Description
Marketing as a function and a profession has made tremendous strides since Peter Drucker first defined it as “the distinguishing, unique function of the business” almost 40 years ago.
B2B
The New B2B
Marketing Imperative
Developing Fundamental Capabilities
to Capture Market Share
by Matthew Ericksen, John Jullens, Gaurav Kataria
B2B
The New B2B Marketing Imperative
2
Executive Summary
M
arketing as a function and a profession has made
tremendous strides since Peter Drucker ?rst de?ned it
as “the distinguishing, unique function of the business”
almost 40 years ago.
1
But while business-to-consumer
(B2C) companies embraced Drucker’s marketing mandate,
business-to-business (B2B) companies lagged behind. Today, due
to competitive and economic pressures, this situation is changing.
This study, jointly conducted by the Association of National
Advertisers (ANA) and Booz & Company, ?nds that B2B compa-
nies are awakening to the need for greater marketing prowess and
that those that develop it win increased market share. At the same
time, it reveals that the majority of B2B companies still de?ne mar-
keting as a tactical—rather than strategic—function. Accordingly,
the capabilities and skills of B2B marketers are limited and their
ability to contribute to their companies’ results is constrained.
The study further identi?es three core marketing capabili-
ties—market-back product development, pricing management,
and brand and reputation management—that offer B2B compa-
nies the most attractive returns. Because the practices that de?ne
these basic capabilities are well established and already proven,
B2B companies needn’t reinvent the wheel. But developing them
does require a rigorous and strenuous effort. Whereas many func-
tional activities, such as pricing, can be exercised within the mar-
keting department, these marketing capabilities must be applied
throughout a company’s value chain. And because the majority
of B2B companies have yet to develop them as organizational
capabilities, they offer enhanced competitive advantage.
This creates a timely and valuable opportunity for B2B mar-
keters. Those who act on the ?ndings, implications, and rec-
ommendations of this study can help their companies grow—
an especially critical need in a global economy characterized by
negative growth—and establish more strategic and challenging
roles for themselves.
The New B2B Marketing Imperative
Marketing does not contribute to the success of B2B companies as
much as it could and should. Unlike B2C companies, where mar-
keting has always been an important core competence, B2B com-
panies have historically focused more on achieving product-based
differentiation. Accordingly, these companies built professional
sales forces to communicate that differentiation and establish
and manage direct relationships with their corporate customers.
B2B marketing was essentially a tactical support function that
managed public relations, generated leads, and provided sales
brochures and other collateral materials.
But the effectiveness of purely product-driven strategies has
eroded, and traditional pro?t drivers have declined. Deregula-
tion, globalization, and intense competition have accelerated
the commoditization of B2B products and services, rendering
product-based speci?cations and differentiation less effective.
Further, growing sourcing sophistication, as well as industry and
supply base consolidation, spawned a shift in power from sellers
to buyers, as buyers were able to disaggregate a product into its
components and negotiate the price of each (making it more
dif?cult to pro?t from bundling and integration). And, of course,
the global recession has exacerbated the need for companies
to accomplish more with less, creating pressure to reduce the
cost of sales.
These conditions have combined to create an urgent need
for more effective marketing and the capabilities that enable it.
Indeed, this joint study by the ANA and Booz & Company reveals
that B2B companies that better develop their fundamental mar-
keting capabilities can reap rewards in substantially increased
market share.
In fact, the need for enhanced and more strategic marketing
capabilities has already been recognized by many B2B compa-
nies. An ANA study in 2008 revealed that during the preceding
three years, a third of B2B marketing organizations had been
The ?ndings and recommendations in this report derive from a joint
study conducted by the Association of National Advertisers (ANA)
and Booz & Company in late 2008 and early 2009. The impetus
for the study was the lack of attention and research dedicated to
marketing effectiveness in the business-to-business sector.
The study included a survey of B2B marketers, interviews with
a cross section of the participants, and a rigorous analysis of the
variation in capability maturity and market share among the par-
ticipants. The study encompassed more than 100 B2B market-
ers in major companies representing over 10 industries, including
?nancial services, information technology, chemicals, manufac-
turing, and healthcare.
The objectives of the study were ?vefold: Identify the unique
challenges facing B2B marketers; identify a set of essential B2B
marketing capabilities; evaluate the maturity level of those capa-
bilities in B2B companies; highlight the emerging opportunities of
B2B marketers; and begin to establish a broadly applicable set of
best practices in B2B marketing.
The Study and Its Methodology
3
strategically realigned; marketers were given a greater voice in
developing existing customer relationships, in new business
development, and in corporate strategy and innovation.
2
But the same study also found that B2B marketers contin-
ued to be signi?cantly less involved in strategic decision making
than their B2C counterparts. This was especially obvious with
regard to customer relationships and growth initiatives, such as
entering new markets. Only 8 percent of B2B marketers said
they played a key role in customer relationship decisions, com-
pared with 42 percent of B2C marketers. Sixty-?ve percent of
B2B marketers versus 85 percent of B2C marketers said they
were involved in growth initiative decisions. B2B marketers were
also less involved than their B2C colleagues in new product de-
velopment decisions as well as in core marketing decisions,
such as positioning, pricing, and channel strategies.
