizations,
private colleges, civic clubs, and so on. Holding costs down is
especially important to them because it enables them to provide their
services to more people. Figuring out who exactly in B2B markets is
responsible for what gets purchased and when often requires some
detective work by marketing professionals and the salespeople they work
with.
Review Questions
- What sorts of products do producers buy?
- What role do resellers play in B2B markets, and why are they important to sellers?
- How do sellers find government buyers? Institutional buyers?
- Why is it difficult to figure out whom to call on in business markets?
Buying Centers
Learning Objectives
- Explain what a buying center is.
- Explain who the members of buying centers are and describe their roles.
- Describe the duties of professional buyers.
- Describe the personal and interpersonal dynamics that affect the decisions buying centers make.
The
professors who form a committee at your school to choose textbooks are
acting like a buying center. Buying centers are groups of people within
organizations who make purchasing decisions. Large organizations often
have permanent departments that consist of the people who, in a sense,
shop for a living. They are professional buyers, in other words. Their
titles vary. In some companies, they are simply referred to as buyers.
In other companies, they are referred to as purchasing agents,
purchasing managers, or procurement officers. Retailers often refer to
their buyers as merchandisers. Most of the people who do these jobs have
bachelor's of science degrees. Some undergo additional industry
training to obtain an advanced purchasing certification designation.
Buyers
can have a large impact on the expenses, sales, and profits of a
company. Pier 1's purchasing agents literally comb the entire world
looking for products the company's customers want most. What happens if
the products the purchasing agents pick don't sell? Pier 1's sales fall,
and people get fired. This doesn't happen in B2C markets. If you pick
out the wrong comforter for your bed, you don't get fired. Your bedroom
just looks crummy.
Consequently,
professional buyers are shrewd. They have to be because their jobs
depend on it. Their jobs depend on their choosing the best products at
the best prices from the best vendors. Professional buyers are also well
informed and less likely to buy a product on a whim than consumers. The
following sidebar outlines the tasks professional buyers generally
perform.
The Duties of Professional Buyers
- Considering the availability of products, the reliability of the products' vendors, and the technical support they can provide
- Studying a company's sales records and inventory levels
- Identifying suppliers and obtaining bids from them
- Negotiating prices, delivery dates, and payment terms for goods and services
- Keeping abreast of changes in the supply and demand for goods and services their firms need
- Staying informed of the latest trends so as to anticipate consumer buying patterns
- Determining the media (TV, the Internet, newspapers, and so forth) in which advertisements will be placed
- Tracking advertisements in newspapers and other media to check competitors' sales activities
Increasingly, purchasing managers have become responsible for buying not only products but also functions their firms want to outsource. The functions aren't limited to manufacturing. They also include product innovation and design services, customer service and order fulfillment services, and information technology and networking services to name a few. Purchasing agents responsible for finding offshore providers of goods and services often take trips abroad to inspect the facilities of the providers and get a better sense of their capabilities.
Other Players
Purchasing agents don't make all the buying decisions in their companies, though. As we explained, other people in the organization often have a say, as well they should. Purchasing agents frequently need their feedback and help to buy the best products and choose the best vendors. The people who provide their firms' buyers with input generally fall into one or more of the following groups:
Initiators
Initiators are the people within the organization who first see the need for the product. But they don't stop there; whether they have the ability to make the final decision of what to buy or not, they get the ball rolling. Sometimes they initiate the purchase by simply notifying purchasing agents of what is needed; other times they have to lobby executives to consider making a change.
Users
Users are the people and groups within the organization that actually use the product. Frequently, one or more users serve as an initiator in an effort to improve what they produce or how they produce it, and they certainly have the responsibility for implementing what is purchased. Users often have certain specifications in mind for products and how they want them to perform. An example of a user might be a professor at your school who wants to adopt an electronic book and integrate it into his or her online course.
Influencers
Influencers are people who may or may not use the product but have experience or expertise that can help improve the buying decision. For example, an engineer may prefer a certain vendor's product platform and try to persuade others that it is the best choice.
Gatekeepers
If
you want to sell a product to a large company like Walmart, you can't
just walk in the door of its corporate headquarters and demand to see a
purchasing agent. You will first have to get past of a number of
gatekeepers, or people who will decide if and when you get access to
members of the buying center. These are people such as buying
assistants, personal assistants, and other individuals who have some say
about which sellers are able to get a foot in the door.
Gatekeepers
often need to be courted as hard as prospective buyers do. They
generally have a lot of information about what's going on behind the
scenes and a certain amount of informal power. If they like you, you're
in a good position as a seller. If they don't, your job is going to be
much harder. In the case of textbook sales, the gatekeepers are often
faculty secretaries. They know in advance which instructors will be
teaching which courses and the types of books they will need. It is not
uncommon for faculty secretaries to screen the calls of textbook sales
representatives.
