Carmen Neghina, Alina Oprea, Myriam Suidan - Case study - Marketing and Psychology
Who Influences Decisions?
Who Is in the Buying-Center?
Who Are the Powerful Buyers?
What Do Buyers Want?
Diagnosing Motivation
The Buyers’ Decision-making Process
Possible Outcomes
How Do Buyers Perceive a Company?
8. Who are the important buyers? What do they want? Who and how makes the purchase decision? … Combining individual and group dynamics of buying to predict what the “ decision making unit ” will do …
Today’s case study refers to the selling process and methods of improving the process by identifying the way buyers make their purchase decisions. It will help answer questions such as … who is the actual buyer? Why isn’t it sometimes enough to have the best product in the market? Who makes the actual decision to purchase a product or a service?
In theory, the purchase process is rather simple. People feel a need… which they want to fulfill. For this, they go out searching for pieces of information about product that might fulfill this need. Once we know what our options are, we need to evaluate them, in order to realize which one suits our need best. Once we decide on one alternative, we make the purchase decision. The last step of the buying process is the post-purchase recognition, in which we evaluate our satisfaction with our purchase. Ofcourse, the result of the process is to increase revenue for the company. However, things are not so simple. If they were, most companies would succeed easily at selling their products. The reality is ofcourse very different, as it is difficult to attract customers, and to retain them.
Shedding light on consumer behavior can help organizations increase their revenues by increasing the volume of sales. Understanding why and how purchase decisions are made will allow for fewer surprises in the selling process, which is particularly important for significant purchase decisions (jet). Choosing customers that you know will be loyal can also help managers improve their selling results. All in all, we need to understand how customers think, so that we can keep them happy and loyal, making sure that we are the ones they will turn when they will need our products.
Most revenues come from a rather small group of buyers, who of course are of greater importance for the organization that the occasional buyer. Failing to ensure that these customers are satisfied with the entire buying process can make a company become bankrupt. Failing to observe the less tangible aspects of selling can make vendors lose sales. Aspects, such as personal aspects, complex buying behaviors, subtle needs that need to be fulfilled, emotions related to the product and the opinions of the buyer are vital for any purchase decision.
In order to maximize the chances of making successful sales, it is necessary to know who makes up the buying group, how the parties interact, how roles shift in the group, who has more decision power, and who has less to say in the decision making? What are the priorities of the group, and of the individuals forming the group?
Companies are not the ones who make the actual decisions. It is people who do. And, every individual has his or her own personality and decision drivers. To summarize it, a vendor needs to know who the buyers are, what they want, and how they actually make the purchase decision. Effective selling, requires a useful combination of the individual and group dynamics of buying, in order to predict what the buying decision making unit will do.
The buying managers who take up different roles in the buying decision make up the buying center. They all have various roles in the decision making process. Defining the general roles people can assume in a decision group, can help us understand the ranking and importance of every role and can facilitate a better selling process. Initiator: recognizes that some problems can be solved or avoided by acquiring a product or service (drivers: technological improvements, reducing costs – owning not leasing) Decider: say yes or no to the purchase; should be a driven person, with influence; different than signers Influencers: have a say in whether a purchase is made and what is bought; broader range for major purchases Purchaser: person actually doing the financial transaction User: persons who will get to use the product Gatekeeper: problem/product experts; select vendor offerings; control information; can be formalized: approved vendor lists
Reward power – refers to a manager’s ability to encourage purchases by providing others with monetary, social, political or psychological benefits Coercive power – ability to impose punishment on others Attraction power – a person’s ability to charm or otherwise persuade people to go along with his preferences Expert power – persuading people because of real or perceived expertise in some area; the skills do not need to be real Status power – comes from having a high position in the corporation; “authority”
Diagnosing motivation accurately is one of the easiest mgmt tasks to do poorly and one of the most difficult tasks to do well. Although most managers have experience in finding another’s wants, most are not very accurate when they really try to find out what another person wants and will do.
Ask the sales officer!!!!!
Sales-call planning is not only a matter of minimizing miles traveled or courtesy calls on unimportant prospects but of determining what intelligence is needed about key buyers and what questions are likely to produce that information. Gathering psychological info is more often a matter of listening carefully than of asking clever questions during the sales interview Sales audit should be implemented: evaluate all sales force control forms and call reports and discard any that not have been used by mgmt for planning or control purposes => Effect: it frees the sales force from filling in forms, sales mgmt from gathering forms it doesn’t know what to do with, and data processing reports on one ever requests
The buying managers who take up different roles in the buying decision make up the buying center. They all have various roles in the decision making process. Defining the general roles people can assume in a decision group, can help us understand the ranking and importance of every role and can facilitate a better selling process. Initiator: recognizes that some problems can be solved or avoided by acquiring a product or service (drivers: technological improvements, reducing costs – owning not leasing) Decider: say yes or no to the purchase; should be a driven person, with influence; different than signers Influencers: have a say in whether a purchase is made and what is bought; broader range for major purchases Purchaser: person actually doing the financial transaction User: persons who will get to use the product Gatekeeper: problem/product experts; select vendor offerings; control information; can be formalized: approved vendor lists
Make productive sales calls a norm, not an oddity: Sales personnel often do not have a good idea of why they are going on most calls, what they hope to find out, and which questions will give them the needed answers The potential psychological or other info that can be used is not always yielded Some customers are too complex Sales personnel should realize that gathering psychological info is more often a matter of listening carefully than of asking clever questions during the sales interview Sales force considers that the mgmt doesn’t want to hear what salespeople know about an account. Although the sales force file voluminous call reports and furnish other data, they simply vanish The company should always stress out that it rewards careful fact gathering, tight analysis and impeccable execution Less acceptable to make psychological estimates of buyers than economic ones Computing numbers without understanding them leads to lost sales
Benefits: The idea is that the marketers would move from the outer nest toward the inner using as many nests as necessary The model gives flexibility to marketers in selecting or avoiding the criteria as suited to their business. They proposed the use of the five general segmentation criteria which they arranged in a nester hierarchy: i) Demographics: industry, company size, customer location ii) Operating variables: company technology, product/brand use status, customer capabilities iii) Purchasing approaches: purchasing function, power structure, buyer-seller relationships, purchasing policies, purchasing criteria iv) Situational factors: urgency of order, product application, size of order v) Buyers’ personal characteristics: character, approach Gathering psychological data is a sensitive issue. It is less acceptable to make psychological assumptions than economic ones.