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1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Market Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois Universit

1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Page 1: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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2002 Edition

Vitale and Giglierano

Chapter 2Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets

Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

Page 2: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Types of Organizational Customers

Government Units

Government Units

Nonprofit and Not-for-Profit Organizations

Nonprofit and Not-for-Profit Organizations

Commercial Enterprises

Commercial Enterprises

Industrial Distributors

Value-AddedResellers

OriginalEquipmentManufacturers

Users or End Users

85,000 local, state, and federal government units

Churches, hospitals, colleges, nursing homes, etc.

Page 3: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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• Industrial Distributors– Provide economic utilities

of form, time, place, and possession to manufacturers

– Creates assortments of products from many manufacturers

– Particularly useful for reaching customers too small to justify direct sales efforts

Commercial Enterprises

Commercial Enterprises

Industrial Distributors

Value-AddedResellers

OriginalEquipmentManufacturers

Users or End Users

Page 4: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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• Value-Added Resellers– More than just a

distributor or wholesaler.– Provides unique offering

enhancements tailored to a customer’s needs by combining products/services from other manufacturers.

– Creates a value network at the user level.

Commercial Enterprises

Commercial Enterprises

Industrial Distributors

Value-AddedResellers

OriginalEquipmentManufacturers

Users or End Users

Page 5: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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• Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs)– Purchase products

and incorporate those products into their products.

– Usually the largest-volume users of goods and services.

– Ex: Intel is an OEM supplier to many computer manufacturers, Firestone was an OEM supplier to Ford for many years.

Commercial Enterprises

Commercial Enterprises

Industrial Distributors

Value-AddedResellers

OriginalEquipmentManufacturers

Users or End Users

Page 6: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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• Users or End Users (E/U)– A manufacturer that

purchases goods or services for consumption/

incorporation into their products in such a way that the identity of the purchased product is lost.

– When Goodyear purchases steel for fabrication into steel belts for tires, Goodyear is the steel manufacturer’s E/U.

Commercial Enterprises

Commercial Enterprises

Industrial Distributors

Value-AddedResellers

OriginalEquipmentManufacturers

Users or End Users

Page 7: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Producer Types

Component Partsand Manufactured

MaterialsProducers

CapitalGoods

Manufacturers

AccessoryEquipmentSuppliers

RawMaterialsProducers

Page 8: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Producer TypesRaw Materials Producers

Often compete in price sensitive markets

Raw materials markets are often dominated by a few very large producers

Products lose identity once incorporatedinto the customer’s product

Seek value added positionsRaw

MaterialsProducers

Page 9: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Producer TypesComponents Parts and Manufactured Materials Producers

More differentiated from direct competition by the value added to the customer’s product.

Usually retain identity even whenincorporated into the customer’s product.

Parts retain their same form when incorporated.

Seagate computer drives are an example.

Component Partsand Manufactured

MaterialsProducers

Page 10: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Producer TypesCapital Goods Manufacturers

Adherence to specifications reducesopportunities for differentiation.

Involves the development of specifications to ensure that organizational needs are met.

Capital goods involve large purchases with considerable risk for the customer.

Customers expect an offering that includes installation, equipment, and accessories.

CapitalGoods

Manufacturers

Page 11: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Producer TypesAccessory Equipment Suppliers

Accessory equipment is usually produced by an independent supplier.

Accessories can be added to a bundled offering by a channel intermediary.

Accessory equipment is equipment that works with some other offering.

The key to providing value is to be compatible with industry standards for the primary offering.

AccessoryEquipmentSuppliers

Page 12: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Communities of interested parties who are not direct participants in a

market as customers, channel members, suppliers, or competitors.

FinancialPublicsFinancialPublics

Independent Press

Independent Press

Public InterestGroups

Public InterestGroups

Internal PublicsInternal Publics

Publics

Page 13: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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The Macroenvironmentinfluencesvaluecreation.

DemographicEnvironment

EconomicEnvironment

SocioculturalEnvironment

NaturalEnvironment

TechnologicalEnvironment

CompetitiveEnvironment

Page 14: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Forms of Competition in B2B Markets

• Pure Competition– No single entity dominates the market or

has much of an influence on price.– Most common in commodity industries.– Little product differentiation – price is a

major component of the marketing mix.

Page 15: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Forms of Competition in B2B Markets

• Monopolistic Competition– Many buyers, many sellers.– Product is differentiable – can vary in

quality, features, and style– A range of prices is possible.– Promotion and branding are important to

product differentiation.

Page 16: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Forms of Competition in B2B Markets

• Oligoplistic Competition– Market consists of a few sellers that are

sensitive of each others’ strategy.– Barriers limit entry of new competitors.– Prices are aimed at maintaining market

stability.– Key is building relationships with large

volume customers.

Page 17: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Forms of Competition in B2B Markets

• Pure Monopoly– Only one primary seller.– Competitors that do exist are small niche

players.