Clearly, there is still much work to be done to respond
to the new B2B marketing imperative. The 2009 ANA/
Booz & Company survey was designed to plumb the challenges
facing B2B marketers, the opportunities and potential rewards
for those with above-average skills, and the capabilities that will
deliver the most value to their companies (see “The Study and
Its Methodology”).
The Constrained Roles and
Responsibilities of B2B Marketers
The vast majority of B2B companies continue to underutilize
and undervalue marketing. In fact, only 13 percent of the re-
spondents in the 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey said the
senior leaders in their companies had extensive marketing ex-
perience or emphasized marketing experience in their leader-
ship development programs. As one marketing director who
participated in the study declared, “Marketing is just not in the
DNA of senior management.”
It is unsurprising, therefore, that on the continuum of mar-
keting capabilities, only 18 percent of the surveyed marketers
said they were operating at the most advanced levels of their
discipline, as “growth champions” who drive their companies’
priorities and lead the development of brands, products, and
new businesses. Further, just under half of the surveyed mar-
keters described their roles as tactical in nature, as opposed to
strategic, and relegated themselves to the less developed side
of the continuum (see Exhibit 1).
Con?rmation of the role limitations of B2B marketers can be
found in how they de?ne their responsibilities, which are also fo-
cused on tactical rather than strategic issues. For instance, while
80 percent of those surveyed were “responsible” or “accountable”
Exhibit 1: B2B Marketers Rank Themselves on the Capability Continuum
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Service Provider
Provides advertising,
promotion, and PR
services at the request
of the brand and
product/service teams
%
o
f
r
e
s
p
o
n
d
e
n
t
s
Tactical Functional Role
(49%)
21%
14% 14% 14%
19% 18%
Strategic Business Role
(51%)
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Best-Practice Advisor
Works with the
individual businesses
to maximize marketing
effectiveness and
ef?ciency by bringing
best practices to
advertising, promotion,
public relations, and
other activities
Marketing Master
Develops and leads
large, company-wide
marketing efforts,
and helps set the
company’s priorities
Brand Builder
Is an ef?cient provider
of marketing services
from communications
to creative output and
campaign execution
in support of the
company’s brands
Senior Counselor
Serves as a primary
advisor on marketing
strategy to the CEO
and the individual
businesses, and leads
major advertising,
promotions, and public
relations campaigns
Growth Champion
Drives the company’s
priorities. and leads
the development of its
brands, products, and
new businesses
Marketing Capability Continuum
B2B
The New B2B Marketing Imperative
4
for advertising, the percentages of those marketers who have
similar levels of involvement in customer relations, new business
development, and corporate strategy drop off precipitously (see
Exhibit 2).
A Dearth of Marketing Prowess in B2B
B2B companies are not ignoring marketing: Slightly more than
half now have CMOs; approximately a third have realigned
marketing for a more strategic role; and in spite of the reces-
sion, roughly a ?fth are recruiting marketing talent. But at the
same time, the potential for performance improvement through
marketing capabilities is enhanced by the fact that relatively
few B2B companies have developed them. The 2009 ANA/
Booz & Company study indicates that there is still much room
for performance gains—at least until more B2B companies
strive to capture marketing’s competitive advantages.
More than a third of the survey’s respondents said their com-
panies’ product development process is still conducted from a
perspective that is primarily inside out. While market research
may be used and customer feedback solicited, customers are
rarely driving the process and their input is seldom integrated
from end to end. In addition, 90 percent of the B2B marketers
surveyed said their function, which is a direct source of cus-
tomer insight, was not tightly integrated into their companies’
product development processes. (Sales, according to some re-
spondents, does play a more active role in B2B product devel-
opment because it often ?elds customer requests for custom
designs. But these tend to be based on the needs of individual
accounts rather than market-driven demand.)
A majority of B2B marketers are not fully integrated dur-
ing the major stages of product development, until the ?nal
launch—the end point of the process, when changes are most
dif?cult and expensive. In B2B companies, marketers typically
have limited involvement in R&D or are called on only as need-
ed, as determined by a process owner from outside the function
(see Exhibit 3).
There is a similar situation in the pricing of products and ser-
vices in B2B companies. Again, more than a third of the market-
ers surveyed reported that their companies determine prices on
a cost basis, which is also an inside-out process. Conversely, less
than a third of the companies are using value-based pricing strat-
egies that derive from customer utility and that invariably yield a
price better aligned to the marketplace and often actually higher.
Finally, few ?rms have a comprehensive strategy in place for
strengthening their brand image and corporate reputation. The
survey revealed that less than half of the respondents track spe-
ci?c brand attributes. Further, it identi?ed brand and corporate
reputation management as the least developed of the core mar-
keting capabilities studied.
The survey also revealed that only 15 percent of the market-
ers feel fully con?dent in their ability to track sales and cost-
to-serve data for individual customers across channels. Only 9
percent of the respondents capture a 360-degree view of cus-
tomers. And even though a surprising 45 percent of the respon-
dents said they are able to measure marketing ROI advertising
sales lift, a recent survey of B2B media suppliers contradicts
this belief; only 10 percent of the suppliers think B2B marketers
are measuring the effectiveness of their advertising spend.
