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I n t e r n a t i o n a l M a r k e t i n g Products and Services for Business Chapter 13 1 4 t h E d i t i o n P h i l i p R. C a t e o r a M a r y C. G i l l y J o h n L . G r a h a m McGraw-Hill/Irwin International Marketing 14/e Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

I n t e r n a t i o n a l M a r k e t i n g

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What Should You Learn? The importance of derived demand in industrial markets How demand is affected by technology Characteristics of an industrial product The importance of ISO 9000 certification What you should learn from Chapter 13? •The importance of derived demand in industrial markets; •How demand is affected by technology; •Characteristics of an industrial product; and •The importance of ISO 9000 certification.

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Page 1: I n t e r n a t i o n a l M a r k e t i n g

I n t e r n a t i o n a l M a r k e t i n g

Products and Services for Business

Chapter 13

1 4 t h E d i t i o nP h i l i p R. C a t e o r a

M a r y C. G i l l yJ o h n L . G r a h a m

McGraw-Hill/IrwinInternational Marketing 14/e

Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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13-2

What Should You Learn?• The importance of derived demand in industrial

markets

• How demand is affected by technology

• Characteristics of an industrial product

• The importance of ISO 9000 certification

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13-3

What Do I Need to Know?• The growth of business services and nuances

of their marketing

• The importance of trade shows in promoting industrial goods

• The importance of relationship marketing for industrial products and services

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Global Perspective Intel, the Boom and the Inescapable Bust

• In industrial markets, including global ones, what goes up must come down

• Issues of standardization versus adaptation – Less relevance to marketing industrial goods than consumer

goods

• Factors accounting for greater market similarities in customers of industrial goods versus consumer goods – The inherent nature of the product– The motive or intent for the user differs

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Major Categories U.S. ExportsExhibit 13.1

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Demand in Global Business-to-Business Markets

• Demand in industrial markets is by nature more volatile

• Stages of industrial and economic development affect demand for industrial products

• The level of technology of products and services make their sales more appropriate for some countries than others

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The Volatility of Industrial Demand

• Cyclical swings in demand– Professional buyers tend to act in concert– Derived demand accelerates changes in markets

• Derived demand can be defined as demand dependent on another source

• Minor changes in consumer demand mean major changes in related industrial demand– Boeing

► Worldwide demand for travel services related to demand for new airplanes ► Commercial aircraft industry one of the most volatile

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Derived Demand ExampleExhibit 13.2

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Stages of Economic Development• Stage 1 – the traditional society

• Stage 2 – preconditions for takeoff

• Stage 3 – take off

• Stage 4 – drive to maturity

• Stage 5 – the age of mass consumption

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Technology and Market Demand• Trends spurring demand for technologically

advanced products– Expanding economic and industrial growth in Asia– The disintegration of the Soviet empire– The privatization of government-owned industries worldwide

• The companies with the competitive edge will be those whose products are:– Technologically advanced– Of the highest quality– Accompanied by world-class service

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Quality and Global Standards• Perception of quality rests solely with the

customer– Level of technology reflected in the product– Compliance with standards that reflect customer needs– Support services and follow-through– Price relative to competitive products

• Quality standards vary with level of country’s industrialization

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Quality is Defined by the Buyer• How well a product meets the specific needs of

the buyer

• The price-quality relationship

• Product design must be viewed from all aspects of use– Climate– Terrain

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Quality is Defined by the Buyer• Total Quality Management (TQM)

• Lack of universal standards

• Country-specific standards

• The metric system

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ISO 9000 Certification – An International Standard of Quality• Positively affects the performance and stock

prices of firms

• Certification of the existence of a quality control system a company has in place to ensure it can meet published quality standards– Describes three quality system models – Defines quality concepts – Gives guidelines for using international standards in quality

systems

• Generally voluntary

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ISO 9000 Certification – An International Standard of Quality• EU Product Liability Directive

• Now a competitive marketing tool in Europe and around the world

• The ACSI approach

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Business Services• For many industrial products the revenues from

associates services exceed the revenues from the products– Cellular phones– Printers

• Leasing capital equipment

• Services not associated with products– Boeing at-sea-satellite-launch services– Ukrainian cargo company space rental on giant jets– Professional services (advertising, banking, healthcare, etc.)

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After-Sale Services• Installation

• Training

• Spare and replacement parts– Delivery time– Cost of parts

• Service personnel

• Almost always more profitable than the actual sale of the machinery or product

• Crucial in building strong customer loyalty

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Other Business Services• Client followers

• Mode of entry– Licensing– Franchising– Direct investment

• Protectionism

• Restrictions on cross-border data flows

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Expansion of U.S. Law Firms in Selected Cities Worldwide

Exhibit 13.3

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Trade Shows: A Crucial Part of Business-to-Business Marketing

• Secondary methods for marketing:– Advertising in print media– Catalogs– Web sites– Direct mail

• Trade shows have become the primary and most important vehicle for doing business in many foreign countries

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Trade Shows: A Crucial Part of Business-to-Business Marketing

• Total annual media budget spent on trade events:– Europeans – 22 percent– Americans – 5 percent

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Trade Shows: A Crucial Part of Business-to-Business Marketing

• Trade shows– Provide the facilities for a manufacturer to exhibit and

demonstrate products to potential users– Allow manufacturers to view competitors products– Are an opportunity to create sales and establish relationships

with agents, distributors, franchisees, and suppliers

• Online trade shows– Become useful in difficult economic and/or political

circumstances– Are obviously a less than adequate substitute for live trade

shows

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Relationship Marketing in Business-to-Business Contexts

• Not a matter of selling the right product the first time– Instead selling a continuously changed the product to keep it

right over time

• The objective of relationship marketing – To make the relationship an important attribute of the transaction

► Differentiating oneself from competitors

• Using the Internet to facilitate relationship building and maintenance– Cisco Systems– Solar Turbines Inc.

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The Global Project Team• Customer

• Sales engineer

• Application engineer

• Engineering and control systems

• Project manager

• Manufacturing technicians

• Customer services

• Suppliers

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Summary• Industrial marketing requires close attention to

the exact needs of customers

• Industrial goods marketers must pay close attention – To level of economic and technological development of each

market to determine the buyer’s assessment of quality

• The demand for products and services in business-to-business markets is by nature more volatile than in most consumer markets

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Summary • Demand also varies by level of economic

development and the quality of educational systems across countries

• Product or service quality is defined by customers

• Development of ISO 9000 global quality standards

• After-sale services are an important aspect of industrial sales

• Trade shows are an especially important promotional medium in business-to-business marketing