4MD3 Business to Business Marketing Lecture 3 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 20
About This Presentation
Title:

4MD3 Business to Business Marketing Lecture 3

Description:

THE TWO EXTREMES OF THE RELATIONSHIP CONTINUUM. transactional relationships ... but no surrender. what keeps marketer 'in line'? CUSTOMER BENEFITS OF. PS RELATIONSHIPS ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:34
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: dylanb7
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 4MD3 Business to Business Marketing Lecture 3


1
4MD3Business to Business MarketingLecture 3
  • Steve Howse
  • January 24, 2008

2
Review of Last Class
  • BM/CM Differences
  • demand
  • buyer purchase criteria
  • buyer behaviour
  • buyers

3
PREVIEW OF BUYER-SELLER RELATIONSHIPS
  • transactional relationships
  • preferred-supplier relationships
  • benefits to customers and marketers
  • relationship development
  • customer switching costs

4
BACKGROUND
  • many other relationships are valuable
  • but customer relationships are crucial
  • many similarities to human relationships
  • concept of return on relationship

5
THE TWO EXTREMES OF THE RELATIONSHIP CONTINUUM  
  • transactional relationships
  • preferred-supplier relationships  
  • most of the real world lies between

6
TRANSACTIONAL RELATIONSHIPS
  • customer buys opportunistically
  • mating metaphor
  • common in case of commodities
  • no relationship connectors i.e
  • no adaptation
  • no information exchange
  • no operational linkages
  • no long-term contracts (contd)
  •  

7
TRANSACTIONAL RELATIONSHIPS (CONTD)
  • no trust or loyalty
  • no commitment, involvement or interdependence
  • "multiple sourcing" is the norm
  • bow-tie communication
  • account for most of marketers cash flow
  • what keeps marketer in line?
  • closest real-world examples?

8
PREFERRED-SUPPLIER RELATIONSHIPS
  • AKA "strategic partnering" 
  • customer buys collaboratively
  • increasingly common  
  • many relationship connectors
  • high trust and loyalty
  • high commitment and involvement
  • high interdependence
  • single-sourcing the norm (contd)

9
PREFERRED-SUPPLIER RELATIONSHIPS (CONTD)
  • multiple communication links
  • limited freedom of action on both sides
  • past, present and future merge
  • all marketers become service firms
  • but no surrender
  • what keeps marketer in line?

10
CUSTOMER BENEFITS OFPS RELATIONSHIPS
  • satisfaction of its specific needs  
  • more unsolicited help from marketer
  • assured access to critical inputs
  • blockage of competitors access to critical
    inputs
  • elimination of middlemen
  • lower transaction costs
  • lower checking costs
  • protection of proprietary information
  • the downside of single-sourcing?

11
CUSTOMERS USE PS RELATIONSHIPS WHEN
  • the foregoing benefits are especially important
    also when.
  • they must live with a single supplier
  • customer switching costs are very high
  • marketer has monopoly
  • or they can live with a single supplier

12
MARKETER BENEFITS OFPS RELATIONSHIPS
  • lower marketing costs
  • assured demand

13
THE BUSINESS MARKETERS RELATIONSHIP PORTFOLIO
  • we usually develop a mix from several places on
    the continuum
  • why not all toward PS end of continuum?
  • how choose customers for PS-end relationships?

14
RELATIONSHIP DEVELOPMENT STAGES
  • awareness
  • exploration
  • expansion  
  • commitment  
  • dissolution

15
PROGRAMMED BUYING (A PURCHASING TECHNIQUE)
  • customers use to ensure neither side dominates
    the relationship e.g..
  • purchase 30 of needs from a given supplier
  • representing 30 of that suppliers sales
  • result is MAD

16
CUSTOMER SWITCHING COSTS
  • the buyers cost of dissolving and replacing a
    relationship
  • quantifiable costs
  • non-quantifiable (i.e. soft) costs

17
QUANTIFIABLE CUSTOMER SWITCHING COSTS
  • choosing and getting-to-know a new supplier
  • new supplier's adaptation  
  • redesign of own product
  • subsequent retesting and recertification
  • new office and shop routines (contd)

18
QUANTIFIABLE CUSTOMER SWITCHING COSTS (CONTD)
  • retraining and remotivating employees
  • disruption of operations
  • purchase and installation of related products
  • legal costs

19
NON-QUANTIFIABLE CUSTOMER SWITCHING COSTS
  • poorer communication
  • loss of personal friends
  •  
  • psychological harm

20
TACTICAL IMPLICATIONS
  • in suppliers try to increase
  • no. and depth of customer switching costs
  • customers awareness of them
  • out suppliers try to downplay or counteract
    them
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com