Title: Foreword
1(No Transcript)
2Organizational Buyer Behavior of Group Market
Foreword
The ideal salesperson in the company meetings
segment isnt a salesperson in the traditional
sense, but rather the problem-solver.
-
Robert C. Mackey-
3OBJECTIVES
After reading this chapter, you should be able to
- Understand the organizational buying process.
- Identify and discuss the importance of the
participants in the organizational buying
process. - Identify the major influences on organizational
buyers. - List the eight stages of the organizational
buying process. - Identify and describe the group markets in the
hospitality industry.
4Organizational Buyer Behavior of Group Market
Don Walter
- Don Walter is a member of the Convention Liaison
Councils Hall of Leaders. - he received this honor because of his
contribution to the meetings convention
business over the last thirty years - Don has purchased or influenced the purchase of
nearly 100 million in hospitality travel
products. - To Don, honest, straightforward negotiations are
the important factor in negotiating with a hotel. - if both the meeting planner and the hotel sales
manager are up front with each other, it saves
hours of unnecessary negotiation for each party.
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5Organizational Buyer Behavior of Group Market
Don Walter
- Walter does not buy on price alone and avoids
properties that appear desperate for his
business. - he claims that often these hotels have financial
problems, which result in staff turnover and
understaffing - You may have to deal with several people because
of the turnover problem. - when the meeting is held, service is poor, meals
take longer and setup changes are difficult to
accomplish - If the meeting does not go off well, the savings
in cost seems trivial in comparison to the damage
done to the sponsoring associations reputation.
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6Organizational Buyer Behavior of Group Market
Don Walter
- When negotiating, Walter looks for a fair deal.
- he expects the hotel to make money, but also
expects good service and overall value - He observes employees during a site visit to get
an idea of the service he can expect for his
meeting. - when he sees an employee pick up a gum wrapper,
it indicates the employees have pride in their
hotel - He likes to go back to a hotel where he sees the
same faces he saw last year. - low turnover and promotion from within give him a
good feeling about a hotel
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7Organizational Buyer Behavior of Group Market
Don Walter
- After signing a contract with the hotel, he likes
to deal with one person - Don brings his own contract, he does not use the
hotels - Walter said that requirements of the Americans
with Disabilities Act (ADA) should be a concern
to both hotels and meeting planners. - compliance ensures that everyone wanting to
attend the meeting has access to the meeting - failure to comply could result in lawsuits from
attendees against both the meeting sponsor and
hotel
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8Organizational Buyer Behavior of Group Market
Don Walter
- Don Walter provides an example of the tremendous
purchasing power of an organizational buyer, and
provides some insights into what is importantto
meeting planners and association executives - they want good service at a fair price with no
surprises - when they need to make changes during the event,
they expect the hotel or convention hall to be
supportive - In most hotels and many food-service operations,
organizations account for a large percentage of
sales. - business markets differ from consumer markets in
structure demand, nature of the buying unit,
typesof decisions, and the decision process
involved
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9The Organizational Buying Process
Market Structure and Demand
- The American Marketing Association holds more
than twenty conferences annually. - the value of this account approaches 1 million
- a delegate also spends about 850 on
transportation and 425 on entertainment, plus
spending in local restaurants - Hyatt and Marriott share the majority of the
AMAs conference business, with Marriotts share
close to three thousand room-nights a year. - each organizational customer can deliver tens of
thousands of dollars worth of business to the
hotel, airlines, and the destinations economy
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10The Organizational Buying Process
Market Structure and Demand
- Organizational demand is derived demand, or a
function of the businesses that supply the
hospitality travel industry with meetings,
special events, and other functions. - AMA plans hosts conferences because members,
marketing managers, suppliers, and educators,
have attended past conferences on these topics. - if a particular conference receives poor
attendance, the AMA drops it from future
schedules - Ultimately, demand for association member
products determines the demand for association
meetings.
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11The Organizational Buying Process
Market Structure and Demand
- Through good environmental scanning, marketers
can identify emerging industries, companies, and
associations, screening for good business
partners. - Hotel managers need to understand the financial
health of the corporations associations they
serve. - if clients fall on hard times, managers need to
look for healthy industries to replace the lost
business, before it affects the revenue per
available room (REVPAR) - Compared with consumer purchases, a business
purchase usually involves more buyers and a more
professional purchasing effort.