Deciders
The decider is the person who makes the final purchasing decision. The decider might or might not be the purchasing manager. Purchasing managers are generally solely responsible for deciding upon routine purchases and small purchases. However, the decision to purchase a large, expensive product that will have a major impact on a company is likely to be made by or with the help of other people in the organization, perhaps even the CEO. The decision may be made by a single decider, or there may be a few who reach consensus. Further, deciders take into account the input of all of the other participants: the users, influencers, and so forth. Sellers, of course, pay special attention to what deciders want. "Who makes the buying decision?" is a key question B2B sales and marketing personnel are trained to quickly ask potential customers.
The Interpersonal and Personal Dynamics of B2B Marketing
We
made it a point earlier in our discussion to explain how rational and
calculating business buyers are. So would it surprise you to learn that
sometimes the dynamics that surround B2B marketing don't lead to the
best purchasing decisions? Interpersonal factors among the people making
the buying decision often have an impact on the products chosen, good
or bad. (You can think of this phenomenon as "office politics".) For
example, one person in a buying unit might wield a lot of power and
greatly influence the purchasing decision. However, other people in the
unit might resent the power he or she wields and insist on a different
offering, even if doesn't best meet the organization's needs. Savvy B2B
marketers are aware of these dynamics and try their best to influence
the outcome.
Personal
factors play a part. B2B buyers are overwhelmed with choices, features,
benefits, information, data, and metrics. They often have to interview
dozens of potential vendors and ask them hundreds of questions. No
matter how disciplined they are in their buying procedures, they will
often find a way to simplify their decision making either consciously or
subconsciously. For example, a buyer deciding upon multiple vendors
running neck and neck might decide to simply choose the vendor whose
sales representative he likes the most.
Factors
such as these can be difficult for a company to control. However,
branding - how successful a company is at marketing its brands - is a
factor under a company's control, says Kevin Randall of Movéo Integrated
Branding, an Illinois-based marketing-consulting firm. Sellers can use
their brands to their advantage to help business buyers come to the
conclusion that their products are the best choice. IBM, for example,
has long had a strong brand name when it comes to business products. The
company's reputation was so solid that for years the catchphrase
"Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM" was often repeated among
purchasing agents - and by IBM salespeople of course!
In
short, B2B marketing is very strategic. Selling firms try to gather as
much information about their customers as they can and use that
information to their advantage. As an analogy, imagine if you were
interested in asking out someone you had seen on campus. Sure, you could
simply try to show up at a party or somewhere on campus in the hopes of
meeting the person. But if you were thinking strategically, you might
try to find out everything you could about the person, what he or she
likes to do and so forth, and then try to arrange a meeting. That way
when you did meet the person, you would be better able to strike up a
conversation and develop a relationship with him or her. B2B selling is
similarly strategic. Little is left to chance.
Key Takeaway
Buying
centers are groups of people within organizations who make purchasing
decisions. The buying centers of large organizations employ professional
buyers who, in a sense, shop for a living. They don't make all the
buying decisions in their companies, though. The other people who
provide input are users, or the people and groups within the
organization that actually use the product; influencers, or people who
may or may not use the product but have experience or expertise that can
help improve the buying decision; gatekeepers, or people who will
decide if and when a seller gets access to members of the buying center;
and deciders, or the people who make the final purchasing decision.
Interpersonal dynamics between the people in a buying center will affect
the choices the center makes. Personal factors, such as how likeable a
seller is, play a part because buyers are often overwhelmed with
information and will find ways to simplify their decision making.
Review Questions
- Which people do you think have the most influence on the decisions a buying center makes? Why?
- Describe the duties of professional buyers. What aspects of their jobs seem attractive? Which aspects seem unattractive to you?
- How do personal and interpersonal dynamics affect the decisions buying centers make?
Stages in the B2B Buying Process and B2B Buying Situations
Learning Objectives
- Outline the stages in the B2B buying process.
- Explain the scorecard process of evaluating proposals.
- Describe the different types of B2B buying situations and how they affect sellers.
Stages in the B2B Buying Process
Next, let's look at the stages in the B2B buying process. They are similar to the stages in the consumer's buying process.
1.
A need is recognized. Someone recognizes that the organization has a
need that can be solved by purchasing a good or service. Users often
drive this stage, although others can serve the role of initiator. In
the case of the electronic textbook, it could be, for example, the
professor assigned to teach the online course. However, it could be the
dean or chairman of the department in which the course is taught.
2.
The need is described and quantified. Next, the buying center, or group
of people brought together to help make the buying decision, work to
put some parameters around what needs to be purchased. In other words,
they describe what they believe is needed, the features it should have,
how much of it is needed, where, and so on. For more technical or
complex products the buyer will define the product's technical
specifications. Will an off-the-shelf product do, or must it be
customized?
