A buying center, also called decision-making unit (DMU),[1] brings together "all those members of an organization who become involved in the buying process for a particular product or service".[2]

The concept of a DMU was developed in 1967 by Robinson, Farris and Wind (1967).[3] A DMU consists of all the people of an organization who are involved in the buying decision.[4] The decision to purchase involves those with purchasing and financial expertise; those with technical expertise and of course the top-management. McDonald, Rogers and Woodburn (2000) state that identifying and influencing all the people involved in the buying decision is a prerequisite in the process of sales.[4]

Modelling buying centers

The concept of a buying center (as a focus of business-to-business marketing, and as a core factor in creating customer value and influence in organisational efficiency and effectiveness) formulates the understanding of purchasing decision-making in complex environments.

Some of the key factors influencing a buying center or DMU's activities include:

  • Buy class. The "Buygrid" model developed by Robinson et al. classified "buy classes" as "straight rebuy", "modified rebuy" or "new task",[5] also referred to as "new task buying".[6]
  • Product type (e.g. materials, components, plant and equipment, or maintenance, repair and operations (MRO)
  • Importance of the purchase[7]

In some cases the buying center is an informal ad hoc group, but in other cases, it is a formally sanctioned group with a specific mandate. American research undertaken by McWilliams in 1992 found out that the mean size of a buying center mainly consisted of four people.[8] The range in this research was between three and five people. The type of purchase that has to be done and the stage of the buying process influence the size. More recent research found that the structure, including the size, of buying centers depends on the organizational structure, with centralization and formalization driving the development of large buying centers.[9]

Decision-making process

When the DMU wants to purchase a certain product or service the following steps are taken inside the buying center:

  • Need or problem recognition: the recognition can start for two reasons. The first reason can be to solve a specific problem of the company. The other reason can be to improve a company's current operations/performance or to pursue new market opportunities.
  • Determining product specification: The specification includes the peculiarities which the product/service that is going to be purchased must contain.
  • Supplier and product search: this process contains the search for suppliers that can meet a company's product or service needs. First a supplier that matches with the specifications of the company has to be found. The second condition is that the supplier can satisfy the organizations financial and supply requirements.
  • Evaluation of proposals and selection of suppliers: the different possible suppliers will be evaluated by the different departments of the company.
  • Selection of order routine: this stadium starts after the selection of the supplier. It mainly consists of negotiating and agreeing with the supplier about certain details.
  • Performance feedback and evaluation: performance and quality of the purchased goods will be evaluated.

In this process of making decisions different roles can be given to certain members of the center of the unit depending on the importance of the part of the organization.

Robinson et al.'s "Buygrid Framework" saw new task activities, dealing with a problem which has not arisen before, as more complex than the other buy classes, and closer to achieving a general solution applicable in future rebuy activities.[3] Co-author Yoram Wind, looking back at the Buygrid Model 25 years after its publication, held that the model had provided "a very useful framework" whose "underlying dimensions [were] valid", but "its generalizability under a variety of market situations [was] not yet completely understood".[10]

Conceptual and methodological issues in buying center research

There are several issues concerning buying centers which in 1986 were thought to need additional research.[11] These issues can be divided into:

Buying center boundaries and buying center domain

Distinguishing the buying center from its environment, also defining and delimiting the activities of a particular buying center.

Buying center structure

Understanding how organizational structure may differ from or may shape the structure of the buying center and examining how a particular buying strategy may serve to mediate the effects of environmental uncertainty on the structure of the buying center.

Process considerations in buying center

Power and conflict issues within the buying center.

Decision making

One stream of research focuses on the number of decision phases and their timing and the other emphasizes the type of decision-making model (or choice routine) utilized.

Communications flow

The informal interactions that emerge during the buying process.

See also

  • Procurement - formalised organizational procedures for purchasing

References

  1. Havaldar, Krishna K. (2005). "Buying centre (or decision making unit)". Industrial marketing: text and cases (2nd ed.). New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill Education. p. 43. ISBN 9780070588400. OCLC 60574619. The buying center is sometimes referred to as the decision making unit (DMU) or buying group. The buying center or decision making unit is a useful tool which answers the question—Who are involved in buying decision in an industrial organization? It is defined as a body of all the individuals or groups participating in the buying decision process and who have interdependent objectives and share common risks.
  2. Robinson, P. J., C. W. Farris, and Y. Wind (1967), Industrial Buying and Creative Marketing, Boston, MA: Allyn and Bacon, quoted in Wesley J. Johnston and Thomas V. Bonoma, "The Buying Center: Structure and Interaction Patterns" in Journal of Marketing, Vol. 45, No. 3 (Summer, 1981), pp. 143-156, accessed 6 December 2015
  3. 1 2 Robinson, P.; Faris, Y.; Wind, C. W. (1967). Industrial buying and creative marketing. United States: Allyn & Bacon. ASIN B0006BRX3A.
  4. 1 2 McDonald, M.; Rogers, B.; Woodburn, D. (2000). Key customers: How to Manage them Profitably. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann.
  5. Monash University, Buy classes, accessed 11 May 2023
  6. Roy, S. and Sivakumar, K., The role of information technology adoption in the globalization of business buying behavior: a conceptual model and research propositions, Journal of Business and Industrial Marketing, 22/4, 2007, p. 223, accessed 18 August 2023
  7. Jobber, David; Ellis-Chadwick, Fiona (2013). "5". Principles and Practices of Marketing (7th ed.). Maidenhead, UK: McGraw-Hill Higher Education. pp. 162–165. ISBN 9780077140007.
  8. McWilliams, Robert D.; Naumann, Earl; Scott, Stan (1992). "Determining buying center size". Industrial Marketing Management. 21 (1): 43–49. doi:10.1016/0019-8501(92)90032-O. ISSN 0019-8501.
  9. Wood, John "Andy" (October 2005). "Organizational configuration as an antecedent to buying centers' size and structure". Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing. 20 (6): 263–275. doi:10.1108/08858620510618101.
  10. Wind, Y. and Thomas, R. J., The BuyGrid Model: 25 Years Later, published April 1996, accessed 13 September 2023
  11. Spekman, Robert E.; Kjell, Gronhaug (July 1986). "Conceptual and methodological issues in buying centre research". European Journal of Marketing. 20 (7): 50–63. doi:10.1108/EUM0000000004656.
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