Chapter 7 Flashcards
The marketing of goods and services to individuals and organizations for purposes other than personal consumption
Business Marketing (Industrial Marketing)
The use of the internet to facilitate the exchange of goods, services, and information between organizations
Business-To-Business Electronic Commerce (B-To-B or B2B E-Commerce)
A measure of a Web site’s effectiveness; calculated by multiplying the frequency of visits by the duration of visits by the duration of a visit by the number of pages viewed during each visit (site reach)
Stickiness
A cooperative agreement between business firms
Strategic Alliance (Strategic Partnership)
A firm’s belief than an ongoing relationship with another firm is so important that the relationship warrants maximum efforts at maintaining it indefinitely
Relationship Commitment
The condition that exists when one party has confidence in an exchange partner’s reliability and integrity
Trust
A network of interlocking corporate affiliates
Keiretsu
Individuals and organizations that buy business goods and incorporate them into the products they produce for eventual sale to other producers or to consumers
Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs)
A detailed numbering system developed by the United States, Canada, and Mexico to classy North American business establishments by their main production process
North American Industry Classification (NAICS)
The demand for business products
Derived Demand
The demand for two or more items used together in a final product
Joint Demand
Phenomenon in which a small increase or decrease in consumer demand can produce a much larger change in demand for the facilities and equipment needed to make the consumer product
Multiplier Effect (Accelerator Principle)
An electronic trading floor that provides companies with integrated links to their customers and suppliers
Business-To-Business Online Exchange
A practice whereby business purchasers choose to buy from their own customers
Reciprocity
Capital goods such as large or expensive machines, mainframe computers, blast furnaces, generators, airplanes, and buildings
Major Equipment (Installations)