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12The Organizational Buying Process
Market Structure and Demand
- Corporations that frequently use hotels for
meetings may hire their own meeting planners. - Professional meeting planners receive training in
negotiating skills and belong to associations
such as Meeting Planners International, which
educates its members in the latest negotiating
techniques. - A corporate travel agents job is to find the
best airfares, rental car rates, and hotel rates.
- hotels must have well-trained salespeople to deal
with well-trained buyers, creating thousands of
sales jobs
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13The Organizational Buying Process
Market Structure and Demand
- Once the meeting is sold, the account is turned
over to a convention service manager who works
with the meeting planner to make sure the event
is produced according to the meeting planners
expectations. - Outside the hotel, jobs relating to meetings
include corporate meeting planners, association
meeting planners, independent meeting planners,
and convention and visitor bureau salespersons.
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14The Organizational Buying Process
Types of Decisions and the Decision Process
- Organizational buyers face more complex buying
decisions than consumer buyers. - Their purchases often involve large sums of
money, complex technical features, economic
considerations, and interactions among many
people at all levels. - The organizational buying process tends to be
more formalized professional purchasing effort.
- the more complex the purchase, the more likely it
is that several people will participate in the
decision-making - In the organizational buying process, buyer and
seller are often very dependent on each other.
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15Participants in the Organizational Buying Process
The Buying Center
- The decision-making unit of a buying organization
is sometimes called the buying center
- Users - those who use the product or service
- Influencers - directly influence the buying
decision butdo not themselves make the final
decision - Deciders - select product requirements and
suppliers - Approvers - authorize proposed actions of
deciders or buyers - Buyers - have formal authority for selecting
suppliers and arranging the terms of purchase - Gatekeepers - have the power to prevent sellers
or information from reaching members of the
buying center
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16Participants in the Organizational Buying Process
The Buying Center
- Buying centers vary by number type of
participant, so salespersons calling on
organizational customers must determine
- who are the major decision participants?
- what decisions do they influence?
- what is their level of influence?
- what evaluation criteria does each participant
use?
- When a buying center has multiple participants,
the seller may not have time/resources to reach
them all. - smaller sellers concentrate on reaching key
buying influencers and deciders
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17Participants in the Organizational Buying Process
The Buying Center
- Most deciders like to feel in control of the
purchasing decision, so going over a deciders
head working with the boss will be resented. - In most cases the boss will leave the decision up
to the decider, and the ill will created by not
dealing with the decider directly will result in
him or her choosing another company. - Larger sellers use multilevel, in-depth selling
to reach as many buying participants as possible.
- their salespeople virtually live with their
high-volume customers
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18Major Influences on Organizational Buyers
Introduction
- Organizational buyers are subject to many
influences as they make buying decisions, and
some vendors assume the most important influences
are economic. - A study of buyers in ten large companies
concluded that emotions feelings play a part in
the decision. - In reality, organizational buyers commonly
respond to both economic and personal factors. - where there is substantial similarity in supplier
offers, price becomes an important determinant - when competing products differ substantially,
buyers are faced with many decision variables
other than price
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19Major Influences on Organizational Buyers
Introduction
- The various influences on organizational buyers
may be classified into four main groups - environmental, organizational, interpersonal,
individual
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20Major Influences on Organizational Buyers
Environmental Factors
- Organizational buyers are heavily influenced
bythe current and expected economic environment.
- Factors such as the level of primary demand, the
economic outlook, and the cost are important. - In a recession, companies cut their travel
budgets, whereas in good times, travel budgets
are usually increased.
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21Major Influences on Organizational Buyers
Organizational Factors
- Each organization has specific objectives,
policies, procedures, organizational structures,
and systems related to buying. - The hospitality marketer has to be as familiar
with them and wants to know
- how many people are involved in the buying
decision? - who are they?
- what are the evaluation criteria?
- what are the companys policies constraints on
the buyers?
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22Major Influences on Organizational Buyers
Interpersonal Factors
- The buying center usually includes several
participants, with differing levels of interest,
authority, and persuasiveness. - hospitality marketers are unlikely to know the
group dynamics taking place during the buying
decision process - Salespeople commonly learn the personalities and
interpersonal factors that shape the
organizational environment and provide useful
insight into group dynamics.