3
These deficiencies indicate that there is a dearth of
fundamental marketing prowess among B2B companies that
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Public Relations
Advertising
High-Level Strategy
New Market Entry
Customer Relations
Inquiries and Complaints
Customer Relations
Retention and Loyalty
Responsible Accountable Supporting Informed
50% 11% 31%
12% 15% 4%
8%
69%
33%
35%
22%
28% 24% 26% 22%
22% 39% 17%
24% 33% 8%
18% 41% 8%
Exhibit 2: The Responsibilities of B2B Marketers
5
translates directly into a shortage of marketing’s base currency—
customer insight. Since customer insight is an essential ingredi-
ent in bringing successful products and services to market, the
lack of it creates barriers to growth and pro?tability.
Why Build B2B Marketing Capabilities,
and Which Ones?
The fact that the marketing capabilities of most B2B companies
are less than fully developed and lack customer insight is not itself
a persuasive argument for investing in an expanded role for the
function. Perhaps the B2B sector does not need the same level
of marketing prowess or customer insight as a Procter & Gamble
or a Unilever. Perhaps, in a global economy that is shrinking for
the ?rst time since World War II and in which liquidity is a primary
consideration, B2B companies have more important priorities. So
why should they bolster their marketing expertise now? The short
answer: top-line growth and increased market share.
This survey revealed that B2B companies with above-average
marketing capabilities gain greater market shares than those
companies with below-average capabilities. When the marketing
capabilities of the surveyed companies were correlated to market
share gains over a three-year period, 40 percent of the above-
average B2B marketers were found to have gained market share,
compared with 26 percent of the below-average B2B marketers.
This represents a market share gain premium for above-average
marketers of 54 percent. The market share gains of those B2B
marketers whose capabilities placed them in the top quartile is
even greater; 56 percent of those companies recorded gains, a
premium of 115 percent over the below-average B2B marketers.
This study also found that not all marketing capabilities have
the same degree of impact on market share gains (see Exhibit
4, page 6). Not surprisingly, overall, core marketing capabili-
ties—those that directly in?uence customers, such as pricing
and branding—have the highest correlations to market share
growth. Enabling capabilities—those that govern the operations
of the marketing function, such as decision rights and com-
pensation plans—tend to have a lower correlation to market
share growth. On average, the correlation between market share
growth and core capabilities is double that of enabling capabili-
ties. (This is not to say that enabling capabilities can or should
be ignored. As a company’s core marketing capabilities grow,
the importance of enabling capabilities grows along with them;
enabling capabilities support the effectiveness and ef?ciency of
marketers as they seek to apply core capabilities.)
Core marketing capabili ties—
those that directly in?uence
customers—have the highest
correlations to market share growth.
Enabling capabilities—those
that govern the operations of the
marketing function—have a lower
correlation to market share growth.
Exhibit 3: B2B Marketing Integration with Product Development
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Idea Generation
Idea Assessment
Business Case
Development
Engineering
Development
Testing and
Validation
Final Launch
Fully As Needed Limited
45% 35% 20%
40% 23% 37%
39%
11%
22%
65% 27% 8%
34% 44%
36% 53%
43% 18%
B2B
The New B2B Marketing Imperative
6
Of greatest interest to B2B marketers should be the three
marketing capabilities that have the highest correlation to mar-
ket share gains:
• Market-back product development, in which the customer’s
perspective is actively integrated throughout the entire pro-
cess, from the initial exploratory and concept phases all the
way to product development and testing, including market
research and, of course, developing the business case.
• Brand and reputation management, in which a differentiated
value proposition is developed and tracked for each brand
and aligned with the entire marketing mix, and a comprehen-
sive approach to managing the company’s reputation with a
full range of stakeholders is adopted.
• Pricing management, in which marketers quantify the eco-
nomic or business value that customers derive from their of-
ferings and incorporate this customer value, as well as cost-to-
serve, into product and service prices.
When evaluated across all the companies in this survey,
these three marketing capabilities were found to be signi?cantly
more developed in companies that had gained market share
than in those that had not (see Exhibit 5).
Aside from the value of knowing which marketing capabilities
offer the greatest bene?t to B2B companies, it is also important
to note that developing them on an organizational scale is easier
said than done. Capability development, especially when capa-
bilities involve marketplace differentiation, is often quite complex
because it requires redesigning systems, processes, and metrics,
as well as the roles that people play in the organization. For
example, the workings of the manufacturing capability best
known as the Toyota production system are common knowledge,
but few carmakers have been able to emulate them in practice.
Capturing the B2B Market Share Premium
The primary implication of the 2009 ANA/Booz & Company
study into B2B marketing is clear: A greater focus on funda-
mental marketing capabilities can yield substantial returns. But
to capture these returns for their companies, B2B marketers will
need to address systemic, functional, and capabilities issues.
In systemic terms, many B2B marketers will have to estab-
lish a new, more integral role for themselves in the corporate
hierarchy:
• They will have to earn the attention and consideration of the
senior leadership team by expanding their current roles as
Exhibit 4: The Correlation of Marketing Capabilities to Market Share Growth
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Market-Back
Product
Development
Brand and
Reputation
Management
Media
Planning
Pricing
Management
Involvement
in CRM
Structure Decision
Rights
Information Motivators Knowledge
Management
High
Correlation
Low
Correlation
0.17
0.18
0.15
0.17
0.02
average
average
0.14
0.02
Core Capabilities Enabling Capabilities
0.14
0.07
0.07 0.07 0.07
7
advertising and PR managers into strategic advisors, engage
with the team in the identi?cation and prioritization of corpo-
rate goals, and lead the development of brands, products and
services, and new businesses.
