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4.3 B2B buying behaviour

B2B buying is more complex than, yet in some ways similar to, the consumer buying process. Manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers, governments, non-profit organisations, farms and hospitals are among the many business buyers. They buy industrial goods and services in order to produce consumer or other industrial goods and services.

Business buyers tend to be concentrated geographically in the major urban/industrial areas of countries. In the case of port and shipping services in Australia , they would be largely in the greater Melbourne and Sydney areas and other capital cities. Business buyers are much smaller in number than consumer buyers, but they have significantly greater buying power. Compare, for instance, the contrasts in business needs of furniture retailers for transportation and warehousing with their consumer needs for transporting/warehousing their personal effects whenever they move residence.

The next reading which includes Peppers and Rogers (2001) discusses seven areas in which B2B marketing differs from business-to-consumer (B2C) marketing. Turn to this reading now which also explains your text's view of business marketing, the importance of relationship marketing between business buyers and sellers, and how business marketing differs from consumer marketing.

In your text

Kotler et al. (2004) Chapter 8, pp. 278-288, 'Business-to-business behaviour' and 'Business-to-business markets'.

Reading 4.3

Peppers, D. and Rogers, M. 2001, One to One B2B: Customer Development Strategies for the Business-to-Business World
(Executive Summary), Peppers + Rogers Group, no other
details available.

Activity 4.4

You can appreciate the size of the business market more fully via the following exercise.

Grab the closest pair of shoes you can find and inspect them. Then:

  1. Write down each of the component parts of the shoes that you can see (for example, the eyelets for the laces).
  2. Write down all the component parts that you think are probably there but you cannot see (for example, the leather/filling/synthetic filling inside the heel).
  3. Write down all the raw materials that you think have gone into making the component parts you have just listed (for example, the dye that gives the shoe its colour).
  4. Write down some of the machinery that you think might have been involved in the manufacture of the shoes.

As you will have worked out, each part which goes into the shoes, each item of raw material, and each piece of machinery, represents multiple transactions at different levels of the industry hierarchy-the raw material and machinery suppliers, the manufacturers of the shoes, the wholesalers and the retailers who distribute the shoes to you, the final consumer. In short, the business market is LARGE and warrants the attention of marketers.

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