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2. Industrial Marketing. Also called: Business-to-Business (B2B) and Organizational Marketing.Definition: the creation and management of mutually beneficial relationships between organizational suppliers and organizational customers.Customer can be private firm, public agency, or nonprofit org
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1. Chapter 1The Unique Nature of Industrial Marketing
2. 2 Industrial Marketing Also called: Business-to-Business (B2B) and Organizational Marketing.
Definition: the creation and management of mutually beneficial relationships between organizational suppliers and organizational customers.
Customer can be private firm, public agency, or nonprofit organization.
3. 3 The Marketing Concept Creating value for customers with goods and services that address organizational needs and objectives.
4. 4 Marketing Concept Three major components:
All company activities should begin with, and be based on, the recognition of a fundamental customer need.
A customer orientation should be integrated throughout the functional areas of the firm: production, engineering, finance, R&D.
Customer satisfaction is viewed as the means to long-term profitability goals.
5. 5
6. 6 Market Orientation Acquire intelligence from the external environment.
Disseminate that intelligence throughout the organization.
Respond to the intelligence: take action.
(Kohli and Jaworski 1990, Journal of Marketing)
7. 7 Marketing Mission Statement
State in terms of meeting customer needs, not in terms of products or technologies.
Marketing Myopia (Levitt 1960 HBR)
8. 8 Marketing Activities Identify customer needs
Research customer behavior
Divide market into manageable segments
Develop new products/services
Establish/negotiate prices
Deliver, install, service products
Ensure adequate and timely supply of products at correct place
Allocate resources across product lines
Communicate with customers
Evaluate/control marketing programs
9. 9 Marketing Mix Limited number of variables under Marketing’s control to create position that is attractive to the target market segment.
Four Ps
Product
Price
Promotion
Place (Distribution)
10. 10 External Environment Characterized by:
Degree of Stability
Complexity
Diversity
Hostility
11. 11 External Environment Six Environments
Technological
Economic
Social/Cultural (Customer)
Political/Legal
Natural/Climatic
Competitive
12. 12 So what’s different about B2B? Marketing Concept
Marketing Mix
Market Segmentation
Product Life Cycle
All apply in both B2C and B2B.
13. 13 So what’s different about B2B? The technical characteristics of the product are important.
These products directly affect the operations and economic health of the customer.
The customer is an organization rather than an individual consumer, or family.
14. 14 Five Major DifferencesBetween B2B and B2C
Products/Services being marketed
Nature of demand
How the customer buys
Communication process
Economic/Financial factors
15. 15 Products/Services More complex
Functional vs. Symbolic Attributes
Large unit dollar value/Large quantities
Custom/Tailored
Various Stages from raw material to finished goods.
Foundation, Entering, Facilitating Goods
16. 16
17. 17 Nature of Demand Derived
Joint/Shared
Concentrated
Inelastic
18. 18 How Customer Buys Group Process
Formal
Lengthy
Loyal
Decisions based on risk and opportunity
19. 19 Communication Personal selling more important than mass paid advertising
Support sales with other promotional activities: advertising in trade journals, catalogs, trade shows, direct mail, WWW.
Message focused on technical, factual, and descriptive content.
Multiple audience members.
20. 20 Economic/Financial Factors Competition oligopolistic
Power/Dependency relationships
Reciprocity:Doing business with companies that do business with them.
Economic variables: interest rates, inflation, business cycle