• They will have to balance marketing’s strategic agenda with
the most dif?cult economy in decades—creating and consis-
tently pursuing an agenda that delivers short-term returns and
long-term bene?ts.
• They will have to understand that all marketing capabilities are
not equal in terms of bene?t and identify and pursue those ca-
pabilities that can best help them meet the two other goals.
In functional terms, the majority of B2B marketers will have
to learn to walk before they attempt to run. Toward this end and
the ful?llment of the third goal, they should consider focusing
their attention on the three key capabilities identi?ed in this sur-
vey. They should build their expertise in each of these capabili-
ties slowly, avoid reinventing the wheel (by acquiring and adapt-
ing B2C talent and techniques), and continually demonstrate
the value of their efforts.
In terms of the three key capabilities, B2B marketers can
begin to frame their development efforts around the following
best practices:
Market-back product development: The best marketers earn a
voice in the product development process by delivering cus-
tomer insight. In order to obtain this insight, they identify and
articulate customer needs and desires. They understand their
customer segments and the value drivers in each segment.
They translate the value drivers into product attributes, work
with R&D to design these attributes into products and services,
and set innovation priorities.
Brand and reputation management: Effective marketers man-
age brand portfolios that integrate, support, and achieve cor-
porate goals—and enhance corporate reputation. They de?ne
and execute product and service strategy and positioning. They
articulate brand propositions that include bene?ts and values.
They continuously track and improve brand attributes. And they
extend and leverage the appeal of the brand across all of the
company’s activities, including products and services, commu-
nications, sales and service, and corporate culture.
Pricing management: Leading marketers manage pricing as an
integral element of brand strategy. Pricing is proactively deter-
mined and implemented over the life cycle of the products and
services. Further, in order to maximize pro?ts, pricing is based
on the value delivered to customers, in addition to costs and
market conditions.
Conclusion
Typically, B2B companies do not have a strong marketing tradi-
tion, but a combination of trends and conditions suggests that
their need for marketing is becoming more and more compel-
ling. Those B2B companies that have already strengthened
their marketing capabilities are reaping rewards in increased
market share, and the stakes will surely be raised as their capa-
bilities mature and more and more companies follow their lead.
This new marketing imperative in B2B has created an opportu-
nity for marketers in this sector to deliver higher returns to their
companies and establish more strategic roles for themselves.
Those who seize this opportunity will stand among the leading
marketers of the future.
Exhibit 5: Key Marketing Capabilities,
Market Share Gainers vs. Non-Gainers
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Market-Back
Product
Development
Brand and
Reputation
Management
Pricing
Management
Capability
Level
2.6
2.4
3.3
3.1
Market share gainers
Market share non-gainers
2.9
2.5
3.4
3.2
3.0
2.8
2.6
2.4
0.0
1
Peter Drucker, Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices
(Harper & Row, 1973), page 61.
2
Association of National Advertisers and BtoB magazine,
“The Continuously Changing Role of Marketing,” March 2008.
3
American Business Media and Booz & Company,
“A Roadmap for Pro?table Revenue Growth” (2008).
Chicago
Matt Ericksen
Partner
312-578-4610
[email protected]
Cleveland
John Jullens
Principal
216-696-1753
[email protected]
Gaurav Kataria
Associate
216-925-4039
[email protected]
Matthew Ericksen is a Booz & Company
partner based in Chicago. For over 20
years he has been working with industrial
companies to de?ne winning strategies
and the organizational and transforma-
tional programs required for success.
John Jullens is a Booz & Company prin-
cipal based in Cleveland. He specializes
in demand-side transformation, including
revenue growth strategies, brand man-
agement, customer retention, and retail
channel effectiveness for B2C and B2B
clients in North America, Europe, and Asia.
Gaurav Kataria is a Booz & Company
associate based in Cleveland. He special-
izes in growth strategies for automotive,
industrial, and consumer goods companies.
About the ANA
The ANA’s mission is to provide indispensable leadership
that drives marketing communications and media and brand
management excellence and champions, promotes, and de-
fends industry interests. The ANA is the industry’s foremost
and recognized source of marketing communications best
practices. It also leads industry initiatives, in?uences indus-
try practices, manages industry affairs, and advances, pro-
motes, and protects all advertisers and marketers. The trade
association represents 400 companies with 9,000 brands
that collectively spend more than $250 billion in marketing
communications and advertising. For more information visit
www.ana.net.
About Booz & Company
Booz & Company is a leading global consulting ?rm, helping
the world’s top businesses, governments, and organizations.
With more than 3,300 people in 59 of?ces around the world, we
bring foresight and knowledge, deep functional expertise, and
a practical approach to building capabilities and delivering real
impact. We work closely with our clients to create and deliver
essential advantage. Visit www.booz.com to learn more about
Booz & Company.
doc_632650193.pdf
Marketing as a function and a profession has made tremendous strides since Peter Drucker first defined it as “the distinguishing, unique function of the business” almost 40 years ago.