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23Major Influences on Organizational Buyers
Individual Factors
- Each participant in the buying decision process
has personal motivations, perceptions, and
preferences. - Age, income, education, professional
identification, personality, and attitudes toward
risk all influencethe participant in the buying
process. - buyers definitely exhibit different buying styles
- Hospitality marketers must know their
customersand adapt their tactics to known
environmental, organizational, interpersonal, and
individual influences.
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24Organizational Buying Decisions
Introduction
- Organizational buyers do not buy goods and
services for personal consumption. - they buy hospitality products to provide
training, reward employees and distributors, and
to provide lodging for their employees - Eight stages of the organizational buying process
have been identified and are called buyphases. - this model is called the buygrid framework
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25The Buygrid Framework
Stage 1 - Problem Recognition
- The buying process begins when someone in the
company recognizes a problem or need that can be
met by acquiring a good or a service. - problem recognition can occur because of
internalor external stimuli - Internally, a new product may create the need for
a series of meetings to explain the product to
the sales force. - Externally, the buyer sees an ad or receives a
call from a hotel sales representative who offers
a favorable corporate program.
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26The Buygrid Framework
Stage 2 - General Need Description
- Having recognized a need, the buyer goes on to
determine the requirements of the product and to
formulate a general need description. - The corporate meeting planner works with others
to gain insight into the requirements of the
meeting. - they determine the importance of the price,
meeting space, sleeping rooms, food and beverage,
and other factors - Alert marketers can help buyers define their
companies needs and show how their hotelcan
satisfy them.
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27The Buygrid Framework
Stage 3 - Product Specification
- Once the general requirements are determined, the
specific requirements for the meeting can be
developed. - Information often requested includes
availabilityof water, ceiling heights, door
widths, security, and procedures for receiving
and storing materials prior to the event. - A salesperson must be prepared to answer their
prospective clients questions about their
hotels capabilities to fulfill the product
specification.
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28The Buygrid Framework
Stage 4 - Supplier Search
- The buyer now conducts a supplier search to
identify the most appropriate hotels. - the buyer can examine trade directories, do a
computer search, or phone familiar hotels - Hotels that qualify may receive a site visit from
the meeting planner, who eventually develops a
shortlist of qualified suppliers.
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29The Buygrid Framework
Stage 5 - Proposal Solicitations
- Once the meeting planner has drawn up a short
list of suppliers, qualified hotels are invited
to submit proposals. - hotel marketers must be skilled in researching,
writing presenting proposals - Proposals should be marketing oriented, not
simply technical documents. - they should position their companys capabilities
and resources so that they stand out from the
competition - many hotels have developed videos for this purpose
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30The Buygrid Framework
Stage 6 - Supplier Selection
- In this stage, members of the buying center
review the proposals and move toward supplier
selection. - they conduct an analysis of the hotel,
consideringphysical facilities, ability to
deliver service, andthe professionalism of its
employees - In general, meeting planners consider the
following attributes in making their selection of
a location
- sleeping rooms meeting rooms
- food beverage
- check-in/checkout billing procedures
- staff
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31The Buygrid Framework
Stage 6 - Supplier Selection (cont.)
- The buying center may attempt to negotiate with
preferred suppliers for better prices terms
before making the final selection. - There are several ways the hotel marketer can
counter the request for a lower price. - dates can be moved from a high demand period toa
need period for the hotel - menus can be changed.
- The marketer can cite the value of the services
the buyer now receives, especially where services
are superior to competitors
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32The Buygrid Framework
Stage 7 - Order-Routine Specification
- The buyer writes the final order with the chosen
hotels, listing technical order-routine
specifications of the meeting. - the hotel responds by offering the buyer a formal
contract - The contract specifies cutoff dates for room
blocks, date when hotel will release the room
block for sale to other guests, and minimum
guarantees for food and beverage functions. - Many hotels restaurants have turned what should
have been a profitable banquet into a loss by not
having or enforcing minimum guarantees.
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33The Buygrid Framework
Stage 8 - Performance Review
- The buyer does a postpurchase performance review
of the product to determine if the product meets
the buyers specifications and if the buyer will
purchase from the company again. - It is important for hotels to have at least daily
meetings with a meeting planner to make sure
everything is going well and correct things
thatdid not go well. - This manages the buyers perceived service
helps avoid a negative postpurchase evaluation by
the buyer.