Users
and influencers come into play here. In the case of our electronic
book, the professor who teaches the online course, his teaching
assistants, and the college's information technology staff would try to
describe the type of book best suited for the course. Should the book be
posted on the Web as this book is? Should it be downloadable? Maybe it
should be compatible with Amazon's Kindle. Figure 4.6 "An Example of
Product Specifications Developed for a B2B Purchase" shows the
specifications developed for a janitorial-services purchase by the state
of Kentucky.
Figure 4.6 An Example of Product Specifications Developed for a B2B Purchase

3.
Potential suppliers are searched for. At this stage, the people
involved in the buying process seek out information about the products
they are looking for and the vendors that can supply them. Most buyers
look online first to find vendors and products, then attend industry
trade shows and conventions and telephone or e-mail the suppliers with
whom they have relationships. The buyers might also consult trade
magazines, the blogs of industry experts, and perhaps attend Webinars
conducted by vendors or visit their facilities. Purchasing agents often
play a key role when it comes to deciding which vendors are the most
qualified. Are they reliable and financially stable? Will they be around
in the future? Do they need to be located near the organization or can
they be in another region of the country or in a foreign country? The
vendors that don't make the cut are quickly eliminated from the running.
4.
Qualified suppliers are asked to complete responses to requests for
proposal (RFPs). Each vendor that makes the cut is sent a request for
proposal (RFP), which is an invitation to submit a bid to supply the
good or service. An RFP outlines what the vendor is able to offer in
terms of its product - its quality, price, financing, delivery,
after-sales service, whether it can be customized or returned, and even
the product's disposal, in some cases. Good sales and marketing
professionals do more than just provide basic information to potential
buyers in RFPs. They focus on the buyer's problems and how to adapt
their offers to solve those problems.
Oftentimes
the vendors formally present their products to the people involved in
the buying decision. If the good is a physical product, the vendors
generally provide the purchaser with samples, which are then inspected
and sometimes tested. They might also ask satisfied customers to make
testimonials or initiate a discussion with the buyer to help the buyer
get comfortable with the product and offer advice on how best to go
about using it.
5.
The proposals are evaluated and supplier(s) selected. During this
stage, the RFPs are reviewed and the vendor or vendors selected. RFPs
are best evaluated if the members agree on the criteria being evaluated
and the importance of each. Different organizations will weigh different
parts of a proposal differently, depending on their goals and the
products they purchase. The price might be very important to some
sellers, such as discount and dollar stores. Other organizations might
be more focused on top-of-the-line goods and the service a seller
provides. Recall that the maker of Snapper mowers and snowblowers was
more focused on purchasing quality materials to produce top-of-the-line
equipment that could be sold at a premium. Still other factors include
the availability of products and the reliability with which vendors can
supply them. Reliability of supply is extremely important because delays
in the supply chain can shut down a company's production of goods and
services and cost the firm its customers and reputation.
For
high-priced, complex products, after-sales service is likely to be
important. A fast-food restaurant might not care too much about the
after-sales service for the paper napkins it buys - just that they are
inexpensive and readily available. However, if the restaurant purchases a
new drive-thru ordering system, it wants to be assured that the seller
will be on hand to repair the system if it breaks down and perhaps train
its personnel to use the system.
A
scorecard approach can help a company rate the RFPs. Figure 4.7 "A
Scorecard Used to Evaluate RFPs" is a simple example of a scorecard
completed by one member of a buying team. The scorecards completed by
all the members of the buying team can then be tabulated to help
determine the vendor with the highest rating.
Figure 4.7 A Scorecard Used to Evaluate RFPs

Selecting
Single versus Multiple Suppliers. Sometimes organizations select a
single supplier to provide the good or service. This can help streamline
a company's paperwork and other buying processes. With a single
supplier, instead of negotiating two contracts and submitting two
purchase orders to buy a particular offering, the company only has to do
one of each. Plus, the more the company buys from one vendor, the
bigger the volume discount it gets. Single sourcing can be risky,
though, because it leaves a firm at the mercy of a sole supplier. What
if the supplier doesn't deliver the goods, goes out of business, or
jacks up its prices? Many firms prefer to do business with more than one
supplier to avoid problems such as these. Doing business with multiple
suppliers keeps them on their toes. If they know their customers can
easily switch their business over to another supplier, they are likely
to compete harder to keep the business.
6.
An order routine is established. This is the stage in which the actual
order is put together. The order includes the agreed-upon price,
quantities, expected time of delivery, return policies, warranties, and
any other terms of negotiation. The order can be made on paper, online, or sent
electronically from the buyer's computer system to the seller's. It can
also be a one-time order or consist of multiple orders that are made
periodically as a company needs a good or service. Some buyers order
products continuously by having their vendors electronically monitor
their inventory for them and ship replacement items as the buyer needs
them. (We'll talk more about inventory management in Chapter 9 "Using
Supply Chains to Create Value for Customers").
