My
colleague Ralph Oliva has done a great job running a research center
here at Penn State called the Institute for the Study of Business Markets (ISBM).
They just celebrated their 30th anniversary, and that milestone
promoted me to ask how digital business is reshaping B2B markets. Here
are some initial thoughts.
A) Product
Let's start with the product, or more properly, the
offer: what customer problem is being solved? The rapid drop in the
prices of many sensors, along with nearly universal access to wi-fi,
means that B2B providers can instrument a customer's business process
and sell "holes rather than drills," as the old saying goes. That is, if
I'm a body shop, I don't want to buy sandpaper and abrasives; I want to
know that I can prep and paint any car that comes in without delays for
out-of-stock supplies. Thus 3M's model, as I understand it, of
continuous restocking of the abrasives and masking tape supply closets
turns their stuff into a service. Add sensors on nozzles or chemical
tanks for remote monitoring, access to product engineers and experts to
explain exactly how best to address a new challenge -- or custom-design a
fresh solution, testing and certification services, or operator
training for Green or Lean or other objectives. The result is that
something as mundane as industrial lubricants can become a
differentiated offering, as achieved by Castrol Industrial and other
providers.
Thus the Internet and related technologies can play a crucial role
in "servicization": recall that an Qantas Airbus A380 had its Rolls
Royce jet engine fail spectacularly in November 2010. Rolls Royce knew
immediately about the issue because the Trent 900 engines are monitored
by satellite in real time all over the world. Not long ago, such a
capability would sound like science fiction, but with the reality of
"thrust by the hour" payment options, engine builders must maintain this
kind of close oversight of their assets.
Finally, the Internet's power as an information medium makes it well
suited for conveying knowledge. In B2B markets, this is often critical:
engineers want to know parameters, plant managers want to know
work-arounds, and designers want to know next-generation capabilities.
It's been said that information about stuff is more valuable than stuff:
if a supplier can differentiate its offer with the kind of supplemental
expertise Castrol is providing, the purchasing decision can move from a
low-price bake-off to a specified non-competitive contract. The
customer goes from buying granules or goo to paying a premium for the
knowledge of how to extract unconventional or optimal performance of the
now-differentiated commodity.
B) Channel (Place, in marketing-speak)
Here's a revealing
experiment: search for a B2B product on Google. See what channels have
the product available: it's quite likely eBay and/or Amazon have
resellers -- sometimes licensed ones -- offering everything from test
equipment to medical devices to raw chemicals to forklifts. This isn't
just used goods either: some are new, with unclear warranty backing.
Now repeat the experiment on Baidu, enlisting a Chinese speaker if at all possible.
C) Price
Search
costs, in the economic sense of the word, have been dramatically
altered by search, in the Google sense. Price transparency is a real
issue, whether across national boundaries, across competitors, or across
primary (new) versus secondary markets. One response is to bundle
products and services, which can defeat transparency in some instances,
but the once-secret pricing sheet is now often semi-public information.
D) Promotion
Here we will consider what a company can do to reach potential customers.
The
first point worth mentioning here is that Internet marketing cannot
replace all the things the marketing team has been doing for decades:
thought leadership, sales collateral, conferences and trade shows, even
direct mail. Thus there are four related challenges raised by Internet
methods:
1) Identifying how marketing supports corporate strategy
2) Identifying profitable areas of Internet action
3) Identifying the points of connection with the previous marketing portfolio.
4)
Identifying the right metrics, communicating them to the proper
parties, and adjusting action to enhance profitability, market share, or
whatever the high-level objective may be.
Strategy
Companies in B2B often put a premium on innovation
because commodity price pressure crashes profit margins. If the
objective is to get X% of revenue from products less than Y years old,
profitability can be enhanced, but the task becomes to tell the buying
public about all the new items in the pipeline, often without the
shorthand benefits conferred by a brand.
Other companies in B2B innovate less frequently but at greater
scale: WL Gore comes to mind. In these situations, patents and brand can
combine to create a high-margin scenario. Steep barriers to entry
clarify the marketing objective to focus on product performance.
Still other companies run with ruthless efficiency and can underprice most any competition.
These
three types of companies would each require dramatically different
marketing strategies. In the real world, markets might not be so clearly
sorted out, so aligning marketing effort to larger objectives can be
tricky.
Internet marketing
The sheer number of options in this one domain
can make priority-setting a complex matter. E-mail, social media,
webinars, YouTube videos, search engine marketing, user communities,
mobile applications, product configurators and other widgets, knowledge
bases, and many other tools can be useful in the right context. Each can
also turn out to be an expensive diversion of scarce resources and
public goodwill. Devising a fresh portfolio appropriate to a given
competitive context, product suite, and customer segment can be
extremely challenging.
Integrated marketing - now with added Internet goodness
As hard
as it is to build an effective Internet effort, getting leverage across
all the firm's marketing investments challenges lines of authority,
budgeting processes, cultural assumptions, and customer habits. In some
instances, budget decisions might come down to an either/or: choosing
either a local seminar series or a website re-launch. In more promising
scenarios, identifying how a Twitter campaign can enhance the trade show
presence, or how "chalk talk" videos can drive demand for white papers,
or how a mobile app can feed call center volumes can reinvigorate old
methods as well as giving the team credibility across demographics.
The number of potential combinations in a grid with the following
axes grows very big very fast. In many cases, causation is not
immediately apparent: in any given cell, which activity is driving
outcomes in the other?
Traditional marketing efforts (an incomplete list)
Public relations
Analyst relations
Editorial connections: obtaining product reviews, for example, or placing guest editorials
Advertising: print, TV, other
Trade promotion (rebates, etc)
Thought leadership
Trade shows
Direct mail
Other marketing events
Sponsored content
Brochures
Catalogs
Case studies and testimonials
Certifications (LEED, fair trade, organic, cruelty-free, conflict-free, etc)
Call centers
Sales force support (print, gifts, laptop or tablet demos, pitch decks, proposal templates, etc)
Customer events (golf, auto racing, etc)
Professional associations
Internet marketing (also incomplete)
Website(s)
Estimation and configuration tools
Knowledge bases
Search engine optimization
Customer communities
Chat/discussion boards
Twitter
LinkedIn
YouTube
Email
Webinars
Mobile apps
Blogs
Banner ads
Podcasts
That hypothetical grid should
make the point: building an integrated marketing plan with Internet
activities connected to a coherent portfolio requires thinking
digitally, in terms of word of mouth (no longer controlled by brands),
in terms of speed, in terms of customer engagement, and in terms of
revenue paths.
Measurement
Knowing how and what to manage becomes more complex
in the online era, in part because certain forms of measurement (tweets,
clicks, downloads) are so straightforward. Finding true signal,
relative to the strategic objectives noted above, amidst the noise is a
critical first step - but only that. Communicating evolving measurement
systems, and the rationale behind them, to a broadly distributed,
demographically diverse population is a true test of both management and
leadership.
Thus there's a lot to discuss here. The game, the rules, the
players, and the scoreboard are all in a state of flux, but in such
times, the advantage goes not to the biggest, but to the most nimble and
the fastest learners. Tallying those winners will be the task of a
future newsletter.