B2B
The New B2B
Marketing Imperative
Developing Fundamental Capabilities
to Capture Market Share
by Matthew Ericksen, John Jullens, Gaurav Kataria
B2B
The New B2B Marketing Imperative
2
Executive Summary
M
arketing as a function and a profession has made
tremendous strides since Peter Drucker ?rst de?ned it
as “the distinguishing, unique function of the business”
almost 40 years ago.
1
But while business-to-consumer
(B2C) companies embraced Drucker’s marketing mandate,
business-to-business (B2B) companies lagged behind. Today, due
to competitive and economic pressures, this situation is changing.
This study, jointly conducted by the Association of National
Advertisers (ANA) and Booz & Company, ?nds that B2B compa-
nies are awakening to the need for greater marketing prowess and
that those that develop it win increased market share. At the same
time, it reveals that the majority of B2B companies still de?ne mar-
keting as a tactical—rather than strategic—function. Accordingly,
the capabilities and skills of B2B marketers are limited and their
ability to contribute to their companies’ results is constrained.
The study further identi?es three core marketing capabili-
ties—market-back product development, pricing management,
and brand and reputation management—that offer B2B compa-
nies the most attractive returns. Because the practices that de?ne
these basic capabilities are well established and already proven,
B2B companies needn’t reinvent the wheel. But developing them
does require a rigorous and strenuous effort. Whereas many func-
tional activities, such as pricing, can be exercised within the mar-
keting department, these marketing capabilities must be applied
throughout a company’s value chain. And because the majority
of B2B companies have yet to develop them as organizational
capabilities, they offer enhanced competitive advantage.
This creates a timely and valuable opportunity for B2B mar-
keters. Those who act on the ?ndings, implications, and rec-
ommendations of this study can help their companies grow—
an especially critical need in a global economy characterized by
negative growth—and establish more strategic and challenging
roles for themselves.
The New B2B Marketing Imperative
Marketing does not contribute to the success of B2B companies as
much as it could and should. Unlike B2C companies, where mar-
keting has always been an important core competence, B2B com-
panies have historically focused more on achieving product-based
differentiation. Accordingly, these companies built professional
sales forces to communicate that differentiation and establish
and manage direct relationships with their corporate customers.
B2B marketing was essentially a tactical support function that
managed public relations, generated leads, and provided sales
brochures and other collateral materials.
But the effectiveness of purely product-driven strategies has
eroded, and traditional pro?t drivers have declined. Deregula-
tion, globalization, and intense competition have accelerated
the commoditization of B2B products and services, rendering
product-based speci?cations and differentiation less effective.
Further, growing sourcing sophistication, as well as industry and
supply base consolidation, spawned a shift in power from sellers
to buyers, as buyers were able to disaggregate a product into its
components and negotiate the price of each (making it more
dif?cult to pro?t from bundling and integration). And, of course,
the global recession has exacerbated the need for companies
to accomplish more with less, creating pressure to reduce the
cost of sales.
These conditions have combined to create an urgent need
for more effective marketing and the capabilities that enable it.
Indeed, this joint study by the ANA and Booz & Company reveals
that B2B companies that better develop their fundamental mar-
keting capabilities can reap rewards in substantially increased
market share.
In fact, the need for enhanced and more strategic marketing
capabilities has already been recognized by many B2B compa-
nies. An ANA study in 2008 revealed that during the preceding
three years, a third of B2B marketing organizations had been
The ?ndings and recommendations in this report derive from a joint
study conducted by the Association of National Advertisers (ANA)
and Booz & Company in late 2008 and early 2009. The impetus
for the study was the lack of attention and research dedicated to
marketing effectiveness in the business-to-business sector.
The study included a survey of B2B marketers, interviews with
a cross section of the participants, and a rigorous analysis of the
variation in capability maturity and market share among the par-
ticipants. The study encompassed more than 100 B2B market-
ers in major companies representing over 10 industries, including
?nancial services, information technology, chemicals, manufac-
turing, and healthcare.
The objectives of the study were ?vefold: Identify the unique
challenges facing B2B marketers; identify a set of essential B2B
marketing capabilities; evaluate the maturity level of those capa-
bilities in B2B companies; highlight the emerging opportunities of
B2B marketers; and begin to establish a broadly applicable set of
best practices in B2B marketing.
The Study and Its Methodology
3
strategically realigned; marketers were given a greater voice in
developing existing customer relationships, in new business
development, and in corporate strategy and innovation.
2
But the same study also found that B2B marketers contin-
ued to be signi?cantly less involved in strategic decision making
than their B2C counterparts. This was especially obvious with
regard to customer relationships and growth initiatives, such as
entering new markets. Only 8 percent of B2B marketers said
they played a key role in customer relationship decisions, com-
pared with 42 percent of B2C marketers. Sixty-?ve percent of
B2B marketers versus 85 percent of B2C marketers said they
were involved in growth initiative decisions. B2B marketers were
also less involved than their B2C colleagues in new product de-
velopment decisions as well as in core marketing decisions,
such as positioning, pricing, and channel strategies.