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34Group Business Markets
Introduction
- One of the most important types of organizational
business is group business - it is important for marketing managers to
understand differences between a group and a
consumer market - group business is often more sophisticated and
requires more technical information than the
consumer market - Many group markets book more than a year in
advance, and during this time, cognitive
dissonance can develop. - marketers must keep in contact with the buyer to
assure them that they made the right decision in
choosing the sellers hotel
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35Group Business Markets
Categories
- The four main categories of group business are
conventions, association meetings, corporate
meetings, and SMERF. - Social, Military, Educational, Religious, and
Fraternal organizations - Conventions attract large numbers, but meetings
occur much more frequently than conventions.
- there are about ninety-five meetings for each
convention - fifteen hundred people attend the average
convention - 165 people attend the average association meeting
- 78 people attend the average corporate meeting
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36Group Business Markets
Considerations
- When choosing a hotel, an important consideration
for a is whether the hotel can house the
participants. - most hotels have the potential of attracting
hundreds of small meetings, where larger hotels
can attract conventions - Successful hotels know which groups to attract,
how to use group business to fill need dates
how to sell groups on the hotels benefits rather
than just price.
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37Group Business Markets
CIC - APEX
- The Convention Industry Council (CIC) is made up
of thirty-four member organizations that
represent both buyers and suppliers to the
meetings industry. - they recently developed the Accepted Practices
Exchange (APEX), a set of standards and best
practices to all parties involved in the creation
and implementation of a meeting - APEXs event specifications provide a checklist
for planning an event, and its glossary brings a
common meaning to terms used in the meetings
industry. - APEX is a great tool for those involved in
selling or planning meetings
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38Group Business Markets
Conventions
- Conventions are a specialty market requiring
extensive meeting facilities. - usually the annual meeting of an association,
include general sessions, committee
special-interest meetings - Hotels with convention facilities, such as the
Chicago Hyatt can house small and midsized
conventions. - Conventions that use a major facility, such as
the Jacob Javitts Convention Center in New York,
often have tens of thousands of delegates. - called citywide conventions because hotels
throughout the city house their delegates
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39Group Business Markets
Conventions
- There are almost 14,000 conventions held each
year in the US, with delegates staying an average
of 3.6 days spending an average 1,500 per
event. - of this amount about 350 is spent on lodging
- Associations usually select convention sites two
to five years in advance, with some large
conventions planned ten to fifteen years before
the event. - Some associations prefer to have their
conventions in the same city year after year. - others move to a different area of the country
each year
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40Group Business Markets
Conventions
- A convention can be a major source of income for
the sponsoring organization. - registration fees from attendees and sales of
exhibition space in the trade show are major
sources of revenue - The price that can be charged for exhibition
space is related to the number of attendees. - an association looks for locations that will be
both accessible and attractive to members
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41Group Business Markets
Conventions
- Convention planners listed the following as the
most important factors in choosing a destination
- availability of hotels facilities
- distance from attendees ease costs of
transportation - climate recreation, sights cultural activities
- The most important attributes of the hotel
- meeting rooms sleeping rooms
- food beverage quality
- exhibit space support services
- negotiable rates billing procedures
- check-in/checkout staff assignment previous
experience
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42Group Business Markets
Conventions
- Food quality is very important to convention
planners. - attendees will talk about exceptional banquets,
out-of-the-ordinary receptions unique coffee
breaks - poor food and service can generate negative
feelings about the convention among the
participants - Support services must be available when needed.
- a nonfunctioning DVD player must be
repaired/replaced quickly to ensure the
presenters flow is not interrupted - Billing procedures are important to planners.
- meeting planners want a bill that is
understandable, accurate, and delivered in a
timely manner
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43Group Business Markets
Convention Bureaus
- Convention bureaus are nonprofit marketing
organizations that help hotels sign conventions
meetings. - often supported by a hotel or sales tax run by
chambers of commerce, visitor bureaus, or
city/county governments - A hotel relying on meeting business for a
significant portion of its occupancy should have
a good working relationship with the convention
bureau. - which includes active membership in the
organization
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44Group Business Markets
Association Meetings
- Associations sponsor many types of meetings.
