1 / 24

Understanding Organizational Buying Behavior

Understanding Organizational Buying Behavior. Anand G Khanna . Organizational buying behavior. Consumer vs. Organizational buying behavior Main types of buying situations in B2B Stages of decision in B2B Roles in B2B procurement Influences on organizational behavior Buying centres .

hovan
Télécharger la présentation

Understanding Organizational Buying Behavior

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. Understanding Organizational Buying Behavior Anand G Khanna

  2. Organizational buying behavior • Consumer vs. Organizational buying behavior • Main types of buying situations in B2B • Stages of decision in B2B • Roles in B2B procurement • Influences on organizational behavior • Buying centres

  3. Consumer vs. Organizational buying behavior • Decisions made by consumers are quite simple • Organizational buying processes are more complicated, there are several phases and steps • Different buying behavior for different products and target groups • Simple consumer goods like food and beverages are bought very spontaneously – influenced by advertising and product presentation • For premium consumer goods (expensive clothes, computers) – buying behavior is getting more rational – comparison • Private investment goods – price bargaining

  4. B2B products – organizational procurement starts • More than one person involved • Buying process follows certain rules • Price comparison, standardisation, tenders, processes

  5. Main types of buying situations in B2B • Straigtht rebuy – routine decision, repetitive process (energy, office supplies, raw materials, ), component suppliers for the automotive industry – little or no new information • Modified rebuy – more complicated but less sophisticated: cars, trucks, computers, consulting – modified rebuys are often treated with less attention • New task – calls for thorough research – industrial plant – highest level of uncertainty. Strategic new tasks are of extreme strategic and financial importance (Power Plants, Mining,Oil&Gas ,Petrochem ,aircrafts, military equipment, infrastructure) – re-evaluation of alternatives and search for new information and new alternatives

  6. Decision Making Units • Cross Functional Groups / Teams (User ,Technical , Materials , Finance) • CF recommend for decision making Authority – predetermined on Value/Project /Application basis

  7. Steps in the Buying Decision Process • Problem Recognition • General Need Description • Product/Service Specification • Supplier /Source Search • RFP/RQP/Tender • Bid evaluation& Selection-Contract Award • Delivery, Commissioning , Implementation • Evaluate Performance

  8. Preliminary application • Recognition of a problem (need) and a general solution • Released by top management = operating department or external consultants • Result  request for an offer addressed to a number of potential suppliers

  9. Tender preparation phase • Determination of characteristics and quantity of needed items • Search for and qualification of potential sources • Supplier has to provide an offer • Tries to be incomparable with his competitors • Customer tries to make the offer best comparable

  10. Negotiation phase • Core selling process • Comprises acquisition and analysis of proposals, evaluation of proposals and selection of suppliers

  11. Processing phase/warranty/ service phase • Contains selection of an order routine • Realisation of the transaction along with the fixation of after sales service tasks

  12. Roles in B2B procurement – buying center concept • Group of people involved in the buying process – buying center • Webster/Wind model shows 5 different roles – not institutionalised –Vary from co to co Industry to industry • This causes problems in identifying and targeting the right people within the decision process

  13. The Buying Center Environment External Factors Independent standards-setting organizations Industry needs and Orgn buying behavior Internal Factors Need of Product ,Service Technology Accounting Management Marketing Legal Production/Mfg. Finance Service Government agencies Various Publics

  14. Buying center Role keepers have different tasks – not mandatory • Buyer • User • Initiator • Gatekeeper • Influencer

  15. Buyer • Formal authority to sign contracts • Member of purchasing department • Influences the vendor selection • Not in technical details • Main criteria: price + terms and conditions of the contract

  16. User • Person working with the product • Interested in benefits and unobstructed function of the product to buy • Large knowhow and preconceived opinion

  17. Influencer • A person with high technical knowledge and practical experience  definition of minimum requirements on technical or company standards

  18. Gatekeeper or Technical Clearing house ? • Controls the flow of information within the buying center • Assistant of decision maker • Influence by preparing the decision and the relevant documents

  19. Decider • Right to say yes or no • He/Group is (are ) the mightiest person

  20. Initiator • Person who brings new ideas and solutions into the company

  21. Specific Marketing considerations in the B2B Marketing Business • Long decision taking process • High risk • Complex buying center • The specific competitive situation

  22. Product policy • Focuses on innovation • Has to care for high flexibility in fulfillment of Demand • Manufacturing facility and commitment for deilvery

  23. Price Offering • Strict bid and tender rules • High transparency • Add value with service offering to achieve a differentiating position –Bundling of product and services • Another aspect: financing and sourcing models

  24. Marketing/Sales policy of Seller • Focus on negotiation phase • Provide excellent people in the selling center • High technical knowledge • Problem solver! • Proving success with comparable tasks • Reference projects!

More Related