Clearly, there is still much work to be done to respond
to the new B2B marketing imperative. The 2009 ANA/
Booz & Company survey was designed to plumb the challenges
facing B2B marketers, the opportunities and potential rewards
for those with above-average skills, and the capabilities that will
deliver the most value to their companies (see “The Study and
Its Methodology”).
The Constrained Roles and
Responsibilities of B2B Marketers
The vast majority of B2B companies continue to underutilize
and undervalue marketing. In fact, only 13 percent of the re-
spondents in the 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey said the
senior leaders in their companies had extensive marketing ex-
perience or emphasized marketing experience in their leader-
ship development programs. As one marketing director who
participated in the study declared, “Marketing is just not in the
DNA of senior management.”
It is unsurprising, therefore, that on the continuum of mar-
keting capabilities, only 18 percent of the surveyed marketers
said they were operating at the most advanced levels of their
discipline, as “growth champions” who drive their companies’
priorities and lead the development of brands, products, and
new businesses. Further, just under half of the surveyed mar-
keters described their roles as tactical in nature, as opposed to
strategic, and relegated themselves to the less developed side
of the continuum (see Exhibit 1).
Con?rmation of the role limitations of B2B marketers can be
found in how they de?ne their responsibilities, which are also fo-
cused on tactical rather than strategic issues. For instance, while
80 percent of those surveyed were “responsible” or “accountable”
Exhibit 1: B2B Marketers Rank Themselves on the Capability Continuum
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Service Provider
Provides advertising,
promotion, and PR
services at the request
of the brand and
product/service teams
%
o
f
r
e
s
p
o
n
d
e
n
t
s
Tactical Functional Role
(49%)
21%
14% 14% 14%
19% 18%
Strategic Business Role
(51%)
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Best-Practice Advisor
Works with the
individual businesses
to maximize marketing
effectiveness and
ef?ciency by bringing
best practices to
advertising, promotion,
public relations, and
other activities
Marketing Master
Develops and leads
large, company-wide
marketing efforts,
and helps set the
company’s priorities
Brand Builder
Is an ef?cient provider
of marketing services
from communications
to creative output and
campaign execution
in support of the
company’s brands
Senior Counselor
Serves as a primary
advisor on marketing
strategy to the CEO
and the individual
businesses, and leads
major advertising,
promotions, and public
relations campaigns
Growth Champion
Drives the company’s
priorities. and leads
the development of its
brands, products, and
new businesses
Marketing Capability Continuum
B2B
The New B2B Marketing Imperative
4
for advertising, the percentages of those marketers who have
similar levels of involvement in customer relations, new business
development, and corporate strategy drop off precipitously (see
Exhibit 2).
A Dearth of Marketing Prowess in B2B
B2B companies are not ignoring marketing: Slightly more than
half now have CMOs; approximately a third have realigned
marketing for a more strategic role; and in spite of the reces-
sion, roughly a ?fth are recruiting marketing talent. But at the
same time, the potential for performance improvement through
marketing capabilities is enhanced by the fact that relatively
few B2B companies have developed them. The 2009 ANA/
Booz & Company study indicates that there is still much room
for performance gains—at least until more B2B companies
strive to capture marketing’s competitive advantages.
More than a third of the survey’s respondents said their com-
panies’ product development process is still conducted from a
perspective that is primarily inside out. While market research
may be used and customer feedback solicited, customers are
rarely driving the process and their input is seldom integrated
from end to end. In addition, 90 percent of the B2B marketers
surveyed said their function, which is a direct source of cus-
tomer insight, was not tightly integrated into their companies’
product development processes. (Sales, according to some re-
spondents, does play a more active role in B2B product devel-
opment because it often ?elds customer requests for custom
designs. But these tend to be based on the needs of individual
accounts rather than market-driven demand.)
A majority of B2B marketers are not fully integrated dur-
ing the major stages of product development, until the ?nal
launch—the end point of the process, when changes are most
dif?cult and expensive. In B2B companies, marketers typically
have limited involvement in R&D or are called on only as need-
ed, as determined by a process owner from outside the function
(see Exhibit 3).
There is a similar situation in the pricing of products and ser-
vices in B2B companies. Again, more than a third of the market-
ers surveyed reported that their companies determine prices on
a cost basis, which is also an inside-out process. Conversely, less
than a third of the companies are using value-based pricing strat-
egies that derive from customer utility and that invariably yield a
price better aligned to the marketplace and often actually higher.
Finally, few ?rms have a comprehensive strategy in place for
strengthening their brand image and corporate reputation. The
survey revealed that less than half of the respondents track spe-
ci?c brand attributes. Further, it identi?ed brand and corporate
reputation management as the least developed of the core mar-
keting capabilities studied.
The survey also revealed that only 15 percent of the market-
ers feel fully con?dent in their ability to track sales and cost-
to-serve data for individual customers across channels. Only 9
percent of the respondents capture a 360-degree view of cus-
tomers. And even though a surprising 45 percent of the respon-
dents said they are able to measure marketing ROI advertising
sales lift, a recent survey of B2B media suppliers contradicts
this belief; only 10 percent of the suppliers think B2B marketers
are measuring the effectiveness of their advertising spend.