- regional, special-interest, educational, and
board meetings - 71,000 associations, 92 of which hold meetings,
creating 227,000 association meetings annually. - generating meeting business valued at 70 billion
- Important destination attributes for an
association meeting planner are availability of
hotel facilities, ease of transportation,
distance from attendees, and transportation
costs. - unlike conventions, climate, recreation
cultural activities are not as important as the
meeting itself is the major draw
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45Group Business Markets
Association Meetings
- In selecting a hotel, the association meeting
planner looks attributes similar to the
convention planner. - except for exhibition space
- For the association meeting planner, food and
beverage are the most important attributes. - Membership in the American Society of Association
Executives (ASAE) is beneficial for hotels
actively pursuing association business. - Members attend association meetings
voluntarily,so the hotel should work with
meeting planners to make the destination seem as
attractive as possible.
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46Group Business Markets
Corporate Meetings
- A corporate meeting is a command performance.
- employees are directed to attend without choice
- Because corporations do not have to develop and
implement a marketing plan to gain attendees,
they often plan meetings with a few weeks lead
time. - About 800,000 corporate meetings are held with an
average expenditure exceeding 36,000 per
meeting. - corporate meetings are smaller than association
meetings - When seeking business from corporations, a hotel
manager must understand who has the
responsibility for booking meetings.
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47Group Business Markets
Corporate Meetings
- The corporations major concern is for a
productive meeting that accomplishes the
companys objectives. - types of corporate meetings include training,
management, planning and the incentive meeting - To a corporate meeting planner, the most
important attributes in the choice of a
destination are the availability of hotels, ease
of transportation, transportation costs, and
distance from the attendees. - Hotels interested in capturing and retaining
corporate meeting business must make sure that
meeting rooms are adequate and set up properly.
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48Group Business Markets
Corporate Meetings
- Hotel salespeople must develop an understanding
of the clients corporate culture to gain insight
into benefits the hotel can offer.
- some companies feel meetings should be austere,
rather than lavish - others view meetings as a time for employees to
relax enjoy themselves, a well-deserved break
- Companies that believe meetings should educate
rejuvenate employees, and build enthusiasm toward
the company are willing to spend more money on
food beverage, entertainment, and hotel
facilities.
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49Group Business Markets
Small Groups
- Although small in terms of number of
participants, thousands of small meetings are
held every month. - Hotels chains have developed special
packagesfor small meetings, often overlooked by
large hotels. - upscale hotels such as the LErmitage in Beverly
Hills go after executive meetings where expense
is not a problem - Sheraton has also developed executive conference
centers for board meetings, strategic planning
sessions training
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50Group Business Markets
Small Groups
- Simplifying small meeting arrangements is
critical because those who plan small meetings
are oftennot meeting planners.
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51Group Business Markets
Incentive Travel
- Incentive travel, a unique subset of corporate
group business, is a reward participants receive
for achieving or exceeding a goal. - for both individual and team performance
- A hotel salesperson selling incentives must be
ableto help their client justify the
expenditure. - percentage of sales of the attendees is an
excellent way - Because travel serves as the reward, participants
must perceive the destination hotel as special. - climate, recreational facilities, and sightseeing
opportunities are high on an incentive planners
list
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52See this feature on page 186 of your textbook.
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53Group Business Markets
SMERFs
- SMERF stands for Social, Military, Educational,
Religious, and Fraternal organizations. - median 485 nights at a budget of 180,000
- in the US, over 50,000 religious organizations
have group travel programs - The individual pays for the majority of the
functions sponsored by these organizations, and
sometimes the fees are not tax deductible. - Participants usually want a low room rate often
find food beverage within the hotel too
expensive. - SMERFs can be flexible to ensure a lower room rate
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54Group Business Markets
SMERFs
- Because attendees are price sensitive, a
challenge is to get them to book within the room
block. - due to Internet searching for lower rates at the
same hotel - Hotels often provide concessions like free rooms
ora free or reduced food beverage function
based on the number of room nights in the groups
block. - if the block does not materialize, the meeting
planner is responsible for extra charges - SMERFs provide good off-peak filler business.
- those new to hotel sales often start with SMERF
markets
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55Group Business Markets
Segmentation of Group Markets by Purpose
- Group markets also can be broken into the
purposeof the meeting, and Table 71 on page 188
showsa matrix describing some of the critical
salesdecision variables for these types of
gatherings. - This matrix reflects the general nature of sales
decision variables within the group market. - exceptions can and do exist
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56Group Business Markets
Restaurants as a Meeting Venue
- Restaurants are designing their space to take
advantage of meetings and meetings of 50
peopleor fewer can be a great source of
business. - A room off of the main room that can be closed
off for meetings gives the restaurant the option
of using it as part of the public dining space on
Saturday night or a meeting room during a
weekday. - meetings held in space of 700 square feet or less
(20 x 35 feet) increased by over 25 percent in
the past two years - Many times they are held at off-peak times, such
as during a weekday.
