Organisational buying/ Chapter 4 Flashcards

1
Q

explain the 3 types of organisational markets

A

industrial market - buy products and services to help them produce other goods and services e.g. raw materials
re-seller market- buy products and services to resell
government market- government agencies that buy products and services to help them carry out other activities

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2
Q

what 6 roles have been identified in the decision making unit

A
initiator
user
decider
influencer
buyers
gatekeepers
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3
Q

what is the initiators job in the DMU

A

they begin the purchasing process e.g. maintenance managers

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4
Q

what is the users job in the DMU

A

the ones who actually use the product. They may be the one who initiates the purchase process and may develop the product specification e.g. welders

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5
Q

what is the deciders job in the DMU

A

have the authority to select the supplier and/or product e.g. production managers

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6
Q

what is the influencers job in the DMU

A

supply information and advice e.g. accountant

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7
Q

what is the buyers job in the DMU

A

have the authority to execute the contractual arrangements e.g. purchasing officer.

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8
Q

what is the gatekeepers job in the DMU

A

controls flow of the information e.g. secretaries

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9
Q

what is the decision making unit

A

it is defined as a group of people within a buying organisation who are involved in the buying decision

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10
Q

what are implications of the DMU

A

Need to identify key actors in buying decisions.
Composition and roles played in the decision-making unit have implications for communications: target audience and message.

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11
Q

explain the organisational decision making process

A
  1. recognition of problem (need)- recognised in internal/external factors.
  2. determination of specification and quantity of needed item- draw up description of what is required
  3. search for and qualification of potential sources- a lot of variation in degree of search takes place in industrial buying
  4. acquisition and analysis
  5. evaluation of proposals and selection of supplier
  6. selection of an order routine- details of payment and delivery drawn up
  7. performance feedback and evaluation-purchasing department draws up evaluation form for user department
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12
Q

what types of choice criteria are there?

A
  1. economic investment e.g. price
  2. technical e.g. delivery, reliability
  3. social (organisational) politics e.g. status, office
  4. personal, reduction e.g. personal risk
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13
Q

what are the implications of the choice criteria?

A
  1. Marketing and sales appeals may need to be modified to different members of the decision-making unit.
  2. Choice criteria may change over time as circumstances change. Suppliers may need to change their offerings and communications as a result.
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14
Q

what are the influences on organisational purchasing behaviour

A
  1. buy class -
    -new task-organisation makes an initial
    purchase of an item to be used to perform a new
    job or to solve a new problem. Lots of info
    required from supplier
    -modified re-buy - When a new task purchase is
    changed on repeat purchases. The buyer may
    require faster delivery, lower prices or modified
    specifications,Moderate amounts of info required.
    -straight re-buy - The buyer purchases the same
    products again routinely under approximately the
    same terms of sale. Little info required
  2. product type- product constituents, product facilities,
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15
Q

what are implications for straight re-buys and new tasks

A
  1. new task - Big gains for those suppliers involved in the decision-making process at the start.
    Many people are involved and the process is long – suppliers need to invest heavily in time to influence all of them.
  2. Current suppliers need to build a strong defensible position and maintain it.
    Potential suppliers need to reduce risk of change for purchaser.
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16
Q

what developments have been made in purchasing practise

A
  1. just in time- minimise stock organising supply system
    it improves quality and supplier must be reliable
  2. centralised purchasing- encourages purchasing specialists to concentrate on a small group of products
  3. e-commerce -buying and selling online
  4. e-procurement- enables companies to fulfil a range of activities and processes associated with purchasing function.
  5. reverse marketing- buyers attempts to persuade supplier to provide exactly what they want.
    6.leasing- give financial benefits to customers and may attract customers that otherwise couldn’t afford the product.
  6. outsourcing- enables firms to focus on core business process while using contracted firms to provide support.