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aceldoml Industrial marketing is the marketing of goods and services from one business to another. The word "industrial" has connotations of heavy machinery, mining, construction etc. but "industrial marketing" is not confined to these types of business activities. Broadly (and inadequatly) marketing could be split into consumer marketing (B2C "Business to Consumer") and industrial marketing (B2B "Business to Business"). The key differences are...
Typical examples of a B2B selling process are...
The main features of the B2B selling process are...
See also B2B definition.
Examples of the B2C selling/buying process are...
The main features of the B2C selling process are...
See also B2C definition.
Proponents of the industrial marketing process argue that it requires a high degree of specialisation and that tradiional advertising or marketing techniques are inadequate when addressing industrial marketing issues.
As in all things, the definitions are not clear cut. For example, an organisation that sells electronic components may seek to distribute its products through marketing channels (see channel (marketing)), and be selling relatively low value products. However, the final purchaser is still a business. Equally there are big ticket items purchased by non-business consumers (houses and motor vehicles being the obvious examples). However, even though these definitions are blurred, sales and marketing activities aimed at B2B are distinctly different from B2C (as outlined above).
Industrial marketing often involves competitive tendering (see tender, tendering). This is a process where a purchasing organisation undertakes to procure goods and services from suitable suppliers. Due to the high value of some purchases (for example buying a new computer system, manufacturing machinery, or outsourcing a maintenance contract) and the complexity of such purchases, the purchsing organisation will seek to obtain a number of bids from competing suppliers and choose the best offering. An entire profession (strategic procurement) that includes tertiary training and qualifications has been built around the process of making important purchases. The key requirement in any competitive tender is to ensure that...
Because of the significant value of many purchases, issues of probity arise. Organisations seek to ensure that awarding a contract is based on "best fit" to the agreed criteria, and not bribery, corruption, or incompetence.
Suppliers who are seeking to win a competitive tender go through a bidding process. At its most primitive, this would consist of evaluating the specification (issued by the purchasing organisation), designing a suitable proposal, and working out a price. This is a "primitive" approach because...
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Not all industrial sales involve competitive tendering. Tender processes are time consuming and expensive, particularly when executed with the aim of ensuring probity. Government agencies are particularly likely to utilise elaborate competitive tendering processes due to the expectation that they should be seen at all times to be responsibly and accountably spending public monies. Private companies are able to avoid the complexity of a fully transparent tender process but are still able to run the procurement process with some rigour.
The "art" of technical selling (solution selling) follows a three stage process...
The important point about solution selling is that it is essential not to sell the solution before you understand the customer\'s requirements; otherwise you are highly likely to unwittingly sell them on how ill-suited your solution is to meeting their requirements. To illustrate; imagine a couple seeking the services of an architect start their first meeting with the inevitable "we want to build a house." If the architect leapt in at that point and proceeded to show them his favourite design influence "the Mediterranean look" only to discover that they hate "Mediterranean" and wanted something "a bit more Frank Lloyd Wright" he will have gone most of the way toward alienating the sale. You can see that if he had "kept his powder dry" for a bit longer and first discovered what they were looking for, he could have better understood which way to skew his pitch. He was equally capable of designing in a Frank Lloyd Wright style.
However, from the seller\'s point of view, industrial selling is a process of identifying organisations who have a requirement and making
The term "cannon fodder" derives from the World Wars and refers to the massing of undertrained and recently recruited troops sent to the fronts to face the enemy. It was noted that such troops invariably had a short survival rate but provided the tactical advantage of distracting the enemy while professional soldiers mounted a flanking manoeuvre and came around from the side or from behind the enemy. In adopting the term to Industrial Marketing it means those bids being submitted that have no chance of winning but are involved to make up the numbers (you can\'t have only one bid in a "competitive" tender process; that wouldn\'t satisfy the requirements of probity (for example in government tenders, or for private enterprise the requirement to "truly test the market" and to "keep them honest"). The reader might be wondering why anybody would go to all of the work of submitting a tender when they had no chance of winning; for the same reason that troops were sent in to battle to die; they thought they had a real chance.
In industrial marketing the personal selling is still very effective because many products must be customized to suit the requirements of the individual customer. Indicators such as the sales tunnel give information on the expected sales in the near future, the hit rate indicates whether the sales organization is busy with promising sales leads or it is spending too much effort on projects that are eventually lost to the competition or that are abandoned by the prospect.
The "dotcom" boom and bust of the late 90\'s saw significant attempts to develop a new retailing business model; on-line shopping. Many entrepreneurs (and their investors) discovered that merely having a website (no matter how innovative) was insufficient to generate sales; the amount of conventional main media advertising required to promote the sites burnt cash at a faster rate than they could generate through on-line sales. They also presumed that consumers would eschew the irksome shopping experience (driving, parking, poor service etc.) for the wonder and convenience of shopping on-line. Some did; but not in sufficient numbers. There were many unforeseen problems and apart from some notable exceptions (Amazon.com and others) the B2C online model was a spectacular failure. However, the same cannot be said of B2B selling where some quite impressive results have been achieved.
Chicago based B2B expert [1]
Australian based B2B organisation [2]
Whitepaper on industrial branding [3]
Heiman, Stephen E. and Diane Sanchez. The New Strategic Selling: The Unique Sales System Proven Successful by the World\'s Best Companies. New York: Warner Books, 1998.
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