7.
A postpurchase evaluation is conducted and the feedback provided to the
vendor. Just as consumers go through an evaluation period after they
purchase goods and services, so do businesses. The buying unit might
survey users of the product to see how satisfied they were with it.
Cessna Aircraft Company, a small U.S. airplane maker, routinely surveys
the users of the products it buys so they can voice their opinions on a
supplier's performance".
Some
buyers establish on-time performance, quality, customer satisfaction,
and other measures for their vendors to meet, and provide those vendors
with the information regularly, such as trend reports that show if their
performance is improving, remaining the same, or worsening. (The
process is similar to a performance evaluation you might receive as an
employee.) For example, Food Lion shares a wide variety of daily retail
data and performance calculations with its suppliers in exchange for
their commitment to closely collaborate with the grocery-store chain.
Keep
in mind that a supplier with a poor performance record might not be
entirely to blame. The purchasing company might play a role, too. For
example, if the U.S. Postal Service contracts with FedEx to help deliver
its holiday packages on time, but a large number of the packages are
delivered late, FedEx may or may not be to blame. Perhaps a large number
of loads the U.S. Postal Service delivered to FedEx were late, weather
played a role, or shipping volumes were unusually high. Companies need
to collaborate with their suppliers to look for ways to improve their
joint performance. Some companies hold annual symposiums with their
suppliers to facilitate cooperation among them and to honor their best
suppliers.
Types of B2B Buying Situations
To
some extent the stages an organization goes through and the number of
people involved depend on the buying situation. Is this the first time
the firm has purchased the product or the fiftieth? If it's the fiftieth
time, the buyer is likely to skip the search and other phases and
simply make a purchase. A straight rebuy is a situation in which a
purchaser buys the same product in the same quantities from the same
vendor. Nothing changes, in other words. Postpurchase evaluations are
often skipped, unless the buyer notices an unexpected change in the
offering such as a deterioration of its quality or delivery time.
Sellers
like straight rebuys because the buyer doesn't consider any alternative
products or search for new suppliers. The result is a steady, reliable
stream of revenue for the seller. Consequently, the seller doesn't have
to spend a lot of time on the account and can concentrate on capturing
other business opportunities. Nonetheless, the seller cannot ignore the
account. The seller still has to provide the buyer with top-notch,
reliable service or the straight-rebuy situation could be jeopardized.
If
an account is especially large and important, the seller might go so
far as to station personnel at the customer's place of business to be
sure the customer is happy and the straight-rebuy situation continues.
IBM and the management consulting firm Accenture station employees all
around the world at their customers' offices and facilities.
By
contrast, a new-buy selling situation occurs when a firm purchases a
product for the first time. Generally speaking, all the buying stages we
described in the last section occur. New buys are the most time
consuming for both the purchasing firm and the firms selling to them. If
the product is complex, many vendors and products will be considered,
and many RFPs will be solicited.
New-to-an-organization
buying situations rarely occur. What is more likely is that a purchase
is new to the people involved. For example, a school district owns
buildings. But when a new high school needs to be built, there may not
be anyone in management who has experience building a new school. That
purchase situation is a new buy for those involved.
A
modified rebuy occurs when a company wants to buy the same type of
product it has in the past but make some modifications to it. Maybe the
buyer wants different quantities, packaging, or delivery, or the product
customized slightly differently. For example, your instructor might
have initially adopted this textbook "as is" from its publisher, Unnamed
Publisher, but then decided to customize it later with additional
questions, problems, or content that he or she created or that was
available from Unnamed Publisher.
A
modified rebuy doesn't necessarily have to be made with the same
seller, however. Your instructor may have taught this course before,
using a different publisher's book. High textbook costs, lack of
customization, and other factors may have led to dissatisfaction. In
this case, she might visit with some other textbook suppliers and see
what they have to offer. Some buyers routinely solicit bids from other
sellers when they want to modify their purchases in order to get sellers
to compete for their business. Likewise, savvy sellers look for ways to
turn straight rebuys into modified buys so they can get a shot at the
business. They do so by regularly visiting with customers and seeing if
they have unmet needs or problems a modified product might solve.
Key Takeaway
The
stages in the B2B buying process are as follows: Someone recognizes
that the organization has a need that can be solved by purchasing a good
or service. The need is described and quantified. Qualified suppliers
are searched for, and each qualified supplier is sent a request for
proposal (RFP), which is an invitation to submit a bid to supply the
good or service. The proposals suppliers submit are evaluated, one or
more supplier(s) selected, and an order routine with each is
established. A postpurchase evaluation is later conducted and the
feedback provided to the suppliers. The buying stages an organization
goes through often depend on the buying situation - whether it's a
straight rebuy, new buy, or modified rebuy.