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57Dealing with Meeting Planners
Negotiating
- When negotiating with meeting planners, it is
important to try to develop a win-win
relationship. - meeting planners like to return to the same
property - Discussions over price can drive the planner and
hotel sales executive apart, or bring them
together - a negotiating technique is to determine group
requirements in detail and work out a package
based on needs budget - Some planners try to negotiate every item
separately, starting with the room rate, then
they choose a 65 banquet and try to negotiate
the price to 45. - every line item becomes a point of contention
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58Dealing with Meeting Planners
Negotiating
- A consultative approach is much more effective.
- if the hotel knows the planner wants to spend 50
for dinner, the chef can develop alternatives in
this range, the hotel can produce the meal at a
profit and sell it for 50 - the hotel gains a profitable meeting, and the
meeting stays within the planners budget
- If attendees are able to get work done at the
conference they will stay longer.
- the hotel can offer a small meeting room with
business services, including Internet access,
computers printers - this can be a low-cost item to the hotel that has
a high value to the meeting planner
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59Dealing with Meeting Planners
Negotiating
- Hotel salespersons must remember that most group
rates are noncommissionable - if the rates are to be commissionable, it should
be determined during the negotiation process - Meeting planners sometimes turn meetings over to
travel agents, who book about 5 percent of all
corporate meetings. - if the planner does so without understanding the
rate is noncommissionable, problems can arise
when the travel agent tries to collect a
commission
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60Dealing with Meeting Planners
Negotiating
- It is also common to give one complimentary
room-night for every fifty room-nights that the
group producesanother point of negotiation. - A smaller meeting room the hotel will not be able
to sell during a proposed meeting can be used in
the negotiation process as a boardroom or a space
for the meeting manager to work. - The hotel salesperson must look for items that
will create value for the meeting planner without
creating costs or sacrificing revenue for the
hotel.
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61Dealing with Meeting Planners
Negotiating
- Many associations have a president, elected from
the membership, and a professional executive,
often called the executive vice president. - the executive vice president usually sets up the
meeting or supervises a meeting planner - It is important for the salesperson to find out
who is involved in the decision-making process,
officially and unofficially. - gatekeepers can give useful insights into the
decision-making process within the organization
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62Dealing with Meeting Planners
Negotiating
- When the vice president of sales asks a junior
salesperson to organize a sales meeting, the
salesperson is usually unsure of how to proceed. - Meeting administrators often know the business as
well as the hotel salesperson. - salespeople should listen to the administrator
tounderstand his/her requirements - Sometimes they know exactly what they want and
just need a quote according to their
specifications. - if this is the case, trying to alter their
specifications arbitrarily can appear
unprofessional and lose business
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63Dealing with Meeting Planners
Negotiating
- Most meeting planners maintain a history of the
group for the purpose of planning future
meetings. - a salesperson can gain valuable information by
asking questions about past conferences - In addition to information volunteered by the
meeting planner, the salesperson should interview
hotels that hosted the conference in past years. - this can provide insight into room pickups,
banquet attendance, past problems what members
enjoyed
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64Dealing with Meeting Planners
Negotiating
- Meeting planners want their calls returned the
same day they are received. - When they ask about availability of meeting
space, they expect a response the same day and a
complete proposal in five days. - Most meeting planners want their bill within one
week of the event 25 want it within two days. - Planners feel hotel management should empower the
convention service manager to solve their
problems. - they do not want to wait while the convention
service manager checks with a superior
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65Dealing with Meeting Planners
Prefunction Meeting
- A most important aspects of creating a successful
function is a prefunction meeting between the
hotel staff and the meeting planner before the
function.
- Accounting should be at the meeting to get
acquainted with the function to make sure billing
meets expectations - the Bell Captain should know if a gratuity is
included - the concierge needs to know the meeting has open
nights with no banquets to allow the concierge to
set aside tables at local restaurants - hotel staff that will be receiving questions
about the event and the schedule should be
briefed - reservations agents should know the names of the
groups VIPs and who should get early check-in
privileges
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66Corporate Accounts and Travel Managers
Corporate Rates
- A nongroup form of organizational business is the
individual business traveler. - most hotels offer a corporate rate, intended to
providean incentive for corporations to use the
hotel - most hotels offer it now to any businessperson
who requests the corporate rate - To provide an incentive system for heavy users,
hotels developed a second set of corporate rates.
