CHAPTER 5: Analyzing Business Markets
CHAPTER 5: Analyzing Business Markets
Chapter Questions
What is the business market, and how does it differ from the consumer market?
What buying situations do organizational buyers face?
Who participates in the business-to-business buying process?
Organizational Buying
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.
Methods of e-Procurement
Websites organized using vertical hubs
Centered on industries such as plastics, steel, chemicals, paper
Buying alliances (several companies combine to buy in volume to obtain lower prices)
Transora—Coca-Cola, Sara Lee, Kraft, PepsiCo, P&G, and several other companies
Diageo, Kraft, P&G and Others Launch Major Online Business Marketplace
Purchasing Orientations
Buying (short term and tactical, lowest price for a given level of quality, commoditization, multi-sourcing)
Procurement (quality improvement and cost reductions)
Supply Chain Management (seamless from purchase of raw materials to the on-time arrival of finished goods to
end users)
Benchmarks Compare a “benchmark” offerings and new-market offering and then asked how much more they
would pay if new features were offered or how much less if certain features were removed
Compositional approach attaches a monetary value to each of 3 alternative levels of given attribute and
repeated for other attributes. The values are then added together for any product configuration.
Importance ratings rate the importance of different attributes and the supplier firms’ performance on these
attributes
Direct survey questions place a direct dollar value on one or more changes in the market offering
Order Routine Specification and Inventory
Stockless purchase plans
Vendor-managed inventory
Continuous replenishment
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