Review Questions
- What buying stages do buying centers typically go through?
- Why should business buyers collaborate with the companies they buy products from?
- Explain how a straight rebuy, new buy, and modified rebuy differ from one another.
International B2B Markets and E-commerce
Learning Objectives
- Describe the reasons why firms in the same industries are often located in the same geographic areas.
- Explain the effect e-commerce is having on the firms, the companies they do business with, where they are located, and the prices they charge.
- Outline the different types of e-commerce sites and what each type of site is used for.
International B2B Markets
Another
characteristic of B2B markets that you may or may not have noticed or
thought about is that firms in the same industry tend to cluster in the
same geographic areas. In the United States, many banks and financial
companies are located on or near Wall Street in New York City. Many film
and television companies operate out of Hollywood. Is it just by chance
that this has occurred? No.
The
clustering occurs because the resources these firms need - both human
and natural - are located in some areas and not others. For example, the
Gulf of Mexico is rich with oil deposits. As a result, many oil
companies and facilities are located along or near the Gulf in cities
such as Houston. Likewise, many high-tech companies are located in
Silicon Valley (California). One reason is that nearby Stanford
University is one of the top computer-science schools in the country and
the firms want to hire graduates from the school.
But
that's not the only reason businesses in the same industry cluster
together. Another reason is the sellers want to be close to their
buyers. Bentonville, Arkansas, the world headquarters of Walmart, used
to be a sleepy little rural town. As Walmart grew, so have the number of
companies moving into the area to do business with Walmart. In the last
twenty years, the size of the town has nearly tripled.
Why
do companies want to be near their buyers? Let's go back to our date
analogy. Suppose you hit it off with the person you're interested in and
you become "an item". You probably wouldn't want to be half the world
away from the person for a long period of time because you would miss
the person and because you wouldn't want a rival moving in on your turf!
The same is true for sellers. Buyers also want to be close to their
suppliers because it can help them get inventory more quickly. Dell's
suppliers are located right next to the company's assembly plants. And,
as you have learned, some companies actually locate their personnel on
their customers' sites.
B2B E-Commerce
Not
all B2B buyers and sellers are cozying up to one another location-wise
today, though: e-commerce, or commerce conducted electronically, such as
over the Internet, has made locating near buyers less important.
Consider the Hubert Company, a Cincinnati-based firm that sells supplies
to the food industry. "Just ten years ago the Internet didn't exist for
the Hubert Company, and today almost 30 percent of our business comes
through the Internet as an ordering mechanism," says Bart Kohler,
president of the company. However, the
Hubert Company can no longer protect the market in and around Cincinnati
just because it's headquartered there. "Whereas in the past, I was
somewhat insulated to just people in my area, now there really are no
geographic boundaries anymore, and anyone can compete with me anywhere,"
Kohler explains. The advantage is that whereas the United States is a
mature market in which growth is limited, other countries, like Brazil,
India, and China, are growing like crazy and represent huge e-commerce
opportunities for the Hubert Company, he says.
Figure 4.9

The
Hubert Company sells to companies all over the globe, including the
U.S. government. Notice the GSA link in the upper right-hand corner of
its Web page.
B2B
e-commerce was actually a little slower to take hold than B2C
e-commerce, though. Initially, the Web sites of many B2B firms were
static. There was no interactivity. "We put our first Web site up in
1998, and it really didn't do anything," Kohler explains. "All it did
was it had the picture of the company. I think it had a picture of me
holding a catalog with a toll-free number at the bottom, and said, 'Hey,
call this number and we'll send you a catalog'".
Things
have changed. Companies have since developed sophisticated e-commerce
systems that allow their customers to do many things for themselves. As a
result, they have been able to cut down on the amount of customer
service they need to provide. Does your business want to ship your
products cheaply across the country via rail? You can sign up online for
an account with a railroad like Union Pacific (UP), reserve some rail
cars on UP's site, and choose the route you want them to travel. Later,
after you ship the goods, you can check your account balance on the Web
site and track the rail cars online like when packages are shipped with
FedEx and UPS. The office supply chain Staples has special Web sites set
up for each of its business customers, which are customized with online
catalogs containing the types of products they buy at the prices they
seem to be willing to pay, based on their past purchases on
StaplesLink.com.
Types of B2B Web Sites
Figure 4.10 An Example of a Sell-Side B2B Web site

Most
of the examples we've described so far are examples of sell-side
e-commerce sites. A sell-side site is a site in which a single seller
sells products to many different buyers. Figure 4.10 "An Example of a
Sell-Side B2B Web site" shows the direction of the sale of goods and
services sold on a sell-side site, such as the Hubert Company has.
