Hutt and Speh (2001) note that "business marketers serve the largest market of all; the dollar volume of transactions in the industrial or business market significantly exceeds that of the ultimate consumer market". For example, they note that companies such as GE,
DuPont and IBM spend more than $60 million a day on purchases to support their operations. Dwyer and Tanner (2006) say the purchases made by companies, government agencies and institutions "account for more than half of the economic activity in
industrialized countries such as the United States, Canada and France". A 2003 study sponsored by the
Business Marketing Association estimated that business-to-business marketers in the United States spend about $85 billion a year to promote their
goods and services. The BMA study breaks that spending out as follows (figures are in billions of dollars): • Trade Shows/Events -- $17.3 • Internet/Electronic Media -- $12.5 • Promotion/Market Support -- $10.9 • Magazine Advertising -- $10.8 • Publicity/Public Relations -- $10.5 • Direct Mail -- $9.4 • Dealer/Distributor Materials -- $5.2 •
Market Research -- $3.8 • Telemarketing -- $2.4 • Directories -- $1.4 • Other -- $5.1 Despite the stream of leads and undeniable impact of marketing in B2B organizations, a 2021 report by Statista states that majority of businesses only allocate 5% of their budget towards promotions. By contrast, B2C companies typically spend 5% to 12% of their total revenue on marketing. According to Morris, Pitt and Honeycutt (2001), the growth of business marketing is largely due to three "revolutions". • Technological revolution. Technology is changing at an unprecedented pace, and these changes are speeding up the pace of new product and service development. A large part of that has to do with the Internet, which is discussed in more detail below. Technology and
business strategy go hand in hand. Both are correlated. While technology supports forming organization strategy, the business strategy is also helpful in
technology development. Both play a role in business marketing. • Entrepreneurial revolution. To stay competitive, many companies have downsized and reinvented themselves. Adaptability, flexibility, speed, aggressiveness and innovativeness are the keys to remaining competitive today. Marketing is taking the entrepreneurial lead by finding
market segments, untapped needs and new uses for existing products, and by creating new processes for sales, distribution and customer service. • (Occurring within marketing itself) Companies are looking beyond traditional assumptions and they are adopting new frameworks, theories, models and concepts. They are also moving away from the mass market and the preoccupation with the transaction. Relationships, partnerships and alliances are what define marketing today. The
cookie-cutter approach is out. Companies are customizing marketing programs to individual accounts. ==See also==