Customer
Lifecycles
by Tim Smith, PhD, May 13, 2002
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Much to their detriment, many businesses in B2B markets
consider issues of consumer buying behavior theory irrelevant. While
much of customer lifecycle theory originates in B2C marketing, it
can be profitably mapped into B2B marketing and sales.
The basic sequence according to consumer buying behavior
can be listed as follows: Goal Activation, Awareness, Attribute
Learning, Benefit Prediction, Product or Service Choice, Experience
and Learning, and Relationship Growth. The same process applies
to B2B markets as well.
Goal Activation: Goal activation refers to the consumer
identifying that their state of existence could be enhanced in reference
to a goal state. Consumers either see an opportunity to raise their
current state of satisfaction or are responding to a drop in their
historical state of satisfaction. In consumer markets, people make
purchases either because ice-cream will make them happier or they
have to replace a blown-out tire. In business markets, the product
or service might either enable the firm to capture increased profits
or help them to deal with a process that is no longer working. Some
sales literature refers to these buyers as being in either growth
mode or trouble mode . When firms aren't in either of these states,
salespeople either attempt to make them uncomfortable or seek the
opportunity to which they are apparently oblivious.
Awareness: After a consumer becomes aware that they
can change their state of happiness or profitability, they then
need to become aware of a possible solution to their problem. Fostering
awareness is a core function of marketing but is often shared with
the sales force as well. For consumer markets, awareness is sometimes
stimulated with point-of-purchase displays, advertising, direct
mail, and telemarketing. Business markets use many of the same tools:
advertising, trade shows, direct mail, and telemarketing.
Attribute Learning and Benefit Prediction refers to
consumers investigating a product or service. For consumer products,
Attributes and Benefits might come from reading labels or hearing.
It \'s magically delicious a few thousand times. In hi-tech business
markets, the same tools are used to communicate feature/benefit
learning & and more. Features and Benefits are communicated
in business markets using a variety of means: web sites, customer
visits, technical sales, white papers, and user meetings, to name
a few. I refer to this stage in the buying process as Consumer Investigation.
As business people, our role is to guide and manage the Consumer
Investigation process to lead the prospect to an obvious conclusion:
Our product or service is the best for your situation.
Finally we get to Choice. This is where the sales
exec should come in and behave as the hunter that she. The job is
to close the deal whether it is in consumer markets or business
markets. Choice will reflect both short term issues, such as instant
gratification or getting rid of the sales person, and long term
issues such as a better upgrade strategy or clearer relationship
building process. When it is said that sales people own the customer
in business markets and marketing owns the customer in consumer
markets, they are referring to the process of Choice.
Experience and Learning: The consumer or business
has purchased the product and is learning its value. For consumer
products, the experience might be that people notice the motorcycle
to be a BMW built for long rides and hot curves. For business products
and services, consumers might learn the added features of Office
XP that enable efficient management of contacts or performance of
mail merges, or they might learn that the Customer Support Representatives
(CSRs) are able to actually help the firm deal with a down system
within 24 hours (crucial for mission critical systems). For B2B
markets, experience and learning is an important element in gaining
repeat purchases, cross-selling, or account referencabilty. In designing
a customer management campaign, these aspects of customer management
are critical to the longevity of the firm in thinly traded markets.
For the Awareness and Consumer Investigation processes,
it is imperative that business leaders in both B2C and B2B markets
consider cost efficiency and depth of message in relation to the
medium of choice. It is also true that you can't bull-rush the process.
Businesses selling to businesses must treat the prospect or buying
committee as professionals that will make an informed choice based
upon the perceived economic benefits. While emotions enter the process,
the emotional sale must match the logical sale to minimize cognitive
dissonance that could delay a purchasing decision indefinitely.
Likewise, the experience and learning aspects must match the sales
message. Without matching the message with the deliverable, the
installation team will learn that it has to match an impossible
deadline for a project scope that is ill-defined, or the product
team will learn that customers request an innumerable amount new
features.
Consumer behavior isn't just a function of consumer
markets, nor is it a function of large volume markets alone. The
knowledge and theory of consumer behavior is a domain to be utilized
by all businesses in capturing revenues profitably.
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Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Small and medium sized businesses
select Wiglaf for our quantitative and fact driven approach. www.wiglaf.biz.
----
The May Report, TECH BUSINESS BRIEFS, May 13, 2002
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