Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e
- Business and
Organizational Customers
and Their Buying Behavior
Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002
Business and Organizational Customers and Their Buying Behavior 201
firms that use that equipment to make finished goods. On the other hand, some
websites are designed to serve a broad (“horizontal”) cross section of firms from
different industries. For example, a horizontal site might serve manufacturers
regardless of whether they produce bearings, truck frames, or construction equip-
ment. See Exhibit 7-7.
One consequence of these differences in focus is that there are many sites with
potentially overlapping coverage. While some industries are not covered well, in other
industries many sites compete to be thecentral market. As a result, this is an arena
in which there are still many ongoing changes. Hundreds, or perhaps thousands, of
B2B websites that were established just a few years ago have already disappeared, and
consolidation is still underway. In some industries there are so many sites that instead
of simplifying the buying and selling process they have made it unnecessarily com-
plicated. For example, a seller who posts an auction on the wrong site may get few
bids, or no bids, from firms who might be serious buyers. Those buyers, in turn, might
waste time checking other sites not included in the sellers’ efforts.
Because of such problems, purchasing managers often turn to special software
packages to help with their search effort. For example, if a purchasing manager can
specify a certain model of a product the search “bot” (short for robot) looks at all of
the websites on the Internet to find everywhere that the product is mentioned. Some
bots take things further and assemble price comparisons or e-mail distribution lists.
Bots are also helping purchasing people who have trouble figuring out exactly
how to describe what they want. By searching for descriptions of products in a broad
product category, it is often possible to develop a better understanding not only of
what alternatives exist but also of what specs are best for the particular need.
Internet (ro)bots search
for products_by
description
Exhibit 7-7 Examples of Different B2B E-Commerce Sites Used by Organizational Buyers and Sellers
All sellers
and buyers
at all levels
“Vertical” depth
across firms at
different levels of
production &
distribution
process
One of two levels
(a seller to
a buyer)
“Horizontal” breadth of goods and services
One
business
One
specific
industry
Many
industries
Bot search
tool sites
Collaboration
hub
Exchanges
Communities
Catalog site
Procurement hub
Seller’s site
(information
and orders)