But
there are buy-side e-commerce sites as well. A buy-side site is one in
which a business buys products from multiple sellers that go there to do
business with the firm. Some government agencies have buy-side sites.
B2B exchanges are e-commerce sites where multiple buyers and sellers go
to find and do business with one another. (You can think of the
exchanges as being somewhat like Craigslist but composed solely of
business buyers and sellers.) Sites such as these make their money by
charging buyers and sellers a fee when they conduct transactions with
one another. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, B2B exchanges sprouted
up on the Internet like weeds. Cyber entrepreneurs took a "build it and
they will come" attitude, hoping to earn a fee off the transactions
conducted on site. Many of these sites have failed, but not all of them.
One of the most successful and largest exchanges is Alibaba.com,
founded in 1999 as a trading platform for small and medium manufacturers
to sell their wares". ChemNet.com is a global exchange where companies go
to buy and sell chemicals of all kinds. The homepage for ChemNet is
shown in Figure 4.11. (Ammonium, sodium, or potassium, anyone?)
Figure 4.11

Need chemicals? You can find them on the B2B exchange Web site ChemNet.
B2B
auctions are Web-based auctions that occur between businesses. The
auctions can be either sell side or buy side. An example of a sell-side
auction is a B2B auction that occurs on eBay or a site like
AssetAuctions.com where surplus industrial equipment is sold. Motorola
regularly sells small quantities of products at the end of their life
cycles on eBay. Motorola has found that eBay is a good way to make some
money from products that businesses are reluctant to buy otherwise
because they are being discontinued". Sell-side auctions are sometimes referred to as forward
auctions.
Buy-side
auctions, by contrast, reverse the traditional auction formula, which
is to help the seller get the highest price for the product. Instead,
the buyer initiates the auction in order to find the cheapest supplier
of a product. Sellers then bid against one another, offering the lowest
prices they can for their products, in order to get the buyer's
business. Because the roles of the buyers and sellers are reversed in
buy-side auctions, they are often referred to as reverse auctions.
Not
all companies use an intermediary like eBay or AssetAuctions to conduct
their auctions, though. Some companies conduct their own auctions on
their Web sites so they don't have to pay a fee to an intermediary. For
example, General Motors auctions off reconditioned vehicles to auto
dealers on its own Web site, http://www.gmonlineauctions.com.
Pricing in E-commerce Markets
One
of the consequences of e-commerce is that B2B customers can easily shop
around from the convenience of their cubicles or offices, bid on
products, and read blogs about products from industry experts. That's
what buyers generally do before they get on the phone or personally meet
with sellers. E-commerce has made it especially easy for buyers to
compare prices. And the cheapest price often attracts the most
attention.
The
result is that B2B sellers (and B2C sellers) have found their ability
to raise prices is limited. The problem is more acute when products are
very similar to one another (commodities) and B2B auctions and exchanges
are utilized. If you are a buyer of chemicals looking for a supplier on
ChemNet, do you want to pay more for one brand of a chemical that has
the same molecular formula as every other brand? Maybe not. However, if
you believe you can get better service from one company than from
another, you might pay more. "Everything has become much more of a
commodity, commodity meaning that it's basically more and more about
price," says Kohler about e-commerce competition. "So my challenge as a
distributor is that I have got to constantly find new ways to try to
create value for Hubert's customers". When he is able to find a new way
to create value, the decision becomes less about price and he can
compete more effectively.
To
avoid e-commerce price wars, some companies refuse to sell their
products directly online or put prices on them. Snapper products are an
example. Go to Snapper.com, and you will find a lot of information about
Snapper mowers and snowblowers online and dealers where you can buy
them. But you won't see any prices listed. Nor can you buy a product
directly from the Web site.
Key Takeaway
Firms
in the same industry tend to cluster in the same geographic areas
because the resources these firms need - both human and natural - are
located in some areas and not others. Sellers also want to be close to
their buyers. E-commerce, or commerce conducted electronically such as
over the Internet, has made locating near buyers less important for
business-to-business sellers and opened up opportunities for them to
sell their products around the world. However, e-commerce has also led
to more competition and made it difficult for sellers to raise their
prices. B2B e-commerce was slower to take hold than B2C e-commerce.
Companies have since developed sophisticated e-commerce systems,
including sell-side and buy-side Web sites, exchanges, and B2B auctions.
Review Questions
- Name some other industries you're aware of in which companies tend to
cluster geographically. Why are the companies in these industries
located near one another?
- How do B2B exchange sites differ from B2B auction sites?
- How can firms that sell their products on the Internet prevent their prices from being driven down by competitors?
