MarketingManagement.pdf

(vip2019) #1
Characteristic Description Example
Fewer buyers

Larger buyers

Close supplier-
customer
relationship

Geographically
concentrated
buyers

Derived
demand

Inelastic
demand

Fluctuating
demand

Business marketers normally deal
with far fewer buyers than do
consumer marketers.

Buyers for a few large firms do most
of the purchasing in many industries.

With the smaller customer base and
the importance and power of the
larger customers, suppliers are
frequently required to customize
offerings, practices, and performance
to meet the needs of individual
customers.
More than half of U.S. business buyers
are concentrated in seven states:
New York, California, Pennsylvania,
Illinois, Ohio, New Jersey, and
Michigan, which helps to reduce
selling costs.
Demand for business goods is
ultimately derived from demand for
consumer goods, so business
marketers must monitor the buying
patterns of ultimate consumers.

Total demand for many business
goods and services is inelastic and
not much affected by price changes,
especially in the short run, because
producers cannot make quick
production changes.
Demand for business products tends
to be more volatile than demand for
consumer products.An increase in
consumer demand can lead to a
much larger increase in demand for
plant and equipment needed to
produce the additional output.

Goodyear Tire Company aims to get
orders from buyers for the Big Three
U.S. automakers (General Motors,
Ford, and Daimler-Chrysler).
Major companies are big customers
in industries such as aircraft engines
and defense weapons.
Tooling supplier Stillwater
Technologies shares office and
manufacturing space with key
customer Motoman, a supplier of
industrial robots, to minimize delivery
distances and enhance their symbiotic
working relationship.^1
Because the Big Three U.S.
automakers have their U.S.
headquarters in the Detroit area,
industry suppliers head there on sales
calls.

The Big Three U.S. automakers are
seeing higher demand for steel-bar
products, mostly derived from
consumers’ demand for minivans and
other light trucks, which consume far
more steel than cars.
Shoe manufacturers will not buy
much more leather if the price of
leather falls. Nor will they buy much
less leather if the price rises unless
they can find satisfactory substitutes.

An increase of only 10% in consumer
demand for computers might result in
a 200% increase in business demand
for related parts, supplies, and
services; a 10% drop in consumer
demand for computers might cause a
complete collapse in business demand.

Table 3.3 Characteristics of Business Markets


Continued

109

Free download pdf