3
These deficiencies indicate that there is a dearth of
fundamental marketing prowess among B2B companies that
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Public Relations
Advertising
High-Level Strategy
New Market Entry
Customer Relations
Inquiries and Complaints
Customer Relations
Retention and Loyalty
Responsible Accountable Supporting Informed
50% 11% 31%
12% 15% 4%
8%
69%
33%
35%
22%
28% 24% 26% 22%
22% 39% 17%
24% 33% 8%
18% 41% 8%
Exhibit 2: The Responsibilities of B2B Marketers
5
translates directly into a shortage of marketing’s base currency—
customer insight. Since customer insight is an essential ingredi-
ent in bringing successful products and services to market, the
lack of it creates barriers to growth and pro?tability.
Why Build B2B Marketing Capabilities,
and Which Ones?
The fact that the marketing capabilities of most B2B companies
are less than fully developed and lack customer insight is not itself
a persuasive argument for investing in an expanded role for the
function. Perhaps the B2B sector does not need the same level
of marketing prowess or customer insight as a Procter & Gamble
or a Unilever. Perhaps, in a global economy that is shrinking for
the ?rst time since World War II and in which liquidity is a primary
consideration, B2B companies have more important priorities. So
why should they bolster their marketing expertise now? The short
answer: top-line growth and increased market share.
This survey revealed that B2B companies with above-average
marketing capabilities gain greater market shares than those
companies with below-average capabilities. When the marketing
capabilities of the surveyed companies were correlated to market
share gains over a three-year period, 40 percent of the above-
average B2B marketers were found to have gained market share,
compared with 26 percent of the below-average B2B marketers.
This represents a market share gain premium for above-average
marketers of 54 percent. The market share gains of those B2B
marketers whose capabilities placed them in the top quartile is
even greater; 56 percent of those companies recorded gains, a
premium of 115 percent over the below-average B2B marketers.
This study also found that not all marketing capabilities have
the same degree of impact on market share gains (see Exhibit
4, page 6). Not surprisingly, overall, core marketing capabili-
ties—those that directly in?uence customers, such as pricing
and branding—have the highest correlations to market share
growth. Enabling capabilities—those that govern the operations
of the marketing function, such as decision rights and com-
pensation plans—tend to have a lower correlation to market
share growth. On average, the correlation between market share
growth and core capabilities is double that of enabling capabili-
ties. (This is not to say that enabling capabilities can or should
be ignored. As a company’s core marketing capabilities grow,
the importance of enabling capabilities grows along with them;
enabling capabilities support the effectiveness and ef?ciency of
marketers as they seek to apply core capabilities.)
Core marketing capabili ties—
those that directly in?uence
customers—have the highest
correlations to market share growth.
Enabling capabilities—those
that govern the operations of the
marketing function—have a lower
correlation to market share growth.
Exhibit 3: B2B Marketing Integration with Product Development
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Idea Generation
Idea Assessment
Business Case
Development
Engineering
Development
Testing and
Validation
Final Launch
Fully As Needed Limited
45% 35% 20%
40% 23% 37%
39%
11%
22%
65% 27% 8%
34% 44%
36% 53%
43% 18%
B2B
The New B2B Marketing Imperative
6
Of greatest interest to B2B marketers should be the three
marketing capabilities that have the highest correlation to mar-
ket share gains:
• Market-back product development, in which the customer’s
perspective is actively integrated throughout the entire pro-
cess, from the initial exploratory and concept phases all the
way to product development and testing, including market
research and, of course, developing the business case.
• Brand and reputation management, in which a differentiated
value proposition is developed and tracked for each brand
and aligned with the entire marketing mix, and a comprehen-
sive approach to managing the company’s reputation with a
full range of stakeholders is adopted.
• Pricing management, in which marketers quantify the eco-
nomic or business value that customers derive from their of-
ferings and incorporate this customer value, as well as cost-to-
serve, into product and service prices.
When evaluated across all the companies in this survey,
these three marketing capabilities were found to be signi?cantly
more developed in companies that had gained market share
than in those that had not (see Exhibit 5).
Aside from the value of knowing which marketing capabilities
offer the greatest bene?t to B2B companies, it is also important
to note that developing them on an organizational scale is easier
said than done. Capability development, especially when capa-
bilities involve marketplace differentiation, is often quite complex
because it requires redesigning systems, processes, and metrics,
as well as the roles that people play in the organization. For
example, the workings of the manufacturing capability best
known as the Toyota production system are common knowledge,
but few carmakers have been able to emulate them in practice.
Capturing the B2B Market Share Premium
The primary implication of the 2009 ANA/Booz & Company
study into B2B marketing is clear: A greater focus on funda-
mental marketing capabilities can yield substantial returns. But
to capture these returns for their companies, B2B marketers will
need to address systemic, functional, and capabilities issues.
In systemic terms, many B2B marketers will have to estab-
lish a new, more integral role for themselves in the corporate
hierarchy:
• They will have to earn the attention and consideration of the
senior leadership team by expanding their current roles as
Exhibit 4: The Correlation of Marketing Capabilities to Market Share Growth
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Market-Back
Product
Development
Brand and
Reputation
Management
Media
Planning
Pricing
Management
Involvement
in CRM
Structure Decision
Rights
Information Motivators Knowledge
Management
High
Correlation
Low
Correlation
0.17
0.18
0.15
0.17
0.02
average
average
0.14
0.02
Core Capabilities Enabling Capabilities
0.14
0.07
0.07 0.07 0.07
7
advertising and PR managers into strategic advisors, engage
with the team in the identi?cation and prioritization of corpo-
rate goals, and lead the development of brands, products and
services, and new businesses.