Ethics in B2B Markets
Learning Objectives
- Explain how the ethical dilemmas B2B marketers face differ from the ethical dilemmas B2C marketers face.
- Outline the measures companies take to encourage their employees and executives to act in ethical ways.
It's
likely that every topic we have talked about so far in this chapter has
an ethical dimension to it. Take procurement, for example: unlike B2C
markets, offering customers free dinners, golf games, and so forth is
very common in B2B settings. In many foreign countries, business and
government buyers not only expect perks such as these but also actually
demand bribes be paid if you want to do business with them. And firms
pay them, even though some countries prohibit them. (The United States
is one such country.) Which countries have a penchant for bribery? In a
report called the "Bribe Payers Index," Transparency International, a
watchdog organization, annually ranks the likelihood of firms from the
world's industrialized countries to bribe abroad. The top five countries
are shown in Table 4.3 "Transparency International's Bribe Payers
Index".
Table 4.3 Transparency International's Bribe Payers Index
1. Russia
2. China
3. Mexico
4. India
5. Italy
Or
take, for example, the straight-rebuy situation we discussed earlier.
Recall that in a straight rebuy, buyers repurchase products
automatically. Recently, Dean Foods, which manufactures the Silk brand
of soy milk, experienced a lot of negative press after the company
changed the word "organic" to "natural" on the labels of its milk, and
quietly switched to conventional soybeans, which are often grown with
pesticides. But Dean didn't change the barcode for the product, the
packaging of the product, or the price much. So stores kept ordering
what they thought was the same product - making a straight rebuy - but
it wasn't. Many stores and consumers felt as though they had been duped.
Some grocers dropped the entire Silk lineup of products.
And
remember Intel's strategy to increase the demand for its chips by
insisting that PC makers use "Intel Inside" stickers? Recently Intel
paid a competitor more than a billion dollars to settle a court case
contending that it strong-armed PC makers into doing business
exclusively with Intel. (Does that make you feel less warm and fuzzy
about the "Intel Inside" campaign?)
What
Dean Foods and Intel did might strike you as being wrong. However, what
is ethical and what is not is often not clear-cut. Walmart has a
reputation for using its market power to squeeze its suppliers for the
best deals possible, in some cases putting them out of business. Is that
ethical? What about companies that hire suppliers abroad, putting U.S.
companies and workers out of business? Is that wrong? It depends on whom
you ask. Some economists believe Walmart's ability to keep costs low
has benefited consumers far more than it has hurt the suppliers of
products. Is it fair to prohibit U.S. companies from offering bribes
when their foreign competitors can?
Clearly,
people have very different ideas about what's ethical and what's not.
So how does a business get all of its employees on the same page in
terms of how they behave? Laws and regulations - state, federal, and
international - are an obvious starting point for companies, their
executives, and employees wanting to do the right thing. The U.S.
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) often plays a role when it comes to B2B
laws and regulations. The FTC regulates companies in an effort to
prevent them from engaging in unfair trade practices that can harm
consumers and hamper competition.
Further,
companies that sell to the government must, by law, follow very strict
ethical guidelines. These companies tend to make such guidelines their
policy because it is easier to make sure that the federal regulations
are followed all of the time than only when selling to the government.
Companies
are also adopting ethics codes that provide general guidelines about
how their employees should behave. Many firms require employees to go
through ethics training so they know what to do when they face tricky
ethical dilemmas. Large corporations have begun hiring "chief ethics
officers" to ensure ethics are properly implemented within their
organizations. The Business Marketing Association has also developed a
code of ethics that discourages bribery and other practices, such as
disparaging a competitor's products unfairly, and encourages treating
one's suppliers equitably.
Figure 4.12

Click
on the following link to read the Business Marketing Association's
entire code of ethics:
http://www.marketing.org/i4a/pages/Index.cfm?pageID=3286.
As
for Walmart, you can't fault the company's procurement practices.
Walmart's purchasing agents aren't allowed to accept a lunch, dinner,
golf game, or so much as a cup of coffee from potential vendors. Walmart
is not the only company to have implemented such a policy. More and
more firms have followed suit because (1) they realize that perks such
as these drive up product costs and (2) they don't want their buyers
making decisions based on what they personally can get out of them
rather than what's best for the company.
All
things equal, companies want to do business with firms that are
responsible. They don't want to be associated with firms that are not.
Why is this important? Because that's what consumers are increasingly
demanding. A few years ago, Nike and a number of other apparel makers
were lambasted when it came to light that the factories they contracted
with were using child labor and keeping workers toiling for long hours
under terrible conditions. Nike didn't own the factories, but it still
got a bad rap. Today, Nike, Inc., uses a "balanced scorecard". When
evaluating suppliers, it looks at their labor-code compliance along with
measures such as price, quality, and delivery time. During crunch
times, it allows some Chinese factories latitude by, for example,
permitting them to adjust when employees can take days off.