Page 18: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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An Adaptation of the Value ChainAn Adaptation of the

Value Chain

Page 19: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Multinational Value Network

Page 20: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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The Product

Life Cycle

Page 21: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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The Technology Adoption Life Cycle

Page 22: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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PLC and TALC

• Product Life Cycle (PLC)– Introduction– Growth– Maturity– Decline

• Technology Adoption Life Cycle (TALC)– Technophiles– Visionaries (aim for

“quantum leaps”)– Pragmatists (want

proven solutions)– Conservatives– Laggards

Page 23: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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TALC and How Technology Markets Evolve

• Chasm– A break in the sales growth curve for a new

technology.– A chasm occurs between visionaries and

pragmatists.

• Tornado– The chaos that occurs during a period of rapid

growth.– A dominant supplier usually emerges from a

tornado.

Page 24: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Using the Technology Adoption Life Cycle

• The vendor of an innovation passes through technophiles and visionaries before establishing a foothold among pragmatists.

• Crossing the chasm (called the “market development gap”) between visionaries and pragmatists is related to a change in the entire marketing mix.– There are changes in type of customer and what

the customers perceives as being of value.

Page 25: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Using the Technology Adoption Life Cycle

• Tornado– Corresponds to the late introduction/early growth

stage of the PLC– The market wants to support the market leader – it

reduces uncertainty for pragmatists.– The market leader has the chance to become the

“gorilla” – the gorilla can do what it wants as long as it stays close to what pragmatists desire.

Page 26: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Introduction

• E-business tools facilitate information flow both the ways, connect the customer, automate transactions, offer a communication medium, develop catalogs, and integrate the back office into the supply chain.

• CRM tools automate an information-rich environment.

Page 27: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Defining CRM for distribution

• Distribution knowledge is divided into explicit and tacit forms.

• Explicit knowledge is information that can be explained in structured form and can, therefore, be programmed

• Tacit knowledge, on the other hand, is inconsistent, fuzzier to explain, and poorly understood

• E-Business focuses on the automation of explicit knowledge.

Page 28: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Defining CRM for distribution

• The purpose of data mining and customer profiling is to simplify the complexities of customer knowledge and behavior.

• Data mining is the process of examining data to determine the existence of relationships that are not immediately apparent.

Page 29: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Defining CRM for distribution

The Boundaries of Knowledge

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Hardware Needs

• Connection has been made easy with Wide spread availability of high-speed networks provided by Internet Service Providers (ISP’s).

• The threat of virus is a serious threat with a significant impact.

• Overwhelming costs of catalog development, hardware and software are the problems of connectivity through web to suppliers and customers.

Page 31: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Hardware Needs

• The intention to employ a mainframe-based system or a client/server environment by a frame dictates the required hardware.

• Experiences of the past are the most common determining factors.

• Capacity is an important issue.• Selection of a CRM software for employment

is a difficult task.

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Software Needs

• Customer data is collected on a regular basis by all firms.

• Anticipation of customer needs is categorized into prediction with and with out historical information respectively.

• Forecasting consists of data collection, mathematical (historical) forecasting, and expert forecasting.

Page 33: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Software Needs

ERP and Bolt-Ons

Page 34: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Anticipating and Meeting Customer Needs

• Data collection activity is the base of forecasting.

• Solutions to customer data problems typically combine strategic alliances with software/hardware solutions.

• Information batching means blocks of information are gathered to be acted upon at differing time intervals rather than instantaneously. The periods are a function of the mode of execution of customer’s orders.

Page 35: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Anticipating and Meeting Customer Needs

• Forecasting software is available as embedded in ERP software or as an bolt on.

• ERP forecasting uses the data it gathers from the system data bases in the forecasting process.

• Standard forecasting methodologies employed by many ERP systems are statistical forecasting and simulation.

Page 36: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Anticipating and Meeting Customer Needs

• Bolt-ons are comparable to specialists in any field.

• A feature offered by certain forecasting bolt-ons is inventory decision-making capability.

• Software decisions also deal with cost minimization.

Page 37: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Anticipating and Meeting Customer Needs

• Transportation management is a critical aspect for distribution.

• A popular option in recent years has been to outsource transportation decisions.

• Application service provider’s (ASPs) are also involved in the transportation activity.

• Profitability analysis software employs Activity Based Management (ABM) techniques to identify the value provided by an action.

Page 38: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Anticipating and Meeting Customer Needs

• Facility location software can be used to analyze the functioning of a distribution network.

• Warehouse management systems (WMS) govern the activity for inventory storage.

• Database marketing includes data mining and the storage of useful data for mining.

Page 39: 1 2002 Edition Vitale and Giglierano Chapter 2 Classifying Customers, Organizations, and Markets Prepared by John T. Drea, Western Illinois University

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Catalog Development

• Catalog development in 1990s born out of the expectation of the distributors to maintain their own catalogs.

• Lackluster performance and development costs have retarded their popularity.

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Back Office Integration

• Back office integration refers to the tools that connect the distributor’s or the manufacturer’s system to its channel partners.

• The other option was enterprise application integration (EAI) that took disparate systems and acted as a translator for the two to communicate.

• The dot.coms adopted EAI and professional associations drove standards development to encourage easier data exchange and development of EAI software