• They will have to balance marketing’s strategic agenda with
the most dif?cult economy in decades—creating and consis-
tently pursuing an agenda that delivers short-term returns and
long-term bene?ts.
• They will have to understand that all marketing capabilities are
not equal in terms of bene?t and identify and pursue those ca-
pabilities that can best help them meet the two other goals.
In functional terms, the majority of B2B marketers will have
to learn to walk before they attempt to run. Toward this end and
the ful?llment of the third goal, they should consider focusing
their attention on the three key capabilities identi?ed in this sur-
vey. They should build their expertise in each of these capabili-
ties slowly, avoid reinventing the wheel (by acquiring and adapt-
ing B2C talent and techniques), and continually demonstrate
the value of their efforts.
In terms of the three key capabilities, B2B marketers can
begin to frame their development efforts around the following
best practices:
Market-back product development: The best marketers earn a
voice in the product development process by delivering cus-
tomer insight. In order to obtain this insight, they identify and
articulate customer needs and desires. They understand their
customer segments and the value drivers in each segment.
They translate the value drivers into product attributes, work
with R&D to design these attributes into products and services,
and set innovation priorities.
Brand and reputation management: Effective marketers man-
age brand portfolios that integrate, support, and achieve cor-
porate goals—and enhance corporate reputation. They de?ne
and execute product and service strategy and positioning. They
articulate brand propositions that include bene?ts and values.
They continuously track and improve brand attributes. And they
extend and leverage the appeal of the brand across all of the
company’s activities, including products and services, commu-
nications, sales and service, and corporate culture.
Pricing management: Leading marketers manage pricing as an
integral element of brand strategy. Pricing is proactively deter-
mined and implemented over the life cycle of the products and
services. Further, in order to maximize pro?ts, pricing is based
on the value delivered to customers, in addition to costs and
market conditions.
Conclusion
Typically, B2B companies do not have a strong marketing tradi-
tion, but a combination of trends and conditions suggests that
their need for marketing is becoming more and more compel-
ling. Those B2B companies that have already strengthened
their marketing capabilities are reaping rewards in increased
market share, and the stakes will surely be raised as their capa-
bilities mature and more and more companies follow their lead.
This new marketing imperative in B2B has created an opportu-
nity for marketers in this sector to deliver higher returns to their
companies and establish more strategic roles for themselves.
Those who seize this opportunity will stand among the leading
marketers of the future.
Exhibit 5: Key Marketing Capabilities,
Market Share Gainers vs. Non-Gainers
Source: 2009 ANA/Booz & Company survey of B2B marketers
Market-Back
Product
Development
Brand and
Reputation
Management
Pricing
Management
Capability
Level
2.6
2.4
3.3
3.1
Market share gainers
Market share non-gainers
2.9
2.5
3.4
3.2
3.0
2.8
2.6
2.4
0.0
1
Peter Drucker, Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices
(Harper & Row, 1973), page 61.
2
Association of National Advertisers and BtoB magazine,
“The Continuously Changing Role of Marketing,” March 2008.
3
American Business Media and Booz & Company,
“A Roadmap for Pro?table Revenue Growth” (2008).
Chicago
Matt Ericksen
Partner
312-578-4610
[email protected]
Cleveland
John Jullens
Principal
216-696-1753
[email protected]
Gaurav Kataria
Associate
216-925-4039
[email protected]
Matthew Ericksen is a Booz & Company
partner based in Chicago. For over 20
years he has been working with industrial
companies to de?ne winning strategies
and the organizational and transforma-
tional programs required for success.
John Jullens is a Booz & Company prin-
cipal based in Cleveland. He specializes
in demand-side transformation, including
revenue growth strategies, brand man-
agement, customer retention, and retail
channel effectiveness for B2C and B2B
clients in North America, Europe, and Asia.
Gaurav Kataria is a Booz & Company
associate based in Cleveland. He special-
izes in growth strategies for automotive,
industrial, and consumer goods companies.
About the ANA
The ANA’s mission is to provide indispensable leadership
that drives marketing communications and media and brand
management excellence and champions, promotes, and de-
fends industry interests. The ANA is the industry’s foremost
and recognized source of marketing communications best
practices. It also leads industry initiatives, in?uences indus-
try practices, manages industry affairs, and advances, pro-
motes, and protects all advertisers and marketers. The trade
association represents 400 companies with 9,000 brands
that collectively spend more than $250 billion in marketing
communications and advertising. For more information visit
www.ana.net.
About Booz & Company
Booz & Company is a leading global consulting ?rm, helping
the world’s top businesses, governments, and organizations.
With more than 3,300 people in 59 of?ces around the world, we
bring foresight and knowledge, deep functional expertise, and
a practical approach to building capabilities and delivering real
impact. We work closely with our clients to create and deliver
essential advantage. Visit www.booz.com to learn more about
Booz & Company.
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