Similarly,
Walmart has developed a scorecard to rate its suppliers on how their
packaging of products affects the environment. Walmart does so because its customers are
becoming more conscious of environmental damage and see value in
products that are produced in as environmentally friendly a way as
possible.
Key Takeaway
Ethics
come into play in almost all business settings. Business-to-business
markets are no different. For example, unlike B2C markets, offering
customers perks is very common in B2B settings. In many foreign
countries, government buyers demand bribes be paid if a company wants to
do business with them. Understanding the laws and regulations that
apply to their firms is an obvious starting point for companies, their
executives, and employees in terms of knowing how to act ethically.
Companies are also adopting ethics codes that provide general guidelines
about how their employees should behave, requiring their employees to
go through ethics training, and hiring chief ethics officers. Companies
want to do business with firms that are responsible. They don't want to
be associated with firms that are not. Why? Because they know ethics are
important to consumers and that they are increasingly demanding firms
behave responsibly.
Review Questions
- Name some of the types of ethical dilemmas facing firms in B2B markets.
- Why is it difficult for employees and firms to know what's considered to be ethical behavior and what is not?
Discussion Questions
- Assume your company makes shop towels, hand-washing stations, and
similar products. Make a list of all the companies that could be
potential customers of your firm. Then identify all the markets from
which their demand is derived. (Who are their customers and their
customers' customers?) What factors might influence the success or
failure of your business in these markets?
- How might a buying center be different for a company that is considering building a new plant versus choosing a new copier?
- Imagine you are a salesperson for a company that sells maintenance
items used in keeping a manufacturing plant running. There is a large
plant in your territory that buys 60 percent of its products from one
competitor and the other 40 percent from another competitor. What could
you do to try to make a sale in that plant if they have never purchased
from you before? How would your answer change if you were the 40 percent
vendor and wanted to increase your share of the buyer's business? Would
your answer change if you were the other vendor? Why or why not?
- When your family makes a major purchase, such as choosing a vacation
destination or buying furniture, does it resemble a buying center? If
so, who plays what roles?
- Katie
is a forklift operator who is tired of her forklift breaking down. She
points out to her boss, the plant supervisor, that her forklift is
broken down at least 20 percent of the time, and it is beginning to
impact production. The plant supervisor tells the purchasing agent that a
new forklift is needed and asks the purchasing agent to get three bids
on new ones with similar features. The purchasing agent calls three
companies and gets bids, which the plant supervisor uses to narrow it
down to two. He then has Katie test drive the two and since she liked
the Yamamatsu best, he decides to purchase that one. What roles do the
supervisor and Katie play in this firm's buying center? Does the process
followed resemble the process outlined in the chapter? If not, why not?
- Someone who works in a company is also a consumer at home. You have
already learned about how consumers buy. How does what you already know
about how consumers buy relate to what you would expect those same
people to do at work when making a purchase?
- A major office equipment manufacturer and an airline once teamed up to
offer a special deal: Buy a copier/printer and get a free round-trip
ticket anywhere in the United States where the airline flies. The
promotion didn't last long - buyers complained it was unethical. What
about it was unethical? Who was really doing the complaining?
- Congratulations, you just made a sale! For the first time in five
years, the Humongo Corporation purchased from your company. How do you
turn this into a straight rebuy? What product characteristics might make
this goal easier to accomplish? What buyer characteristics might make
it more difficult to accomplish?
- Consider a company where marketing and sales are two different
departments. Their customers are other businesses. Using both the buying
center and buying process, describe what the marketing department
actually does. What do salespeople actually do?
Activities
- Interview someone you know who makes purchasing decisions as part of
the job. The person may or may not be a professional purchasing agent as
long as business purchasing decisions are a fairly regular part of his
or her position. What are the key principles to making good purchasing
decisions at work? How do those principles influence people's purchases
for their own personal consumption?
- Locate three different types of Web sites that cater to markets
discussed in this chapter. How do these differ from sites like eBay or
Overstock.com? How are they similar? B2C models like Groupon and
LivingSocial are being adopted by B2B companies. Examples include Bizy
Deal; take a look at their site and identify the types of offerings that
seem prevalent. What characteristics of the product or service would
make such a model right for a B2B company?
- Go to http://www.ism.ws/. What is the purpose of this site and the
organization that created it? How does the ISM help its members with
ethical dilemmas? Be specific, with specific examples from the site.
- Many B2B marketers use NAICS to segment their market. Go to
http://www.census.gov/epcd/www/naics.html. Click on the FAQs link to
answer these questions. What is NAICS and how is it used? How does NAICS
handle market-based rather than production-based statistical
classifications, and why is that distinction imp