- the contract rate is a negotiated rate, usually
10 to 40 percent below the hotels rack rate
and often includes benefits besides a discounted
rate
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67Corporate Accounts and Travel Managers
Corporate Rates
- The corporate business traveler is a sought-after
segment, as while the corporate contract rate is
a discounted rate, it is higher than the group
rate. - the business traveler is also on an expense
account and makes use of the hotels restaurants
business facilities - Companies that would have not considered putting
their people in an economy brand a few years
agoare now using budget and economy-brand
hotels. - budget/economy hotels now have a 34.5 market
share - attributed to upgraded amenities found in economy
hotels and businesses needing to cut costs to
remain competitive
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68Corporate Accounts and Travel Managers
Corporate Rates
- Larger companies have travel management programs
run by the company or in-house branches of a
travel agency that negotiate corporate hotel
contracts. - In addition to developing hotel contracts, the
travel managers set per diem rates, specifying
the amount a company traveler can spend on food
beverage. - often at different levels, with the per diem
amount increasing as one moves up in the
corporation - It is important to find out a companys per diem
rates to determine if the hotel is in the right
price range. - and what level of manager the hotel can expect to
attract
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69Corporate Accounts and Travel Managers
Corporate Rates
- Some corporations use in-house travel agencies,
or in-plants, that also represent other
corporations, providing the advantage of
negotiating leverage. - A business represented through an in-plant may
have only 100 room-nights a year in New York. - the travel agency represented by the in-plant may
service ten companies with 1,500 room-nights in
New York - The agency can negotiate a rate based on the
1,500 room-nights pass it along to individual
companies. - the hotel compensates in-plants by straight
commissions, monthly fees, or a combination of a
fee and commission
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70KEY TERMS
- Buying center. All those individuals and groups
who participate in the purchasing and decision
making process and who share common goalsand the
risks arising from the decisions. - Convention. A specialty market requiring
extensive meeting facilities. - Corporate meeting. A meeting held by a
corporation for its employees. - Derived demand. Organizational demand that
ultimately comes from (derives from) the demand
for consumer goods.
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71KEY TERMS
- General need description. Stage of the industrial
buying process in which a company describes the
general characteristics quantity of a needed
item. - Incentive travel. A reward that participants
receive for achieving or exceeding a goal. - Order-routine specification. The stage of the
industrial buying process in which a buyer
writesthe final order with the chosen
supplier(s), listing the technical
specifications,quantity needed, expected time of
delivery, return policies,warranties, etc.
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72KEY TERMS
- Organizational buying process. The 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. - Performance review. The stage of an industrial
buying process in which a buyer rates its
satisfaction with suppliers, deciding whether to
continue, modify, or drop the relationship.
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73KEY TERMS
- Problem recognition. The stage of the industrial
buying process in which someone in a company
recognizes a problem or need that can be met by
acquiring a good or a service. - Product specification. The stage of an industrial
buying process in which the buying organization
decides on and specifies the best technical
product characteristics for a needed item. - SMERF. Social, Military, Educational, Religious
Fraternal organizations - specialty markets
with a common price sensitive thread.
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74KEY TERMS
- Supplier search. The stage of the industrial
buying process in which a buyer tries to find the
best vendor. - Supplier selection. The stage of the industrial
buying process in which a buyer receives
proposals and selects a supplier or suppliers.
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75EXPERIENTIAL EXERCISES
Try the Following !
- Talk with someone who travels for business. Ask
them if they can choose their own hotel and
airline when they travel for their company. - if they can choose their own hotels and airlines,
askif they have any restrictions or guidelines. - if they are not able to choose their own hotels
andairlines, ask if they have any input into
where they stay. - How would this information help you market travel
products to their organization?
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76INTERNET EXERCISES
Try This !
- Support for this exercise can be found on the
Web site for Marketing for Hospitality and
Tourism, www.prenhall.com/kotler
- Go to the Internet site of a travel organization.
Do they have a separate section for
organizational or group purchases? - If so, how does the information in this section
differ from their consumer site? - If they do not have a separate site, go to
another organization until you find one that has
a separate site for group or organizational
purchases.
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77END
CHAPTER END