Business-to-business
Business-to-business (or B2B for short) is a
marketing strategy which involves the transaction of goods or services between
businesses (as opposed to relations between businesses and other groups, for
example consumers or public administration).
How
B2B marketing is used
B2B transactions tend to take place within one category of products or
service. For example, an enterprise dealing with agricultural products will for
a bulk buyer within the agriculture category.
B2B marketing is generally considered more complex than B2C marketing, as
there is often more than one decision-maker involved in a B2B sale on the
buyer's side.
The term is also often used by multi-level marketing companies as a
euphemism for door-to-door sales practices involving cold calling and street
pitching of low quality merchandise.
What is B2B Marketing Communications?
B2B Marketing Communications is how businesses promote their products and
services to other businesses using tactics other than direct sales. The purpose
of B2B marketing communications is to support the marketer’s sales effort and
improve company profitability.
B2B marketing communications tactics generally include advertising, public
relations, direct mail, trade show support, sales collateral, branding, and
interactive services such as Web design and search engine optimization.
B2B Marketing Methodologies
Positioning
Statement
An important first step in business to business marketing is the
development of your positioning statement. This is a statement of what you do
and how you do it differently and better than your competitors. sure
Developing
your messages
The next step is do develop your messages. This is usually a primary
message that conveys most strongly to your customers what you do and the benefit
it offers to them, supported by a number of secondary messages, each of which
may have a number of supporting arguments, facts and figures.
Building
a campaign plan
Whatever form your b2b marketing campaign will take, build a comprehensive
plan up front to target resources where you believe they will deliver the best
return on investment, and make sure you have all the infrastructure in place to
support each stage of the marketing process - and that doesn't just include
developing the lead - make sure the entire organisation is geared up to handle
the enquiries appropriately.
Briefing
an agency
A standard briefing document is usually a good idea for briefing an agency.
As well as focussing the agency on what's important to you and your campaign,
it serves as a checklist of all the important things to consider as part of
your brief. Typical elements to an agency brief are: Your objectives, target
market, target audience, product, campaign description, your product
positioning, graphical considerations, corporate guidelines and any other
supporting material.
Judging
creative concepts
Depending on your budget, assessment of the creative concepts that come
back from your agency can be a straightforward or complex process. You may pass
them around the office, show them to customers, or go to the lengths of sample
screenings and focus groups using existing customers or individuals that fit
the psychographic profile of your audience. Factors to consider are:
Is it on strategy, is the message clear , will my target customer identify
with it, does it have the creative impact, is the tone and manner correct, does
the concept fit in to the bigger picture, and does it support the company
brand?
Measuring
results
The real value in measurement results, is in tying the marketing campaign
back to business results. After all, you’re not in the business of developing
marketing campaigns for marketing sake. So always put metrics in place to
measure your campaigns, and if at all possible, measure your impact upon your
desired objectives, be it Cost Per Acquisition, Cost per Lead or tangible
changes in customer perception.
E-Marketplaces
Vertical
e-Marketplace
A Vertical e-Marketplace spans vertically up and down every segment of one
specific industry. Each level of the industry has access to every other level,
which greatly increases collaboration. Buyers and Sellers in the industry are
connected to increase operating efficiency, and decrease supply chain costs,
inventories, and cycle times. This is possible because buying/selling items to
customers in a similar industry standardizes needs, therefore reducing the need
for outsourcing many products.
Horizontal
e-Marketplace
A Horizontal e-Marketplace connects buyers and sellers across many
industries. The most common type of materials traded horizontally across
industries are MRO’s (Maintenance, Repair, and Operations materials). These
items are so popular because they are crucial to the daily running of a
business, no matter what industry (or what level of that industry) you are in.
These articles are mainly business and consumer articles. Many corporations
have these bought directly on-line by the maintenance team in order to relieve
the purchasing department.
No-frills
e-Marketplace
Developed in response to customers wanting to purchase products without
service (or with very limited service). The approach parallels the B2C offering
of no-frills Budget Airlines.
The subject of several Harvard and IMD articles/case-studies, no-frills B2B
e-marketplaces enables the effective de-bundling of service from product via
clear "business rules". This provides the basis of differentiation
from conventional B2B sales/purchasing channels.
Etymology
The term "business-to-business" is today used in marketing, but
it was originally coined to describe the electronic communication relations
between businesses or enterprises in order to distinguish it from the
communications between businesses and consumers B2C.
Formerly the term tended to describe industrial marketing or capital goods
marketing only. However, today it is widely used to describe all products and
services used by enterprises.
|